Wednesday, January 14, 2009

On a shoestring

Instapundit is amused and so am I. CBS claims feeding a family a home-cooked meal for $35.00 is on a shoestring, and asks "How low can you go"?
As The Early Show Saturday Edition's "Chef on a Shoestring," Freitag sought to take a traditional, three-course spaghetti dinner and give it a little twist any family would love - on our new, lower, recession-busting budget of $35.
I've fed ten people for a whole lot less than $35.00. If the chicken was on sale, I could make a gumbo that would feed ten people for under $5.00. That chickens cousin, with some dumplings would feed a crowd for under $5.00. It's hard to beat a pot of red beans and rice, and that's almost free. Way under $5.00, unless you want sausage in it. For that matter, Freitag's Spaghetti dinner could be cooked for not much more than $5.00.

Or, for the truly frugal, a pot of mustard greens and a pone of cornbread is about the cheapest meal I know of. Lots of folks would be proud to have greens and cornbread for supper.

I've known women, who with $35.00 could feed a family for a week.

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous7:13 AM

    By coincidence, my sister and I just finished a Crockpot of large lima beans. We estimated the overall cost to be $2.50 including the beans, the ham, the cornmeal and the electricity and gas to cook it all. It provided 7 all-you-can-eat portions at 37¢ per portion.

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  2. Anonymous9:15 AM

    Same thought here. A dollar's worth of sausage, a pound of beans and a half-pound of rice and WOW!

    I could probably do a WEEK on thirty-five bucks, but it wouldn't be instant anything...

    MC

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  3. Anonymous2:41 PM

    For a good laugh at the expence of CBS, go to the article Pawpaw linked and read the readers' comments at the bottom.

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  4. I have the Reed College Student's Guide to Cookery and Housekeepery, a lighthearted little 1960's cookbook that was based on feeding a gaggle of four college students on a dollar per day (in 1960's prices). The ingredients they used (tuna, hominy, etc) are about 7 times as expensive today, but four college students eating for $7/day?

    See BS is generally out of touch, but this is REALLY out in left field.

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  5. I've made more than one meal outta collards and corn bread. Those folks need to come down to the country and learn how to save $$ on groceries...

    If ya grow it, cost is cheap, if ya shoot it, cost of a bullet; something tells me THAT was never a consideration :-)

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  6. Anonymous6:31 AM

    35 bucks?!? Heck, a pound of spaghetti noodles is $1, a jar of el-cheapo sauce is $1, a loaf of french bread is $1, and $3-5 bucks for meat. Let's see, that makes $8 total, leaving 27 dollars for beer.

    What are these people smoking?!?

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