Author Topic: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes  (Read 18158 times)

TabbyCat

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Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« on: March 29, 2016, 12:11:42 PM »
I know there was a big thread on this a while back but search isn't turning it up and is crashing for me - does anyone have the link?

Looking for some good meal ideas in the $1-2 per serving range. Thanks!

slappy

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #1 on: March 29, 2016, 12:35:35 PM »
budgetbytes.com

GuitarStv

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2016, 12:36:58 PM »
While I like the budget bytes website and many of the recipes . . . anyone new to it should be warned that the serving sizes are a bit small.

EnjoyIt

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #3 on: March 29, 2016, 01:00:41 PM »
1) Tuna melt:
1 can tuna, 1/2 tablespoon may, 1/2 tablespoon mustard, some veggies of choice (I like onions, pickles and tomato)  Maybe a slice of cheddar cheese.  1 slice of bread.
Healthy and well under $2/meal.

2) BBQ chicken and corn or potatoes



MrsDinero

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #4 on: March 29, 2016, 01:15:39 PM »
Chicken & Vegetable Fajita Bowl - 4-6 servings depending on how much you eat.

1 lbs chicken breasts = $3/lb
28 oz Canned Diced Tomato = $1
4 oz diced Jalapeno = $0.80
2 Green Peppers Sliced = $2
1 Onion Sliced = $1
Brown Rice = $3.50/bag or $0.20/serving
Spices: Chili Powder, paprika, salt, pepper, cilantro, etc

Total: $8 or $1.33 for 6 servings or $2 for 4 servings

Crockpot Instructions:
Drain liquid from tomatoes and jalapeņos, then empty contents into bottom of crock pot.
Sprinkle spices
Add chicken breasts
Sprinkle more Spices
Cook on High for 4 hours
Add green peppers and onion last 30 minutes
Cook rice in rice cooker (only way I know how)
When crockpot is done, take chicken out and shred it
Put chicken back in crockpot and stir it all about
Then Eat


Lifestyle Deflation

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #5 on: March 29, 2016, 01:23:53 PM »
+1 for crockpot food. Spaghetti and Meat Sauce:

2x 28oz canned peeled tomatoes: $4-5
1lb lean ground beef: $6
1/2 lb pasta: $.75
Spices: Salt, pepper, paprika, red peppers, oregano, etc
Veggies: Chopped onions or peppers $1

Total: Approximately $12 or less

Brown the beef, blend up the tomatoes, add spices and veggies, stir and stick in crockpot for a few hours. Add pasta around a half hour-45 minutes before you want to eat (pasta cooks in the sauce).

Delicious, cheap, and super easy. ~8-10 servings. Leftovers are excellent.

CmFtns

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #6 on: March 29, 2016, 01:32:02 PM »
In the past year or so I've been preparing large weekly meals for dinners for my GF and I... Now it seems like no matter what I do, as long as I have a mix of different ingredient types (i.e. not a 12oz meat serving as entire meal) then it always turns out just above $1/serving.

You can look at these types of meals:
Any kind of stews or soups (potatoes add a lot of cheap goodness)
Lots of slow cooker meals/chilis/pulled chicken stuff
I do quesadillas real cheap with beans red onions chicken and cheese
spaghetti and noodle based dishes with all different kinds of sauces that you can make in slow cooker
Asian style dishes using chicken usually I put over rice or noodles

Examples of things that I have done that go a good big above $2 include:
pulled pork shoulder
steaks
anything where seafood is a large portion of meal

The trick is to mix the super affordable calories with the expensive calories and it always seems to average out right in that price range you were talking about and cook in larger portions and eat leftovers if you can stand it.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2016, 01:35:22 PM by comfyfutons »

Bracken_Joy

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #7 on: March 29, 2016, 01:32:58 PM »
By far my favorite one from Budget Bytes:

http://www.budgetbytes.com/2012/10/chicken-lime-soup/

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #8 on: March 29, 2016, 01:34:28 PM »
Soooo many, but really it depends on your shopping prowess.

In our house corn chowder is a big hit - a pot of it makes enough to freeze for about 4 meals. Alongside some home made bread ($0.30 per loaf) its hard to beat for lunch on a cool day.

I like budget bites too, but I find the ingredients don't always pan out for us. Anything that calls for fresh herbs is immediately a no-go around here since I'm not buying $3.00 of cilantro to get a tablespoon out of - even if the per tablespoon cost represents a savings.

I prefer to pick up depression-era cookbooks and steal recipes from them - still dirt cheap food, but more honest (less fancy) ingredients. If you can find them, Kate Aitken's cookbooks from the 1950's are great for easy, fast, cheap food your grandparents would have made.

Jack

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #9 on: March 29, 2016, 01:34:58 PM »
Chicken & Vegetable Fajita Bowl - 4-6 servings depending on how much you eat.

1 lbs chicken breasts = $3/lb chicken thighs = $1/lb (or less)
28 oz Canned Diced Tomato = $1
4 oz diced Jalapeno = $0.80
2 Green Peppers Sliced = $2
1 Onion Sliced = $1
Brown Rice = $3.50/bag or $0.20/serving
Spices: Chili Powder, paprika, salt, pepper, cilantro, etc

Total: $8 or $1.33 for 6 servings or $2 for 4 servings

Crockpot Instructions:
Drain liquid from tomatoes and jalapeņos, then empty contents into bottom of crock pot.
Sprinkle spices
Add chicken breasts
Sprinkle more Spices
Cook on High for 4 hours
Add green peppers and onion last 30 minutes
Cook rice in rice cooker (only way I know how)
When crockpot is done, take chicken out and shred it
Put chicken back in crockpot and stir it all about
Then Eat

FTFY. If you're using a slow, wet cooking method anyway, using a relatively expensive cut of meat is a waste.

