Today’s post is Part III of the “Saving Money in the Kitchen” series that began Tuesday. You can read Part I here and Part II here.
Although I intended to hit points four through nine today, I think I should stick with four and five. Why? Between the tips, recipe and giveaway I once again had too much information to cover in one post but also my iron is low and I’m sleepy. So I’ll have a steak tonight, lick a few windowsills, chew on a couple rusty nails and try to cap off the ‘Better Living List’ tips on Monday. I’m sorry. Was that a TMI moment?
Don’t forget. There’s a giveaway at the end of the post. We’re also making these today.
How about a closer look.
Oh yes. We’re doing wild things with these…
Right. I ate so many of these that I’m now on a heavy-duty sugar buzz. Must. Focus. Let’s get back to the money saving, shall we? Got your notebook and pencil handy?
Plan your potential meals and make the most of what you already have available before you shop.
In order to plan the meals you will make you need to do three important things.
- Determine how many days ahead you will plan. I think it is best to start with a smaller time frame –say, four days to a week- and move up to longer periods rather than preparing two weeks or more in advance. I learned this the hard way back in the day when I concluded that if most people could plan for a week, I’d quadruple the efficiency and plan for a month. I spent scads of money, packed my refrigerator, and abandoned the plan within 8 days. I was too fickle with my tastes to want what I thought I would want two weeks after planning it. Shoot. In that time I’d moved on from a French food obsession to a fixation on Mexican foods. Can you blame me? The point is that I wasted money (and food) by planning too far in advance.
- Look through your refrigerator, pantry, cabinets, or wherever you stash your food. Take note of what you already have. Now look at list of potential meals you already made based on your family’s preferences. (You did make the list didn’t you?) Compare the lists. Do you have almost everything you need for any of those meals? Put those down as meals you’ll make in the next week.
- How many more meals do you need to round out the number you have in mind? Did you account for breakfasts, lunches and snacks? Don’t forget snacks. I did twice. It was ugly. One time I simply forgot. Another time, though, I thought I’d leave them off the list to help improve our diet and cut costs. On the third day I buckled and ran to the store with all five kids. I raced up and down the aisles throwing fruit snacks, granola bars, bags of chips, rice cakes, candy bars and dry cereal in the cart. It did not end up improving us. If you plan snacks, you’re more likely to eat one that is at least semi-healthy. Carrot sticks or crackers with yogurt dill dip is friendlier both to your budget and your waistline than a bag of chips and a tub of French onion dip.
Now that you have the list of meals that you’ll have over the next few days you have some other things to consider.
- Do you have any evening or weekend commitments that would require quicker meals? Put your fastest meals on those nights. Try to be realistic. Don’t put a meal that requires an hour and a half of work on a weeknight when you’re going to be whipped.
- Do any of your meals require steps that have to be done a day or two in advance? Make note of that on your meal schedule.
- Do you have to pack lunches for anyone? Make note of that and be sure to have them done the night before you need them.
Know what you need beyond what you have to make those meals.
Let’s say one of the meals on your list is broiled salmon with soba noodles, ginger scallion sauce and cucumber salad. Hypothetically, you have the salmon in the freezer, soba noodles on the pantry shelf, and everything but the ginger and scallions and cucumber for the sauce and salad. In this case, you simply need to add seedless cucumbers, ginger and scallions to the produce section of your list. Which brings me to a sidebar.*
*You need a standardized grocery list template. I keep one on the front of my refrigerator. When I run out of something or realize I will need it, I write it on the list. If the front of the refrigerator is too public for you, tape it inside a cabinet in your kitchen. Keep it and a- pencil- where you can get to it easily. The list I use is a simple table I put together years ago in a word processing program, but you can just as easily scrawl five boxes on a piece of paper. The boxes get the following headings: “Produce”, “Grocery”, “Dairy/Frozen”, “Meat/Deli”, and “Household/Miscellaneous”. When I say grocery, I mean shelf-stable items like dried pasta, canned tomatoes, flour, sugar, etc… The ‘Household/Miscellaneous” category is meant to hold all my cleaning supplies, paper goods, pet food, motor oil and other things that don’t quite fit into the food categories. Here’s a picture of the running list that is currently fixed to my refrigerator.
