The K M Links Game - November 2024 Week...
Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by mimififi. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I find that a large batch of minced beef or minced lamb can be "tarted up" in lots of different ways. If you cook the basic beat with onions & tomatoes & Oxo cubes, it can be frozen in convenient size portions. Then you can pre-fry mixed root vegetables and add the sauce for savoury mince, add more fried onions & curry paste for curried mince, add red kidney beans and chilli powder for Chile con carne, or a mixture of vegetables & cover with mashed potato for shepherd pie or cottage pie.
Home made soups (red lentils with mixed vegetables, minstrone, or leek & potato are cheap and filling.
Savoury mashed potato or mashed root vegetable mixtures with grated cheese and grilled bacon are also comfort foods.
Fish cakes with tinned pilchards are also inexpensive and tasty..
I have recently been diagnosed with a gluten intolerance and know that does not help as it is quite an expensive diet to follow unless that is of course that you do not buy gluten free products such as "free from" bread, cakes etc which in my opinion taste foul anyway.
so i just eat food without gluten than trying to substitute them...anyway in regards to your question!!: heres a recipie its simple but really cheap and yummy:
enjoy! ; )
try
pasta
....cook as much as required then cook off small florets of brocolli,diced carrots peas even diced poatoes,mushrooms and ham,then make a basic cheese sauce either with cheddar or stilton pour over the pasta and veg ,grate cheese over the top and bake till top is golden brown its really yummy
well because i have recently been diagnosed with this gluten intolerance they are still doing tests to confirm because of course we miss out on fibre and nutrients so i have gone without for about 6 months which was hard at first but gradually you get so used to it.at the moment i have been told to eat gluten again so that they can see the effects for an endoscopy and i can tell you having the taste of freshly baked crusty bread is the best taste in the world!
as for picnics and lunches i always have to have a hot meal at work or something from the salad bar its very inconvenient when you cant just grab a sandwhich really
Well, mimi (haven't seen you for a while, by the way)... there are some very cheap cuts of meat, but when prepared correctly, they go a long way and are enjoyable. One of the favorites at our house is my rolled skirt steak.
Skirt (sometimes marketed as flank) steak is about $1.50 per pound here in the U.S. and usually comes in 2 to 4 pound pieces. I have the butcher run the steak through his tenderizer which also flattens the half inch thick cut. I then cut it into manageable pieces, but no smaller than about 10 inches long by 8 inches wide. Brown it lightly in a heavy skillet than you can also put in the oven. Remove the piece(s) and let cool. Spread a mixture of cream cheese,finely chopped onion, parsley flakes, garlic, salt and fresh ground pepper and a goodly dash of Worcestershire and roll the meat fairly tightly. Place toothpicks through the roll about every two inches and slice the roll into individual pinwheels. Place these back into skillet with perhaps 2 or 3 tabelspoons of olive oil (EXV) and place in a hot oven (375 to 400 degrees F) for about 30 minutes. Remove once more and make a thickened sauce of the brown bits in the skillet to pour over the rolls.
To go along with this, I boil about a dozen (or as many as you'd need) new potatoes (small red ones about 2 to 3 inches in diameter) for only 20 to 25 minutes or so. Remove and cool and peel. Crush a cup of corn flakes cereal and mix with a packet of dry ranch salad dressing mix and little salt a pepper. Roll the potatoes in melted butter and then roll them in the corn flake mix. Place on a baking sheet and bake in a 400 F degree oven for 20 minutes or so until the flakes are turning dark brown...
Good luck!
hi mimififi, if you and your children like them, then pulses are cheap, nutritional and lovely. You can make some lovely pasta sauces with them. Curries, rissoles, and loads more. Get a Rose Elliott book out from the library for ideas.
Sorry just noted you are not vegetarian anymore, but you can still incorporate the odd pulse meal in.
I have 4 children, so can sympathise with your food dilemas
Good luck!
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