Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On a related note I made fish tacos yesterday and paid $58 at Whole Foods to create 5 tacos.
Not tacos for 5, five tacos. Granted $11 of that was for charcoal but even $47 for 5 tacos is absurd.
At Lidl that might have cost $10. It matters where one shops.
Anonymous wrote:On a related note I made fish tacos yesterday and paid $58 at Whole Foods to create 5 tacos.
Not tacos for 5, five tacos. Granted $11 of that was for charcoal but even $47 for 5 tacos is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:On a related note I made fish tacos yesterday and paid $58 at Whole Foods to create 5 tacos.
Not tacos for 5, five tacos. Granted $11 of that was for charcoal but even $47 for 5 tacos is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a Dr of Dietetics. Your version had a lot less sodium, so I call that a win.
Chipotle and places like it like to disguise their food as healthy alternatives, but their options often include more sodium than Big Macs.
-signed a big hater of Chipotle, Panera, and Cava
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to figure out where people are buying such expensive chicken. I’ve never paid over $1.99/ pound for chicken leg quarters.
We aren’t buying chicken leg quarters; that’s gotta be the worst possible cut of a chicken to deal with or eat
DP
Only if you have no imagination. Dark meat is light years better than all of that tough breast meat.
Food Network and Anthony Bourdain nonsense. "This throwaway cut is ACTUALLY the best ... try it at my restaurant for $30 a plate ... or fly around the globe to have it from a street vendor."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m trying to figure out where people are buying such expensive chicken. I’ve never paid over $1.99/ pound for chicken leg quarters.
We aren’t buying chicken leg quarters; that’s gotta be the worst possible cut of a chicken to deal with or eat
Anonymous wrote:I wonder where OP shops for grocery items. It would be a lot less than OP's number if at Lidl or Aldi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooking at home is only meaningful cheaper when you kind of specialize in a type of food and have a lot of the ingredients in stock. I find that Italian cooking, for example, is not that cheap. Often I have to buy a bottle of wine (not a drinker here). And then I need to buy some kind of diary that goes bad, like cream or half and half, or sour cream. That stuff adds up.
Chinese cooking, in contrast, I find to be much more economical. A lot of the ingredients are shelf stable or can keep for a long time (soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, ginger, garlic etc).
When I buy wine for cooking, I buy cheap wine. Maybe if I'm making something fancy I will upgrade, but if I just need something to cook down into a sauce, I will happily buy a $6 wine. Whole Foods has a "Three Wishes" brand wine that is super cheap and I often grab if I need a wine reduction for just a weeknight sauce.
I buy the cheapest wine too but it is often around 8 bucks, which I think is still expensive to use each time I cook a meal.
But it lasts forever in the fridge. I just reseal it and use the same bottle for months. So it’s really only adding $1-2 to the cost of the meal
I feel like a fortified wine keeps better for things like deglazing a pan. If the recipe called for a lot of wine (like beef burgandy) I’d probably be wary of using something that could taste off and ruin expensive meat. But then again I always drink the bottle of wine in the fridge anyway so I may be biased!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean you could but you're making choices about what youi're buying. Starting with guac, I make it. Not where near WF pre-prepared prices. Also do you need two meats? And what is "good salsa"? Again, I make pico and you can make hotter blender salsas (green, red, etc..).
Here's what I do:
Chicken: $10 for 1 lb organic tenders
Beans: $1 can
Rice: let's say $1 but likely pennies
Avocado: $4 for 2-3 depending on the week which is fine for a family of 4
Cilantro: $2
Onion: $1
Tomato: $2
Lettuce: $4
Jalapeno, bell peppers: $3
Lime: $2
Corn (frozen): $2
Sour cream: $4
Cheese: $4
Hot sauce: $4
Can of chipotle in adobo: $2
Spices and oils etc...: come on, you have these
This is $46 BUT except for the chicken and beans and avocados easily makes 2-3 meals or components (leftover veggies, rice, cheese, etc...). So really more like $20 a meal because I'm making salads, rice dishes, other things with the ingredients.
You will have ample leftovers.
10 bucks a pound for chicken is insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooking at home is only meaningful cheaper when you kind of specialize in a type of food and have a lot of the ingredients in stock. I find that Italian cooking, for example, is not that cheap. Often I have to buy a bottle of wine (not a drinker here). And then I need to buy some kind of diary that goes bad, like cream or half and half, or sour cream. That stuff adds up.
Chinese cooking, in contrast, I find to be much more economical. A lot of the ingredients are shelf stable or can keep for a long time (soy sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, ginger, garlic etc).
When I buy wine for cooking, I buy cheap wine. Maybe if I'm making something fancy I will upgrade, but if I just need something to cook down into a sauce, I will happily buy a $6 wine. Whole Foods has a "Three Wishes" brand wine that is super cheap and I often grab if I need a wine reduction for just a weeknight sauce.
I buy the cheapest wine too but it is often around 8 bucks, which I think is still expensive to use each time I cook a meal.
But it lasts forever in the fridge. I just reseal it and use the same bottle for months. So it’s really only adding $1-2 to the cost of the meal