Once I’ve come down from my sugar high and grilled and eaten this giant flank steak on my counter top, I’ll get cracking on why it’s important to build flexibility and change into your plans and why, almost above all else, it’s important to not take any of this too seriously. But for now, I have a recipe and a giveaway to tackle.
First, I need to warn you a little about my homemade Twix cookie recipe. It makes quite a few, yes it does. That’s not the problem. The problem is that they’re little. And when food is little I feel justified in consuming many, many pieces. If we were talking about, say, little bitty salads this would not be a problem. But we’re not talking about salads. We’re talking about bite-sized golden butter shortbread cookies topped with real dairy caramel then dipped in a dark chocolate coating made with heavy cream and more butter, so help me God. Have mercy on my soul, they’re so very good. This has been a public service announcement from Foodie With Family.
If you are a better human than I am, you’ll stash these in the chill chest for a day before eating them. Don’t misunderstand, they’re good when they’re fresh. They’re too good as my now-burgeoning backside proves. But the depth of flavor they develop after sitting for twenty-four hours is astonishing.
For a photo-free, printer friendly version of this recipe, click here!
Homemade Twix Cookies
Ingredients:
- 1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature, divided
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 2 cups unbleached, all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or ground vanilla
- one batch dulce de leche (homemade or purchased)
- 12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
- 1 Tablespoon heavy cream
Cream 1 cup of the butter, salt, sugar and vanilla together until thoroughly combined. Refrain from eating this. It’ll totally mess up your ratios…
Add the flour and blend until the mixture resembles moist sand with pieces the size of peas scattered throughout.
If you take a small handful and squeeze it, the mixture should hold together well.
Preheat the oven to 300°F.
Lightly butter or spray a 36 mini-muffin pan with non-stick cooking spray. Mound the dough mixture into each mini-muffin cup. Or have your sous chef do it. You can clean up their job later. This stuff is like sand. You can just flick it into the wells with your fingers.
Use a small wooden tamper or your hands to press down the dough.
When all have been firmed, carefully use the tamper to push a well into the center of each cookie.
Bake for about 15 minutes or until golden around the edges. Do not over bake. Remove the pan to a cooling rack and cool 10 minutes before removing. You may need to persuade the cookies to pop out. If this is the case, cool until they’re sturdy and use the dull end of a butter knife to apply pressure to one edge of the cookie. It should pop right out of the pan. Allow cookies to cool completely before filling.
When the cookies are cooled, fill each well with dulce de leche. Place each filled cookie on a clean rimmed pan lined with a silpat or parchment paper. When all the cookies have been filled, transfer the tray to the freezer for two hours.
Before removing the cookies from the freezer, put the remaining butter, heavy cream and chocolate chips in a microwave safe container. Microwave on high for 30 seconds. Stir with a silicone or rubber spatula and microwave at 10 second increments, stirring after each one, until the chocolate is melted and smooth.
Remove cookies from the freezer and work quickly to dip the bottom half of each cookie into the chocolate, allowing the excess to drip away before replacing on the tray.
When they have all been dipped, return the pan to the freezer for thirty minutes.
If the chocolate has set up while the cookies were chillin’ like Dylan, microwave in 10 second increments, again stirring after each, until the chocolate is fluid and smooth. Take the cookies from the freezer. Drizzle chocolate over each cookie or pick cookie up and dip half of it into the chocolate. You need to work quickly if you’re dipping the cookies as the dulce de leche will return to room temperature rather quickly which will make the process a great deal messier. An impromptu poll of my Facebook friends revealed that a minority of them wanted the whole cookie dipped in chocolate. I tried. Really I did. But it looked like a great lump of chocolate. (And I ate them before I could photograph them.)