Bracken_Joy

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #10 on: March 29, 2016, 01:36:27 PM »
Soooo many, but really it depends on your shopping prowess.

In our house corn chowder is a big hit - a pot of it makes enough to freeze for about 4 meals. Alongside some home made bread ($0.30 per loaf) its hard to beat for lunch on a cool day.

I like budget bites too, but I find the ingredients don't always pan out for us. Anything that calls for fresh herbs is immediately a no-go around here since I'm not buying $3.00 of cilantro to get a tablespoon out of - even if the per tablespoon cost represents a savings.

I prefer to pick up depression-era cookbooks and steal recipes from them - still dirt cheap food, but more honest (less fancy) ingredients. If you can find them, Kate Aitken's cookbooks from the 1950's are great for easy, fast, cheap food your grandparents would have made.

Prosp- for 'spare' herbs, I find curry to be an excellent way to use them. Make a big double or triple batch of curry and use up any extra cilantro or green onions I have around. For me, my focus on nutrition makes them worth keeping around. My grocery budget is awful though, so don't listen to me =P

CmFtns

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #11 on: March 29, 2016, 01:37:45 PM »
Chicken & Vegetable Fajita Bowl - 4-6 servings depending on how much you eat.

1 lbs chicken breasts = $3/lb chicken thighs = $1/lb (or less)
28 oz Canned Diced Tomato = $1
4 oz diced Jalapeno = $0.80
2 Green Peppers Sliced = $2
1 Onion Sliced = $1
Brown Rice = $3.50/bag or $0.20/serving
Spices: Chili Powder, paprika, salt, pepper, cilantro, etc

Total: $8 or $1.33 for 6 servings or $2 for 4 servings

Crockpot Instructions:
Drain liquid from tomatoes and jalapeņos, then empty contents into bottom of crock pot.
Sprinkle spices
Add chicken breasts
Sprinkle more Spices
Cook on High for 4 hours
Add green peppers and onion last 30 minutes
Cook rice in rice cooker (only way I know how)
When crockpot is done, take chicken out and shred it
Put chicken back in crockpot and stir it all about
Then Eat

FTFY. If you're using a slow, wet cooking method anyway, using a relatively expensive cut of meat is a waste.

ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

Anyway I've found chicken breast to be very affordable though... I get it for around $1.79/lbs and when you buy thighs you have all the bones and skin attributing to some of that weight
« Last Edit: March 29, 2016, 01:39:30 PM by comfyfutons »

Jack

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #12 on: March 29, 2016, 01:48:34 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

You wouldn't stew a steak, so why would you stew a chicken breast?



FYI, I only ever buy whole chickens:
  • The breast gets grilled or pan-fried
  • The thighs and legs get braised/stewed/poached (and usually shredded/pulled for use in Mexican dishes)
  • The wings get frozen and saved up until I have enough to make hot wings
  • The carcass gets made into chicken stock

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #13 on: March 29, 2016, 01:51:52 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

katsiki

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #14 on: March 29, 2016, 02:08:26 PM »
Chicken & Vegetable Fajita Bowl - 4-6 servings depending on how much you eat.

1 lbs chicken breasts = $3/lb
28 oz Canned Diced Tomato = $1
4 oz diced Jalapeno = $0.80
2 Green Peppers Sliced = $2
1 Onion Sliced = $1
Brown Rice = $3.50/bag or $0.20/serving
Spices: Chili Powder, paprika, salt, pepper, cilantro, etc

Total: $8 or $1.33 for 6 servings or $2 for 4 servings

Crockpot Instructions:
Drain liquid from tomatoes and jalapeņos, then empty contents into bottom of crock pot.
Sprinkle spices
Add chicken breasts
Sprinkle more Spices
Cook on High for 4 hours
Add green peppers and onion last 30 minutes
Cook rice in rice cooker (only way I know how)
When crockpot is done, take chicken out and shred it
Put chicken back in crockpot and stir it all about
Then Eat

This looks awesome.  Thanks!  I will try this one soon.  I love crockpot recipes.

Jack

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #15 on: March 29, 2016, 02:10:55 PM »
But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Pork loin is the pork equivalent of filet mignon. (Okay, so technically that's pork tenderloin, but loin is almost the same.) Treat it accordingly, by cooking it using a dry, fast cooking method. Also, pork today isn't raised like pork in the past; trichinosis is no longer a big problem. Therefore, quit overcooking the pork loin and it'll be much better.

Ever hear the idiom "eating high on the hog" (meaning eating the fancy, expensive stuff?) That's referring to the pork loin!

When I talk about cheap cuts of pork for braising, I'm talking about pork shoulder (aka 'boston butt') or shank.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2016, 02:18:58 PM by Jack »

TabbyCat

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #16 on: March 29, 2016, 03:25:08 PM »
Thanks for the suggestions, everything sounds really good. Interesting tip on depression era cook books - going to ask my mom for her mom's and grandmother's recipes - they always had gardens so they did use a lot of fresh and herbs but maybe some good cheap ideas in there. I would really like to start making my own bread, but I can't eat gluten and gluten free baking is 1) difficult and 2) expensive, so I just don't eat much bread or baked goods and use them as treats. Fresh baked bead is just so good though. I do need to get more use out of the slow cooker we were gifted. Soups and stews sound great.

