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It's Lion Turtles all the way down ([personal profile] lettered) wrote2009-03-26 10:45 pm
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Cooking for one

Housemates and I have separate meals. It works out taste-wise, money-wise. But I find grocery shopping and cooking for one difficult.

I like going to the grocery store every day, taking into account the cheapness of large quantities, and the amount of time I have, that proves difficult as well. I go about once a week, and try to buy for the week.

That is part of the frustration. If I want to have salad, I can buy those bags of lettuce, but that's about five salads for me. Which means I have to have salad every day of the week, or else it goes back. Seems the best way to handle that would be making the salad a little different every time, but this requires supplemental ingredients. And the supplemental ingredients often come in large quantities too: I could have a salad with red peppers one night, and a salad with pears and blue cheese the next. But I would not use all the red pepper and all the pear, and I would need to find other things to put them in.

Meat should be easier. You can buy a pack of chicken and put it in the freezer. Then each night you can take out a breast and cook each one differently. But I find I am not creative enough to come up with different things to do with the chicken. Mostly I come up with baking or frying it with different herbs and spices. Sometimes I think about using different sauces. And of course sometimes I think, "I could make a cassarole! Or a chicken pot pie!" or something. But again, so many other perishable ingredients go into those. I could use all the ingredients up and eat pot pie seven days straight. Or I could waste the other ingredients, the red peppers, the pears. Or I could find other uses for them, but again, I lack creativity in this department.

I also have problems with freezing meat. It never tastes as good once it's been frozen. Things stick to each other so you have to defrost them just to get one out. Even if you put them in separate baggies the baggies end up sticking together. They stick to the boxes they're in. Thawing takes so long.

You guys, my life is obviously a perfect graveyard of buried hopes.

I'm just wondering how you single people, or those of you often cooking for one, handle these things. Got freezer storage advice? Foods you buy because they last longer? Base ingredients you buy and then change up every night? Different fast simple ways to cook chicken, make a salad? Combinations you do--like what to do with a red pepper when you've used a fourth of it for salad but don't want to have red pepper in the salad every night? Things you don't mind eating every single day?

And how about recipes in general? Got any you want to share?

I love food. Except beans and potatoes; those are gross.

a few things that work.

[identity profile] kestrelsparhawk.livejournal.com 2009-03-27 08:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I have the same problems as I see not only you but your respondents have. The things that have worked best for me are: 1) resign myself to making things I don't mind eating as leftovers for a couple of days (spaghetti w/bolognese sauce is my standard here. I can vary it by changing the pasta or throwing cinnamon and/or wine into the sauce after a day or two.

2) Freeze the parts of veggies I don't eat to cook with later -- I love vegetable soup. The red pepper after freezing would still be good on a small pizza, added to a taco, etc.

3) Eat mostly ready-to-eat during the week -- ie keep around sausage, cheese, crackers, celery and carrot sticks, olives, whatever and just pick among them for dinner, adding a hot soup on the side in winter. (You can make a pot of whatever appeals for the week.) On the weekends, have a bit of fancier eating, and do the prep to make your weeks easy.

4) good plastic baggies shouldn't stick together. I freeze beef, chicken, and whatever in small bags and put them all together in a larger ones. Glad and Ziplock both work for me -- parchment is a fail. It's worth buying, rather than re-using vegetable bags from the store, for these. Then of course wash the bought bags and re-use.
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Re: a few things that work.

[identity profile] tkp.livejournal.com 2009-03-28 06:45 am (UTC)(link)
throwing cinnamon and/or wine into the sauce after a day or two.

....I have bug eyes right now. This is genius! The cinnamon sounds...intriguing.

I never actually even thought about freezing veggies. I just assumed it'd be bad. But yeah, using it on pizza or *in* something would work.

3

This is what I try to do. But a lot of times on my days off, I think, "ah! Now I shall cook and prep for the week!" but I can never really think of what to cook or what is sustainable that I can prepare to use later in the week.

4

Maybe my plastic bags are cheap. So--parchment paper doesn't work for you? Some people above say use wax paper. My mom always did that, but I assumed it wouldn't be that different than bags or foil. But I have problems with those and I just get so impatient (particularly because I'm STARVING by the time I get home) that I just gave up.

Thanks so so so much for your help and advice. I think it's really cool I can just ask something like this and people want to help me. You rock!