• Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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        6 天前

        If your problem is you buy ingredients but can’t be arsed to turn them into food? Resist those beautiful fresh veggies and go get the frozen bag of the same thing. Not only will it keep until you really want to cook, it’s already washed and cut, and it has all the same vitamins. Since you’re already saving money, splurge on the better brand.

        Also, go ahead and get some prepared food for no-cook days that are still cheaper than delivery. If you’re inspired to cook that very day by a particular ingredient, make it a simple way, because shopping and stowing is also a whole chore.

      • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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        6 天前

        Have you considered cooking simpler dishes that require far less work?

        Here’s a simple one:

        • Brown one 1lbs of ground beef (takes about 10 minutes) in a skillet
        • pour off the excess liquid fat (not down the drain of your sink. Put it in a container and throw it in the trash if you don’t plan to use it for another recipe_
        • Add 3/4 cup of water to the meat in the skillet
        • one pouch of this:

        Stir the contents of the pan on and off for about 2 minutes.

        You now have a 1lbs of taco meat.

        Empty a bag of lettuce into a bowl. Scoop out the taco meat and put it on the lettuce.

        Sprinkle cheddar cheese on top of it.

        You’ve got taco salad and it took you a bit less than 15 minutes.

      • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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        6 天前

        Here and Here. These are easy recipes and take minimal effort and only require a few ingredients each.

        Obviously the second recipe requires a crockpot. IMO crockpots are worth it because they are a set-it-and-forget it style of cooking.

      • M137@lemmy.world
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        6 天前

        I only buy fresh stuff if I’m going to cook it that day, otherwise frozen or canned. Then I also always buy food that takes little to no preparation and/or make a lot of anything I’m making when I have motivation and freeze that for the days (which are most days for me) when I’m stuck with no motivation. So I always have some food that’s easy to make or just heat up that won’t go bad (at least within a few days). I can’t say how it is where you live, but here in Sweden there’s been a great increase in the variety of frozen veggies etc. Stuff I’ve never seen before like many kinds of beans, mushrooms, avocado, some salad types etc. which is awesome since they keep for much longer.

  • G4Z@feddit.uk
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    6 天前

    I live walking distance from 2 small super markets, I walk to those near every day and just get a few things and I also get hello fresh and I always cook those. So generally my fridge is pretty empty but I always eat well. Just in Time Home Economics you could say.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    6 天前

    This happens to us - if I cook dinner for everyone, two of us eat, if I cook dinner for two of us, everyone wants to eat. If I make enough for leftovers, nobody takes them to lunch. If I don’t make enough, they ask why there is not enough for lunch.

    Things that help on your question though -

    Canned beans, canned tomatoes, canned coconut milk, canned pumpkin, jarred spaghetti sauce, spices - a lot of our staples are not perishable.

    Do you live where you can stop by the store on the way home? Then don’t buy perishables for the week, buy them for the meal you are making.

    Some foods and meals freeze pretty well, freeze them and keep a list of what’s in the freezer so you remember to eat it.

    I hate meal planning but it helps a lot. I sometimes put a note on the fridge “we have food for dal with spinach, chicken & cabbage, sheet pan gnocchi with sausage and broccoli, eggs and potatoes” or whatever we have the food to make, and cross them off as they are made.

    Some foods make other foods. So if I make a hunk of pork, it’s pork, rice and beans then enchiladas then burritos, and so on.

  • drunkpostdisaster@lemmy.world
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    6 天前

    I just hunt and eat the homeless. I work for the municipality so I just leave what I don’t eat around park benches, bus stops and the front of stores to scare the rest away.

  • haych@feddit.uk
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    6 天前

    Meal plan. Write what you’re cooking for the week, buy only ingredients for that.

    Anything uncooked goes in the freezer, you can defrost and cook/reheat a lot of food, stop throwing stuff away.

    • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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      6 天前

      Problem is that some of us have freezers the size of matchboxes, so it is very limited what leftovers we can put in the freezer. It’s something I have attempted to tell my parents who have big freezers and lots of good ideas to how you can buy this and that in bulk and just freeze it for later and save so much money!! Cool. But my freezer is still the size of a matchbox.

      • haych@feddit.uk
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        6 天前

        That doesn’t stop you from Meal Planning ahead and only buying what you need for that week.

        And leftovers can often make great soups, stews, and curries. They can last in the fridge for about a week.

        • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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          6 天前

          Sure, but I just wanted to point out that some of us do not have freezers that can store a lot of food. Whenever I see people being like “just freeze the leftovers” I look at my freezer like “how?”. If I put a bag of beans, a bag of ice and some springrolls in there, it is filled to the brim.

          People shouldn’t assume that everybody have tons of space to store perishable foods. That’s all.

          In my household we usually go for small packs of food when we shop groceries. Meats and vegetables etc. We go for small sizes because we don’t want to end up throwing out food. It’s not cheaper, but it is less wasteful in the long run.