FiguringItOut

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #17 on: March 29, 2016, 03:45:02 PM »
These recipes sound delicious.  Unfortunately, for those of use who need to limit carbs and have a decent servings of protein, low budget is not always the best friend.

I envy those who can load up on rice, potatoes, and pasta as their main meal item. 

calimom

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #18 on: March 29, 2016, 04:08:05 PM »
This recommendation has made the rounds:

www.leannebrown.com

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #19 on: March 29, 2016, 04:35:13 PM »
Tenderloin is a far cry from the loin - tenderloin I can do as medallions or a whole loin and it comes out great, but the loin is another beast altogether. I'll try hot and fast instead of low and slow.

I am blessed with a constitution that can manage high carb, low carb, and gluten free. I do not have any limitations on my diet up to and including petroleum byproducts, GMO's and foods considered risky by Asian street vendors. I am a blessed man.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Since I'm home now, corn chowder recipe I mentioned earlier - this recipe feeds a small army. Possibly a medium sized one if they aren't too hungry. The origins of the recipe are unclear, there are others similar to it online.

Fry together:
8 slices bacon cut into squares
1 good sized onion - chopped

Simmer until tender:
6 potatoes - diced
2 carrots - shredded
1 tsp salt
3 cups water

In second pot combine to make white sauce:
1-1/2 tsp butter (margarine is fine)
4-1/2 tsp flour
1/2 tsp salt
pepper to taste
aprox. 3 cups milk

Combine all of the above with 20 oz cream corn. Heat through and serve.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I have never tried making gluten free bread, but if you want to give it a go, the recipes on the Fleischman's website are my current favs for breadmaking. Since their normal bread recipes are the bomb.com, I assume their celiac-friendly recipes would also knock your sox off.

Dezrah

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #20 on: March 29, 2016, 05:10:42 PM »
I had a side project for a while where I priced out our most common recipes into price per serving units. I found the cost for even our most expensive recipes was shockingly low, BUT that depended on us 1) using all food we buy with no waste of ingredients or leftovers, 2) we actually stuck with the serving size we estimated.

For example, a broccoli-cheese quiche costs $7.21 in ingredients and easily makes 4 servings, $1.80 per serving. If I end up throwing away the extra cream then the total costs more than that at the end of the day. Then if we indulge too much and eat the whole thing that night, I can't really claim I got 4 meals out of it.

So I guess my point is home cooking is actually very cheap, even when using meat and cheese. Focus instead on using what you have, limiting your intake, and decreasing waste.

MrsPete

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #21 on: March 29, 2016, 06:45:40 PM »
budgetbytes.com
I was going to recommend this website!  My daughter started me reading it, and we've particularly enjoyed the soups and the Roasted Chicken Fajitas.

Alongside some home made bread ($0.30 per loaf) its hard to beat for lunch on a cool day.
If you have Jimmy John's fast food restaurant in your area, they sell day-old bread for .50 for a 12" loaf.  You can pick it up through the drive-through.  I usually buy two loaves and they give me an extra one free -- I don't think many people buy it.  We usually slice it up and eat it along with meals, but my daughters like to make French bread pizzas with it.

redcedar

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #22 on: March 29, 2016, 07:39:24 PM »
Grow. Fish. Hunt. Avoid the high priced items pitched to people that want the look without really the work.

bkmnky72

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #23 on: March 29, 2016, 09:08:32 PM »
We average about $2 a serving.

Stir-fry of whatever cheap vegetables you can find.  Dried noodles are cheap. 
I am a fan of chicken thighs and legs.  They go on average about $1 a pound here.
I buy ground turkey chubbs which are a lot cheaper than ground beef.  I usually make stuffed bell peppers with it or simple spaghetti with meat sauce and veggies.
Buy a rice cooker and crockpot.  Rice can be purchased for $10 in 20 pound bags.  We eat about 2 cups a meal. 
We do a lot of ethnic grocery store shopping, which is very cheap and sometimes have better quality veggies than the regular chains.




FiftyIsTheNewTwenty

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #24 on: March 29, 2016, 09:13:27 PM »
But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

You can brine it. 

But most people are simply overcooking their pork.  It doesn't have to be "well done" as most older cookbooks and thermometers say, a holdover from long gone days when pork had trichinosis and other parasites.  At the traditional 160F, one might as well eat a hockey puck.

USDA now recommends 145F, which will make most people happy by taking most of the pink out.  But pinker is  tastier, and some chefs will go as low as 130F. 

Pink pork loin is the tastiest sandwich meat ever.

$1.79/LB at Costco, and no waste.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2016, 09:15:20 PM by FiftyIsTheNewTwenty »

GoConfidently

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #25 on: March 29, 2016, 09:33:13 PM »
Many herbs freeze well, but cilantro is one of the best because of the way it is usually used. Frozen cilantro is great as long as you're cooking with it and not using it as a garnish. Add it to beans, taco or enchilada filling, a simmering curry sauce, pho ga, etc. No waste at all. You can also buy recaito (cilantro flavor base) for any stew, soup, or cooked dish that you want to have the flavor of cilantro without the herbs. Look for it in the ethnic food section.

Runrooster

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #26 on: March 30, 2016, 09:45:39 AM »
a broccoli-cheese quiche costs $7.21 in ingredients and easily makes 4 servings, $1.80 per serving. If I end up throwing away the extra cream then the total costs more than that at the end of the day. Then if we indulge too much and eat the whole thing that night, I can't really claim I got 4 meals out of it.