Store leftover cookies loosely wrapped in the refrigerator. If you have ’em.
Now the giveaway!
I want to help stock your pantry. There are a few things that make life a little more pleasant when you have them on hand. One of my favorites is cinnamon, specifically, Korintje Cinnamon. You may have seen teensy little bottles of this particular cinnamon sold at gold-standard prices at home kitchen gadget parties. I was given a bottle once and there was no looking back. This Indonesian cinnamon is sweet, fragrant and not-at-all bitter. It’s a revelation if you’re used to the 99-cent bottles of uncertain age. I want to give a full pound of Korintje Cinnamon from one of my favorite spice companies, Frontier Herbs. It contains fully 3% oil. It smells so, so good. And one pound of this should keep you in cinnamon for a while!
So what are the rules? It’s simple. Leave a comment on today’s post telling me some of your money saving tips. Don’t have any? No sweat. Tell me where you need the most help. Is it menu planning? Grocery shopping? Knowing what meals to make based on your family’s preferences? How to get your dog to stop eating garbage? (Well, maybe that’s my question. If anyone can help there I’d greatly appreciate it.) Is there any topic you’d like to see covered here on Foodie With Family? One entry per person, pretty please. Gots to keep it fair, you know. I’ll draw a name next Wednesday when I complete the ‘Better Living List’ part of our “Saving Money in the Kitchen” series.
Reader's Thoughts...
Brad says
What is kosher salt?
Bethany says
Okay okay… those just look… well, I shouldn’t make them. No seriously, I can’t! Okay, you twisted my arm. I AM pregnant, after all. Shortbread, caramel and chocolate is a necessary food group for us gestating ladies. Thank you SO much for posting this recipe 🙂
Oh and as far as meal planning, I do something similar. I shop every 2 weeks, kinda out of necessity since we live really really far away from the store. I have an excel spreadsheet I made up that lists all the common meals that we like, and so far I’m up to only making a meal once a month with a decent rotation. I totally agree about being realistic – there have been some weeks when I planned the menus while I was in a cooking mood. DON’T DO IT! I try to, especially now that I’m expecting #3 in 2 months, to make sure that MOST of my meals are either crockpot, casseroles, or come together in 30 minutes. I could have strangled myself the last time I shopped planning for mostly fancy meals… after cooking those dinners I had zero energy left for anything else.
Laura {novelbite} says
Yes. Yes, yes, yes. I came across this recipe after using the search terms craving+twix+homemade (i am not ashamed. i am not ashamed.). Hope to make these soon, if not tonight (i am not ashamed. i am not…). Thank you for sharing!
Rebecca says
I’m so happy you found me! And I’ve done that search myself a time or two 🙂
Teresa says
To save money, we buy our spices from Hillsdale Food co-op, refreshing them in small quantities every few months. We also buy our flours and dried beans there, a wonderful store visited by the Amish also. We also grow a large garden and can or freeze the surplus and participate in a crop share offered by Adams Farm in Liberty. The share is too large for our family so we divide it with friends of ours.
Queen of the Click says
Money saving tip: exchange cooking with friends and neighbors. I make an extra tray of lasagna, baked ziti or casserole and trade with a friend who has made an equally delicious baker’s tray of food. This way we both have another homemade meal and our families get to try something new…better than spending the money on a restaurant meal.
I need meal suggestions that I can prepare and has minimal cleanup. After work, I don’t mind slicing veggies and meats or cooking. Yet washing mixing bowls bothers me. So do you have any quick ideas for me?
Rigoberto Paronto says
Super-Duper internet site! I’m loving it!!! Will come back again once more – taking you feeds also, Thanks.
Sheila Korsmo says
I would have to say that the best money saving for my family is: I shop at Sams and Costco, I buy meats in bulk and use my foodsaver to freeze meal size portions. By doing this, I’m not paying the big bucks that the grocery stores are charging. When I make a meat dish in the crockpot, I make enough so that I can make future meals for the week from that 1 meal.
