With Christmas over our credit card is a little beat up, not too bad, but enough to make me question what I'll be spending of the next couple of weeks while it recovers.
Step 1: Give credit card to hubby to hide - then I can't be tempted to use it. I have to check my bank balance to be sure I can afford something before I buy it - which means tallying up what I'm spending at the supermarket. I tally up my shopping most of the time anyway, but now I'll have to be more accurate.
Step 2: Clear out the cupboards, larder, fridge and freezer. I've found loads of beans and lentils in the larder, fruit and a few part packs of nuts in the freezer and pasta and coconut milk in the basement storage area.
Step 3: Only buy absolute essentials for the next 2 weeks (maybe even 3) and live of what we already have.
Step one was completed on Monday - I have no idea where my credit cards are. Done.
Step two is in progress. I have done a quick rustle around in my larder, store cupboards and shelves and the freezer. I will dig beeper next week. I found loads and loads of legumes that need using. Beluga lentils, dahl lentils, puy lentils, soy beans, haricot beans, chickpeas, pinto beans and red beans.
I soaked the large bag of pinto beans over night, rinsed and then simmered gently today while I set up a new run for the 9 roosters that are arriving today. Once they were tender I left to cool in their juices. I have just packed up containers for the freezer, perfect sizes to feed Mumma, Pappa and Baby Bears. I find this a much better way of doing beans now, I used to just measure out what I needed for meal, soak and cook - then have to do it all over again for the next meal - no wonder I still have so many beans. Now I do them in bulk and all I need to do is grab a box of beans from the freezer in the morning and they'll be ready for use for dinner.
Beans are so cheap, tasty and easy to make. If you're on a budget they are a great way to add protein to a meal at a fraction of the cost. For example, my 1kg bag of pinto beans from a bulk Indian food store cost me $5.50. Once soaked and cooked they have been divided into 6 meal portions (for 2 adults and 2 under fives). That's under a $1 for a meal, around 20c per person! Bargain! When it that cheap you can afford to splash on a little bacon to make my awesome baked beans, Boston baked beans to be precise. I will be making them tomorrow so watch this space.
For step three I will make sure have my cell phone or calculator with me when I go to town next so I can note down the price of things on my shopping list and add them up. I always visit my green grocer before the supermarket too, there's a bit more guess work in what I'm going to spend with everything being sold by the kilo. Then I know exactly what I have to stick to at the supermarket where is everything has fixed prices. I think I can get away with only spending $20 this week, I only need a handful of things, mostly sugar and spices for pickling my huge crop of gherkins and dish liquid to clean up after.
I'd love to hear more of your ideas for legumes! They are so cheap but I never really know what to do with them. We used black beans for homemade buritto's and in a crockpot beef meal once and that's about the extent of it!
ReplyDeleteHi Amanda,
DeleteI can remember when I never knew what to do with beans, and my library didn't help having no books on the subject. Here's my recipe for Boston baked beans http://thetkgoodlife.blogspot.co.nz/2014/02/boston-baked-beans.html
And another for lentil burgers http://thetkgoodlife.blogspot.co.nz/2013/10/ciabatta-burgers-with-kumera-and-lentil.html
Both are gobbled up by my meat loving hubby and kiddies. More recipes to come as I clear out my larder over the next few weeks.