Somehow I'd never priced that out, I regularly see grocery store quiche in the $5-$7 range, no work.  That kind of thinking got me in trouble for awhile- the meals have higher fat and lower vegetable content than what I make at home, and led to indulgence. I always say l will add a vegetable on the side, happens maybe a quarter of the time. On a related note, I'm not sure why you would buy cream extra for quiche.  I use whatever milk I keep around and add extra fat or cheese accordingly.  Bacon or bacon fat. I also make a pan frittata no crust.  A pound of broccoli, 8 eggs, milk and cheese, a loaf of bread on the side, $4.

Greenback Reproduction Specialist

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #27 on: March 30, 2016, 10:35:11 AM »
Lol there are some responses in this thread : )

+1 I love thighs and drum sticks way more than breast meat! Cook them up like chicken wings, OMG they are good.

+1 on pork loine, I cant believe anyone would think that is a horrible meat lol... Brine it, stuff it with garlic and rosemary then roast it. its is some good eating.

Based on some of the responses, I'm not sure how my suggested meals will go over, but here it is.

First buy a whole chicken at under $1/lb, this gives our family of 3 about 6 meals.

1st meal: Beer can chicken, with mashed potatoes and gravy, and green beans.
2nd meal: chicken sandwich for lunch the next day.
3rd meal: left overs of the first meal.

at this point you can freeze the extra meat and carcass for later, or not.

4th, 5th, and 6th meal: Soup made with stock from the chicken carcass.

If you were to add up the costs associated with those meals I would guess the following.

Whole chicken: 4lbs @ $0.88/lb = $3.52
Bag of potatoes: Maybe $2 (and you are going to end up with a lot of potatoes left)
Green beans: (2 cans) $1.25
Pack of gravy: $1
Loaf of bread: $2
Veggies for the soup: $2

Total: $11.77 or average less than $2 per meal(about $0.50 per serving)

Now there are a lot of regular household items that will also go into making that stuff, so I'm assuming it will be on hand. Things like milk, butter, seasonings, etc. But, the items purchased above will also go a lot further than the meals listed above.... So I figure its still pretty cheap eating.

Buying whole hams hocks, pork loins, and turkeys on sale you can pretty much do the same thing.

Our family grocery budget is $300 per month for a family of 3 and that budget covers consumables like toilet paper, sandwich bags, etc.




Ynari

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #28 on: March 30, 2016, 11:03:56 AM »
In the past year or so I've been preparing large weekly meals for dinners for my GF and I... Now it seems like no matter what I do, as long as I have a mix of different ingredient types (i.e. not a 12oz meat serving as entire meal) then it always turns out just above $1/serving.

You can look at these types of meals:
Any kind of stews or soups (potatoes add a lot of cheap goodness)
Lots of slow cooker meals/chilis/pulled chicken stuff
I do quesadillas real cheap with beans red onions chicken and cheese
spaghetti and noodle based dishes with all different kinds of sauces that you can make in slow cooker
Asian style dishes using chicken usually I put over rice or noodles

Examples of things that I have done that go a good big above $2 include:
pulled pork shoulder
steaks
anything where seafood is a large portion of meal

The trick is to mix the super affordable calories with the expensive calories and it always seems to average out right in that price range you were talking about and cook in larger portions and eat leftovers if you can stand it.

I FOUND MY FOOD DOPPLEGANGER. That's how I eat and cook! I'm way too excited about this.


Re: the chicken thigh debate upthread. The other week my local grocery store was having a sale on chicken thigh quarters for $.39 a pound. Of course, I bought a ton. The meat is fine and works well in a number of dishes, though I have to say that I wouldn't buy it at its "regular" price - close to $2 a pound, when I can get chicken breast for $2 a pound at the nearish asian market. The amount of refuse with the skin and bones (which do go to stock, but still) drives the effective price up, and adds to the amount of work I have to do if I want to skin them first.

Anyway, I'd also found 4 slightly overripe avocados that day priced down to $1.20 total, so I ended up making super cheap guacamole, baking the chicken with a crust made out of corn tortillas that were going stale (spiced with homemade chili powder), making "refried" beans in the pressure cooker (only takes about an hour, from dry), and pairing with a side of lettuce. Overall cost about $1 per person. Pretty proud of that, though most of our meals are closer to $2/person.

Sweetloveginger

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #29 on: March 30, 2016, 01:08:51 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.
I like to sear it on all sides over medium high before tossing it into the oven at 350 for 25-35 minutes (depending on your rareness tolerance). Comes out juicy every time.

Sweetloveginger

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #30 on: March 30, 2016, 01:18:57 PM »
Lol there are some responses in this thread : )

+1 I love thighs and drum sticks way more than breast meat! Cook them up like chicken wings, OMG they are good.

+1 on pork loine, I cant believe anyone would think that is a horrible meat lol... Brine it, stuff it with garlic and rosemary then roast it. its is some good eating.

Based on some of the responses, I'm not sure how my suggested meals will go over, but here it is.

First buy a whole chicken at under $1/lb, this gives our family of 3 about 6 meals.

1st meal: Beer can chicken, with mashed potatoes and gravy, and green beans.
2nd meal: chicken sandwich for lunch the next day.
3rd meal: left overs of the first meal.

at this point you can freeze the extra meat and carcass for later, or not.

4th, 5th, and 6th meal: Soup made with stock from the chicken carcass.

If you were to add up the costs associated with those meals I would guess the following.

