What's a good recipe you cook that doesn't need expensive ingredients?
What's a good recipe you cook that doesn't need expensive ingredients?
What's a good recipe you cook that doesn't need expensive ingredients?
Recently I have been doing rice, canned black beans, and frozen veggies. Fry the veggies up in a large pan with a little olive oil. Rinse beans and add them to the pan. I've been using microwave rice recently because I don't have access to a rice cooker. Add the microwaved rice to the pan, add some spices.
Boom easy meal. Can also throw all this in a tortilla for burritos.
Pork Carnitas
Optional: some people like to chuck the shredded pork onto a cookie sheet and then put it under the broiler to crisp it up a little. I am usually too hungry by the time its ready to shred, so I tend to skip that step, but feel free to try if you have more willpower than me.
My stir-fry sauce works wonders with almost anything that can be fried in a pan/wok.
It’s just soy sauce, peanut butter, honey, apple cider vinegar, minced garlic and chili flakes. Mix those up and add it to something you have already got on the pan, when it’s just a few minutes away from being done.
Can also be used as an extremely flavorful marinade for chicken especially.
Yep agreed, we put in noodles, soy sauce, hoisin sauce (to even out the saltyness) and then whatever veggies and protein is available.
homemade pizza.
look up the dough recipe by babish, its quite good
His pan pizza recipe is a party go-to for me. I have some trouble getting the dough to rise enough sometimes, but when it works it's gloriously bready. I like replacing the water in the dough with beer too.
It’s the serious eats deep dish dough for me, baked off in a cast iron pan. It’s perfect, and can double as a focaccia dough!
Probably not "good", but a tin of chickpeas and a jar of store-bought curry sauce (doesn't really matter which one) is super easy. Just put the chickpeas and sauce in a saucepan, and simmer for 20 minutes (also get some rice).
Pasta aglio, olio, peperoncino. Garlic, olive oil, dried chilies. Comes together in the time it takes the pasta to cook. Grate some cheese over the top, or nutritional yeast to keep it vegetarian, and you're done. I like to add some minced preserved lemon right before it comes off the heat.
Bengali daal - a thin lentil soup, served over rice. Rice and dried lentils are one of the cheapest things you can buy in my country (& probably worldwide) - and this recipe uses very limited ingredients. The spices it uses - Indian bay leaf and kalo jeera - are not expensive in Bengal, and pretty basic/versatile, used in all sorts of dishes. But they're also optional - only daal, salt, water and green chillies are mandatory for making a decent daal!
Day 1 : Roast, onion soup mix, chopped potatoes and onions if you're feeling spicy. Put all of that and some water in the slow cooker. Eat your fill, shred and keep the rest. Day 2: throw frozen veggie mix into pot, put back on slow cooker, you now have beef and veggie soup for the next couple of days.
Biggest expense is the meat here, you can even probably stretch it longer by putting in some rice with the potatoes. Feel free to spice as desired.
a really simple ground meat and noodle casserole, my go to when I don't want to spend much effort cooking. Good for about 3-4 servings.
For vegetables, I have something quick like cherry tomatoes, baby carrots, or something frozen like peas or corn that's easy to heat up in the microwave.
I made a lemon basil spaghetti with roasted artichokes tonight that was pretty good. The ingredients were simple, I went to the store for a bag of frozen artichokes and new wedge of parm but we had the rest. I read about it on nytimes today thinking oooh, exotic, I’ll impress the missus. And when I grabbed the bag of frozen artichokes they helpfully had a recipe on the side: for lemon spaghetti with roasted artichokes.
Anyways, just google it. Less than 10 bucks if you have spaghetti and olive oil already.
Spaghetti alla Putanesca:
For 4 people:
If you’re making it for 2 people: after step 5, transfer half of the sauce to a Tupperware container. It keeps in the fridge for a few days or you can freeze it.
Need: Egg nuddels, some slices of garlic,chilli, salt, pepper and some cooking oil.
Cook the nuddels.
Chop the garlic and chilli.
Mix the garlic, chilli, salt, pepper in the oil.
Fry up the nuddels with the oil mixture.
Need even cheaper version, replace the garlic, chilli with their powder version.
If you want something extra, add some soy and/or mayo when it is finished. You can also add an egg boild or fried.
A nice risotto - it takes a bit of time, but the basic recipe is super simple. Get a pot of about 5 or so cups of stock (chicken veggie, whatever) simmering on the stove. In a big pan, sauté a diced onion with olive oil, add a bit of minced garlic, then toss in about a cup and a half of arborio rice (or another short grain rice) and get it all coated in the oil. You can add half a cup of white wine now if you like, or just slowly start adding in a stock, one ladleful at a time. Keep stirring, don’t walk away! This takes some time, but as the stock gets absorbed the rice releases its starch and gets super creamy. Taste test to know when it’s done. Season with salt and pepper, and serve with some parmesan cheese grated over the top (ideally from an actual block of parm, which would likely be the most expensive part of this dish).
You can add various veggies in - I like adding mushrooms or blanched asparagus. It’s great as a side dish, but also works as a main.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
Just a heads up: you posted the same comment about a dozen times.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.
I'm gonna second risotto - for me it's fish: mussels, squid, scallops (cheap ones) and smoked haddock.