Mikell says
My best tip is to not go to the grocery store every week. I try to stock up and make it last for 2 weeks. I also cook in bulk, and divide up the meals for my husband and myself into small containers, and freeze for future meals. This works great with spagetti, chili, and soups.
Melissa says
You know what I said on the last post… well, heck, my sister has the same amount of space I do and you know how frugal she is, soooo yeah. Hm.
I mean, really Bec, you and I have such similar brains. Organized, methodical. We’re planners. All the tips up there? The way you outlined everything, and how you approach the planning? The grocery list you keep and its categories? Hello, MY BRAIN.
So I have to come up with a better budget. I know I can.
saveur says
I agree with many of the tips you’ve already talked about but being frugal stems from making your own homemade food. Beans, cornmeal and oatmeal are a few hearty nutritious and cheap staples in my home. As I live alone, I eat a lot of leftovers and have to balance time spent in the kitchen. I found I tend to overeat when I buy more groceries (in anticipation of future meals), because I feel I have to finish eating everything before it goes bad/sits in the fridge too long. So my suggestion is to buy just what you need, the day you need it, incorporating leftover food into your next meal plan. Frugal eating also means eating in moderation.
Kristin Kunoff says
I think my best money saving tip is buying frozen vegetables. I used to spend a fortune in the produce section and while my husband and I are both students, we need to save as much on groceries as possible. I do miss fresh veggies..some day we’ll have them again=)
Patrick says
I think my big problem comes in the area of planning ahead, or rather following the plan. I’ll buy the requisite groceries for a week or 2 that I’ve planned out, but then since I’m only cooking for myself I’ll often default to making something faster or easier, like a can of tuna. I really like cooking and really like eating good food, but the time investment often seems daunting. As a result I often end up wasting at least some of the fresh food I’ve bought.
maybelles mom says
I can’t say we are the most frugal. I am sort of a new mom (3 year old and almost 6 month old) and reformed profligate prodigal sort. But, recently, we have done better. We make three-four meals a week in the slowcooker (so no eating out); we stash snacks in our purses/brief cases so that there is no chance of hitting the work snack bar; shopping for fancy stuff at ethnic stores; freezing all veggie scraps to make veggie broth and then compost that. But, my number one tip is to remember to take the lunch we packed. It sounds simple but it was our number one money drain.
Jeri says
I love your blog! It always makes me want to try cooking something RIGHT NOW.
The biggest way we save money around my house is to make sure that there are yummy leftovers available for lunch. If not, my husband will go out to eat, which costs a lot and is worse for him! When we are finished with the meal for dinner, I package them up into lunch-sized containers so all he has to do is grab one and go. 🙂
For kid lunches I buy large portions of things and again, package them into reusable containers right when I get home from the store or whatever. I despise having to portion things out for lunch, and if I do it this way I’m not tempted to buy the wasteful and expensive individual packs of stuff! LOL
petoskystone says
2 tips: eat seasonally & *be flexible*. flexibility relates to buying what’s on sale not what you crave this very minute. what i could use help with is a list–maybe something i could print out–on what is seasonal for the different areas of the u.s. (thinking east coast, west coast, midwest, south).
Cristina says
Help me help me -I can’t make or stick to a plan.
Ok really, it’s the getting started that is holding me up.
I think I’m a little food moody, but I want to plan better, eat better and save money!
Amy says
We are moving from the “eating out” couple to the “cooking in” couple. We’ve saved money so far and I love knowing what’s actually in the food we’re eating. I’m trying by best to menu plan, but right now, it’s just in my head. I need to commit it to paper!
Robyn says
I buy soap pads to wash the dishes and they are rectangular shaped. I cut them in half and they feel better in my hand and I get twice as many:) Can’t wait to try the twix cookies.