Whole chicken: 4lbs @ $0.88/lb = $3.52
Bag of potatoes: Maybe $2 (and you are going to end up with a lot of potatoes left)
Green beans: (2 cans) $1.25
Pack of gravy: $1
Loaf of bread: $2
Veggies for the soup: $2

Total: $11.77 or average less than $2 per meal(about $0.50 per serving)

Now there are a lot of regular household items that will also go into making that stuff, so I'm assuming it will be on hand. Things like milk, butter, seasonings, etc. But, the items purchased above will also go a lot further than the meals listed above.... So I figure its still pretty cheap eating.

Buying whole hams hocks, pork loins, and turkeys on sale you can pretty much do the same thing.

Our family grocery budget is $300 per month for a family of 3 and that budget covers consumables like toilet paper, sandwich bags, etc.

So I have been known to stretch chicken out to last for 5 meals. Granted it's just me and my husband but theres always so much leftover! For the first meal we usually eat the legs, and wings saving the rest for the week. This is an example of how I do it. http://www.sweetloveandginger.com/meal-plan-11-1-15/

I hit a new record this month (without trying) our grocery bill was $172.
« Last Edit: March 30, 2016, 01:24:56 PM by Sweetloveginger »

Matumba

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #31 on: March 30, 2016, 01:21:38 PM »
Following

CmFtns

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #32 on: March 30, 2016, 01:42:04 PM »
In the past year or so I've been preparing large weekly meals for dinners for my GF and I... Now it seems like no matter what I do, as long as I have a mix of different ingredient types (i.e. not a 12oz meat serving as entire meal) then it always turns out just above $1/serving.

You can look at these types of meals:
Any kind of stews or soups (potatoes add a lot of cheap goodness)
Lots of slow cooker meals/chilis/pulled chicken stuff
I do quesadillas real cheap with beans red onions chicken and cheese
spaghetti and noodle based dishes with all different kinds of sauces that you can make in slow cooker
Asian style dishes using chicken usually I put over rice or noodles

Examples of things that I have done that go a good big above $2 include:
pulled pork shoulder
steaks
anything where seafood is a large portion of meal

The trick is to mix the super affordable calories with the expensive calories and it always seems to average out right in that price range you were talking about and cook in larger portions and eat leftovers if you can stand it.

I FOUND MY FOOD DOPPLEGANGER. That's how I eat and cook! I'm way too excited about this.


Re: the chicken thigh debate upthread. The other week my local grocery store was having a sale on chicken thigh quarters for $.39 a pound. Of course, I bought a ton. The meat is fine and works well in a number of dishes, though I have to say that I wouldn't buy it at its "regular" price - close to $2 a pound, when I can get chicken breast for $2 a pound at the nearish asian market. The amount of refuse with the skin and bones (which do go to stock, but still) drives the effective price up, and adds to the amount of work I have to do if I want to skin them first.

Anyway, I'd also found 4 slightly overripe avocados that day priced down to $1.20 total, so I ended up making super cheap guacamole, baking the chicken with a crust made out of corn tortillas that were going stale (spiced with homemade chili powder), making "refried" beans in the pressure cooker (only takes about an hour, from dry), and pairing with a side of lettuce. Overall cost about $1 per person. Pretty proud of that, though most of our meals are closer to $2/person.

Cool that you follow a similar cooking strategy =). I've been buying chicken breast @ $1.79-1.89/lbs at the wholesale club store (sam's club) for a couple years now... It always seems to be that price which I'm very happy with when compared to the other grocery stores and I agree about the extra work & waste from bone-in & non-skinless cuts of meat. Are you cooking for 2 as well? or just yourself?

Jack

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #33 on: March 30, 2016, 03:00:48 PM »
FYI, I only ever buy whole chickens:
  • The breast gets grilled or pan-fried
  • The thighs and legs get braised/stewed/poached (and usually shredded/pulled for use in Mexican dishes)
  • The wings get frozen and saved up until I have enough to make hot wings
  • The carcass gets made into chicken stock

I thought about this a little more and feel the need to confess that I'm not good at using the organs (heart, liver, gizzard). My mom loves fried chicken livers, but I'm not sure I've ever even worked up the courage to try them. Anybody have recipes for those?

Koreth

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #34 on: March 30, 2016, 03:21:01 PM »
Whole chickens are a great way to get plenty of food for cheap. As an example one whole chicken, stuffed with brown rice and roasted gets me:
  • 4-6 servings of meat (depending on your serving size)
  • giblets(livers) to flavor the rice with
  • pan drippings to make gravy from
  • giblets(heart, gizzard) to flavor the gravy with
  • rendered chicken fat (just as useful as butter or bacon grease as a cooking fat)
  • Shredded chicken picked from the carcass to use in future meals
  • skin, bones and joints from the carcass for making stock wtih (sometimes includes neck, depends on who butchered & packaged your chicken)

At this very moment, my freezer is stuffed with the bones of past chicken meals, waiting for a free weekend when I'll have time to make a stock. I also have a few meals worth of shredded chicken that needs to become soft tacos or similar.

If you have the freezer storage space, for extra bonus savings, wait until your local grocery stores have chickens on sale (< $1/lb is a good deal for non-organic/free range/etc) then stock up.
FYI, I only ever buy whole chickens:
  • The breast gets grilled or pan-fried
  • The thighs and legs get braised/stewed/poached (and usually shredded/pulled for use in Mexican dishes)
  • The wings get frozen and saved up until I have enough to make hot wings
  • The carcass gets made into chicken stock


I thought about this a little more and feel the need to confess that I'm not good at using the organs (heart, liver, gizzard). My mom loves fried chicken livers, but I'm not sure I've ever even worked up the courage to try them. Anybody have recipes for those?