          • Hazel@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            6 天前

            I have a reasonable sized freezer, not a huge one, but I feel like if I put a bag of ice in it I’d have very little space. Ice cube trays will leave you with more room.

          • haych@feddit.uk
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            6 天前

            I gave multiple ways to reduce food waste. You only responded about the freezer and clung to it, you’re still talking about it. If you have your own method to not waste food then this post and my comment aren’t about you, stop playing the victim.

            • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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              6 天前

              I’m not playing victim. I’m just pointing out that some people have tiny freezers.

              • haych@feddit.uk
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                6 天前

                Then use any other of the methods suggested, stop going on about freezers!

                • Nangijala@feddit.dk
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                  6 天前

                  You really do not have to be this aggressive, my dude. I don’t have meal planning issues, I just wanted to bring up one aspect of meal planning that doesn’t always work for everybody.

                  People work with what they have, I just wanted to mention the thing about freezers because people tend to always assume that everybody has a lot of freezer space, which isn’t the case. That is all. No need to get all bent out of shape over it.

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    6 天前
    1. Consider therapy or medication.

    2. Buy nonperishables in a higher ratio, such as canned, pickled, or dry goods.

    3. If you’re not concerned about your health enough to cook your own food every day, then just don’t buy food that has to be cooked every day.

    4. Remind yourself why you’re doing it, set a timer, and get it done. “This is for me. I love good food, I love my body.”

    • _donnadie_@feddit.cl
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      6 天前

      A thing that has helped me a lot is to go buy food when I’m not hungry. It reduces my chance of overeating and buying lots of food, also making me spend less money.

      When I used to cook a lot for myself in uni it helped a lot to plan meals.

    • Burninator05@lemmy.world
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      5 天前
      1. Food prep. It maybe cuts down on variety but you only have to cook once. The rest of the time you’re just warming something up.
      • JargonWagon@lemmy.world
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        5 天前

        I second food prepping. If you want more variety, separate some of the prepped foods from each other so that you can mix and match.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    5 天前

    It comes down to planning meals and a certain amount of acceptance that what you’ve got in the house is what you eat, period, even if the specific food isn’t what you’re in the mood for at the moment. Fast food, doordash etc are difficult habits to break. They reward your desire to have what you want when you want it, which is a big reward, and can make living on your own food feel like a punishment by comparison. But that feeling is just part of the habit. Eventually it goes away.

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      6 天前

      This isn’t “THE” solution though. Plenty of other options. My favourite is meal prepping - spend three hours cooking for the entire week, put it in the fridge. Instead of an hour / hour and a half each day. You only have to clean up after yourself once too.

      Issues are you need to prepare things that reheat well, or that you can quickly “cook up” each day without it taking too long. I.e. “just add the sauce to the salad” type of deal.

  • Rooty@lemmy.world
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    6 天前

    Buy food that has a long shelf life - lentil, rice, beans, canned vegetables, salsa jars. As a bonus it also doesn’t have to be refridgerated.

  • Aspharr@lemmy.world
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    5 天前

    Bulk make your food. I find that making cooking an “event” you do every week or so is much more manageable than trying to cook your own food each night.

    I’m a big fan of soups, stews and chili. I have a large stock pot and I’ll basically make one of those to where it’s almost full. It can take a long time to cook that much food, but it makes tons of servings. Then I’ll freeze 1/2 to 2/3 of it for future meals. I actually find these types of dishes are even better once you thaw them out. Nutrition wise it’s basically a ton of veggies/beans and some meat, so fairly cheap per meal made and super nutritious.

    Bodybuilder style “meal prep” is also awesome if you don’t mind having the same meals multiple times a week. I like bulk making brown rice in a rice cooker along with some kind meat or fish and finally then adding in a microwave steam pack of veggies. If you have an Aldi available to you their California blend is awesome and fairly affordable for the convenience of just popping it in the microwave. Shout out to Sam’s Club and Costco who both have bulk packs of frozen meat and veggies to help on cost.

    It can get more complicated if you live with others who have different tastes and preferences from yourself. Another hurdle is having the ability to freeze all the excess foods. But when I was single living in my own apartment I don’t think I ever ate more simply and affordably than that. Sprinkle in the occasional “treat” of some kind of takeout and you’re living the good life!

    E: This is obviously from a US perspective, but I’m sure my non-us counterparts can substitute in their equivalents where needed.

  • banazir@lemmy.ml
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    5 天前

    Here’s a tip I learned so very long ago: Never shop hungry.

    That being said, I’m really careful about what I buy anyway and plan my purchases so that I end up using everything. Fresh foods can still spoil because I didn’t spot a moldy spot, but that’s pretty rare. Dried foods are great.

    Honestly I have little good advice to give aside from awareness and planning, since I am by nature perfectionist about my food and budgeting and can’t relate to the meme.