As mentioned above I mainly use them to flavor the stuffing and gravy. With the livers, I'll saute them with onion, celery and carrot and the dry uncooked brown rice. Once the livers have browned, and the vegetables are softened, I'll add water in a 2:1 ratio to the amount of rice used, and leave to simmer until the rice is tender. Actually you don't *have* to use this liver flavored rice, as a stuffing. it can stand on it's own as a dish.

iknowiyam

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #35 on: March 30, 2016, 04:25:07 PM »
Mock Tuna (Chickpea of the Sea) Sandwich Filling

1 (19 ounce) can garbanzo beans (chickpeas), drained and mashed
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
2 teaspoons spicy brown mustard
1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish
2 green onions, chopped
salt to taste
1/8 teaspoon cayenne <---- yes, you need this, at least a pinch. it doesn't get too spicy, it imparts a flavor.

Combine in bowl or food processor, use for sandwiches or eat with crackers. I often replace the relish with tiny chopped bits of carrot or celery. Green onion is almost always omitted for me.

 Raisins are also a nice addition.


honeybbq

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #36 on: March 31, 2016, 09:39:12 AM »
I've been crushing it with our Easter ham.

Bought Easter Sunday morning. It was a big ol spiral cut ham for $13 (on sale).

Easter we had: ham, green beans, and quinoa

then came the leftover fest:

- potato/corn/ham chowder
- ham cheese and chive scones for breakfast
- hawaiian fried rice (ham, pineapple, peppers, etc)
- jambalaya (ham, peppers, rice, tomatoes - not real jambalaya but inspired by lol)
- tonight is hawaiian pizza

Plus I'm going to make and freeze split pea soup with the ham bone and drippings.

And I froze some more of the ham since it was too big.

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #37 on: March 31, 2016, 10:24:47 AM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Moisture into a pork loin?  How about not cooking the shit out of it?
USDA changed their guidelines, 145 degree internal temp is now considered cooked for pork.  If that worries you, cook it to 150.  It'll be super moist.  You can't put a damn pork tenderloin (assuming you are talking the little guys, and not a 6-8# loin) in a crock pot all day and expect it not to be dry as shit.

Brown it on the stove top, wrap it in foil with a little liquid, and stick it in a 300 degree oven until it gets to 145 degree internal temp.

Or, get a smoker, and smoke it low and slow....you'll be amazed.

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #38 on: March 31, 2016, 11:01:52 AM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Moisture into a pork loin?  How about not cooking the shit out of it?
USDA changed their guidelines, 145 degree internal temp is now considered cooked for pork.  If that worries you, cook it to 150.  It'll be super moist.  You can't put a damn pork tenderloin (assuming you are talking the little guys, and not a 6-8# loin) in a crock pot all day and expect it not to be dry as shit.

Brown it on the stove top, wrap it in foil with a little liquid, and stick it in a 300 degree oven until it gets to 145 degree internal temp.

Or, get a smoker, and smoke it low and slow....you'll be amazed.

Maybe I need to enunciate. Pork loin is a roast. One side is fatty. It can come bone in, or boneless and tied. It is either cooked as a whole roast (dry as a popcorn fart) or cut into chops (kinda chewy, not usually served to guests.)

Pork tenderloin is a tenderloin. A long round tube of delicious, moist, wonderful meat which is great as either roasted whole or cut into medallions. Tenderloin is hard to screw up. It is wonderful and cheap.

It is Pork Loin - the roast - that I am talking about. Looks like this:


MicroRN

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #39 on: March 31, 2016, 11:35:13 AM »
Chicken thighs are amazing on the grill.  I marinate them in garlic, fresh ginger, soy sauce, honey, and sesame oil.

Pork shoulder (also called boston butt) or any cheap large beef roast in the crockpot with just some sliced sweet onions, salt and pepper.  Cook it until it shreds, stir it up and let it cook a little longer.  It makes a huge amount of food, but freezes well so then we have food for a long time.  I serve it over something - rice, cous-cous, mashed poatatoes, or with a couple vegetable sides.   

We did a Beans & Rice week once, where we tried a ton of different recipes based around beans and rice, though we weren't strict on the rice part.  You can actually get amazing variety.  We only made it to 6, but I had more recipes saved up. 
1) Mexican style pintos, as part of burrito bowls
2) French White-bean Cassoulet (though we skipped the rice and did bread instead)
3) Channa Masala (Indian style chickpeas) over rice
4) Cajun red beans & rice
5) Indian style lentils over rice
6) Baked beans with cornbread

Learn to make bread.  It costs me from 0.25-0.75/loaf depending on whether it's a basic flour/salt/yeast recipe, or a sandwich bread with honey and milk.  The easiest is Jim Lahey's No-Knead bread.  That's my standby, and I'll usually make it twice a week.  Cornbread is a quick bread and very easy.   (Oops, sorry, just read the thing about no gluten.  I'll leave this for anyone else though).

Soup is about as cheap as it gets for food.  We make a lot of pureed vegetables soups (boil broth and any random veggies you want until soft, then puree.  You can dollop some butter on top, usually needs a fair bit of salt and pepper).  It often has a potato base, but the variety is endless.  In the summer, I make a zucchini-ginger one that I found on another site.  I've used up radish leaves, odds and ends of wilting vegetables, sweet potatoes, turnips, parsnips, celery root, yellow squash, carrots, spinach, and who knows what else.
« Last Edit: March 31, 2016, 11:37:21 AM by MicroRN »

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #40 on: March 31, 2016, 01:33:51 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Moisture into a pork loin?  How about not cooking the shit out of it?
USDA changed their guidelines, 145 degree internal temp is now considered cooked for pork.  If that worries you, cook it to 150.  It'll be super moist.  You can't put a damn pork tenderloin (assuming you are talking the little guys, and not a 6-8# loin) in a crock pot all day and expect it not to be dry as shit.

Brown it on the stove top, wrap it in foil with a little liquid, and stick it in a 300 degree oven until it gets to 145 degree internal temp.

Or, get a smoker, and smoke it low and slow....you'll be amazed.

Maybe I need to enunciate. Pork loin is a roast. One side is fatty. It can come bone in, or boneless and tied. It is either cooked as a whole roast (dry as a popcorn fart) or cut into chops (kinda chewy, not usually served to guests.)

Pork tenderloin is a tenderloin. A long round tube of delicious, moist, wonderful meat which is great as either roasted whole or cut into medallions. Tenderloin is hard to screw up. It is wonderful and cheap.

It is Pork Loin - the roast - that I am talking about. Looks like this:



Oh, I know exactly what you are talking about, the loin (you know, the one chops are cut off of) are delicious.  By far one of my favorite pieces of meat to throw on the smoker.  Pork loin sandwiches are amazing, and are truly Iowan.  Seriously, if you have trouble cooking them, get a GOOD digital meat thermometer, and try cooking the loin with the thermometer in place to monitor the internal temp of the meat.

I promise you, if you cook that pork loin to 145 degrees, take it out, let it rest for 10-15 minutes, and then slice it up, you'll be amazed.  And, the best part, if you don't cut it all up, like leave half of it "whole", put it in the fridge.  Find someone with a meat slicer, and slice thin slices of it for your own cold meat sandwiches.  It'll be better than anything you find in the store!


**Removed picture...will try to locate a more recent cook

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #41 on: March 31, 2016, 01:40:55 PM »
Eh, all I can find is several of my pulled pork and rib cooks on my smoker!  Appears that I do not take many photos when I am smoking pork loin, I'll make sure I get better about that.

But...



Ribs...with baked beans (with bacon and rib trimmings in them...).
My gosh, I need to leave work and go light my smoker!

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #42 on: March 31, 2016, 01:41:28 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Moisture into a pork loin?  How about not cooking the shit out of it?
USDA changed their guidelines, 145 degree internal temp is now considered cooked for pork.  If that worries you, cook it to 150.  It'll be super moist.  You can't put a damn pork tenderloin (assuming you are talking the little guys, and not a 6-8# loin) in a crock pot all day and expect it not to be dry as shit.

Brown it on the stove top, wrap it in foil with a little liquid, and stick it in a 300 degree oven until it gets to 145 degree internal temp.

Or, get a smoker, and smoke it low and slow....you'll be amazed.

Maybe I need to enunciate. Pork loin is a roast. One side is fatty. It can come bone in, or boneless and tied. It is either cooked as a whole roast (dry as a popcorn fart) or cut into chops (kinda chewy, not usually served to guests.)

Pork tenderloin is a tenderloin. A long round tube of delicious, moist, wonderful meat which is great as either roasted whole or cut into medallions. Tenderloin is hard to screw up. It is wonderful and cheap.

It is Pork Loin - the roast - that I am talking about. Looks like this:



Oh, I know exactly what you are talking about, the loin (you know, the one chops are cut off of) are delicious.  By far one of my favorite pieces of meat to throw on the smoker.  Pork loin sandwiches are amazing, and are truly Iowan.  Seriously, if you have trouble cooking them, get a GOOD digital meat thermometer, and try cooking the loin with the thermometer in place to monitor the internal temp of the meat.

I promise you, if you cook that pork loin to 145 degrees, take it out, let it rest for 10-15 minutes, and then slice it up, you'll be amazed.  And, the best part, if you don't cut it all up, like leave half of it "whole", put it in the fridge.  Find someone with a meat slicer, and slice thin slices of it for your own cold meat sandwiches.  It'll be better than anything you find in the store!


**Removed picture...will try to locate a more recent cook

OK - I'm holding you to this, and giving it a go next time we cook one. We buy them often because - cheap! but haven't found a cooking method that really works yet.

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #43 on: March 31, 2016, 01:46:13 PM »
ewwwww chicken thighs that's poor people food.... Can't be seen eating that

ಠ_ಠ

Seriously, if you're braising or stewing, thighs/drumsticks will end up tasting better than breasts would. In fact, making the cheap meat good is exactly what wet cooking methods are for! And the same goes for the cheaper/tougher cuts of beef and pork -- braised brisket or chuck roast is awesome.

But how do you get moisture into a pork loin - even slow-cooked they come out dry. Ugh. I swear I'm going to start injecting them with bacon drippings.

Moisture into a pork loin?  How about not cooking the shit out of it?
USDA changed their guidelines, 145 degree internal temp is now considered cooked for pork.  If that worries you, cook it to 150.  It'll be super moist.  You can't put a damn pork tenderloin (assuming you are talking the little guys, and not a 6-8# loin) in a crock pot all day and expect it not to be dry as shit.

Brown it on the stove top, wrap it in foil with a little liquid, and stick it in a 300 degree oven until it gets to 145 degree internal temp.

Or, get a smoker, and smoke it low and slow....you'll be amazed.

Maybe I need to enunciate. Pork loin is a roast. One side is fatty. It can come bone in, or boneless and tied. It is either cooked as a whole roast (dry as a popcorn fart) or cut into chops (kinda chewy, not usually served to guests.)

Pork tenderloin is a tenderloin. A long round tube of delicious, moist, wonderful meat which is great as either roasted whole or cut into medallions. Tenderloin is hard to screw up. It is wonderful and cheap.

It is Pork Loin - the roast - that I am talking about. Looks like this:



Oh, I know exactly what you are talking about, the loin (you know, the one chops are cut off of) are delicious.  By far one of my favorite pieces of meat to throw on the smoker.  Pork loin sandwiches are amazing, and are truly Iowan.  Seriously, if you have trouble cooking them, get a GOOD digital meat thermometer, and try cooking the loin with the thermometer in place to monitor the internal temp of the meat.

I promise you, if you cook that pork loin to 145 degrees, take it out, let it rest for 10-15 minutes, and then slice it up, you'll be amazed.  And, the best part, if you don't cut it all up, like leave half of it "whole", put it in the fridge.  Find someone with a meat slicer, and slice thin slices of it for your own cold meat sandwiches.  It'll be better than anything you find in the store!


**Removed picture...will try to locate a more recent cook

OK - I'm holding you to this, and giving it a go next time we cook one. We buy them often because - cheap! but haven't found a cooking method that really works yet.

How do you cook it?  Grill?  Oven?  Stove top then oven?  Crock pot (please no!)?

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #44 on: March 31, 2016, 01:47:17 PM »
And....this is the therm I recommend for monitoring temps
http://www.amazon.com/Maverick-Et-732-Remote-Smoker-Thermometer/dp/B004IMA718

Wireless receiver, allows you to sit back and watch it cook instead of having to check temp over and over.

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #45 on: March 31, 2016, 01:51:48 PM »
That thermometer is $75 CAD. I'm trying to think of things I have purchased for $75 CAD. The list includes my entire livingroom set, my bandsaw, and the suit I wore to my wedding.

I wonder if this one would work, although its still 10X more than I would normally pay for a meat therm.

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #46 on: March 31, 2016, 01:56:20 PM »
That thermometer is $75 CAD. I'm trying to think of things I have purchased for $75 CAD. The list includes my entire livingroom set, my bandsaw, and the suit I wore to my wedding.

I wonder if this one would work, although its still 10X more than I would normally pay for a meat therm.

I know, I know, it's anti-MMM.  I started smoking meat long before I became an MMMer (I'm really not, I just like all things financial), and it came highly recommended to me.  It is especially useful when doing 12 hour cooks, that start at oohhh, 10 PM, using charcoal and wood as the heat source.  Makes me sleep a little easier!

I'm sure you can find a lot cheaper thermometer's than the one I linked - I just know that when tested against a pot of boiling water, it was within 1 degree of 212 degrees F.  So, they are accurate.

Le Poisson

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #47 on: March 31, 2016, 01:58:59 PM »
That thermometer is $75 CAD. I'm trying to think of things I have purchased for $75 CAD. The list includes my entire livingroom set, my bandsaw, and the suit I wore to my wedding.

I wonder if this one would work, although its still 10X more than I would normally pay for a meat therm.

I know, I know, it's anti-MMM.  I started smoking meat long before I became an MMMer (I'm really not, I just like all things financial), and it came highly recommended to me.  It is especially useful when doing 12 hour cooks, that start at oohhh, 10 PM, using charcoal and wood as the heat source.  Makes me sleep a little easier!

I'm sure you can find a lot cheaper thermometer's than the one I linked - I just know that when tested against a pot of boiling water, it was within 1 degree of 212 degrees F.  So, they are accurate.

Its all good, but I have to admit that I'm laughing a little at us talking about a $75 thermometer for cooking $1 meals.

TheInsuranceMan

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #48 on: March 31, 2016, 02:01:25 PM »
That thermometer is $75 CAD. I'm trying to think of things I have purchased for $75 CAD. The list includes my entire livingroom set, my bandsaw, and the suit I wore to my wedding.

I wonder if this one would work, although its still 10X more than I would normally pay for a meat therm.

I know, I know, it's anti-MMM.  I started smoking meat long before I became an MMMer (I'm really not, I just like all things financial), and it came highly recommended to me.  It is especially useful when doing 12 hour cooks, that start at oohhh, 10 PM, using charcoal and wood as the heat source.  Makes me sleep a little easier!

I'm sure you can find a lot cheaper thermometer's than the one I linked - I just know that when tested against a pot of boiling water, it was within 1 degree of 212 degrees F.  So, they are accurate.

Its all good, but I have to admit that I'm laughing a little at us talking about a $75 thermometer for cooking $1 meals.

Seems a bit backwards, right?  They are super, super handy, and they insure you have everything cooked exactly how you like it.  Steak, chicken, pork, you name it.  I'm sure there are cheaper alternatives (I know there are more expensive ones!), but when I'm cooking for a large group of people (100+ at times), I need to be extremely accurate!

Jack

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Re: Meals under $2 per serving / Mustachian Recipes
« Reply #49 on: March 31, 2016, 02:03:51 PM »
How do you cook [pork loin]?  Grill?  Oven?  Stove top then oven?  Crock pot (please no!)?

Yes, yes, yes and no, respectively.