As a culture, we have lost so many of the people who survived the wars and the Great Depression, and that incredible collective wisdom on how to survive with very little, with no waste. I'm not talking about the millions of poor souls who have to walk five miles for water or even the "
So, dear reader, herein begins a modest blog on saving money, and making the most of everything you have in your frigerator, freezer, and pantry at the same time. As a lover of food, I hope you will like the ideas and occasional recipes because there really is no excuse for bad food. I'm not the first to say that; I heard Jeffrey Steingarten say so, (food editor of Vogue Magazine, food writer, and all-around super foodie,) and it's true.
There is no shame in frugality. Isn't it something to which we should all aspire? Perhaps in light of our Green Consciousness, we can also take on the challenge of using our food to its fullest. Currently I am cooking through my freezer and finding things I had forgotten about. A six month-old steak was defrosted and turned into stew in the crockpot, along with potatoes, carrots, and onions and a stale quarter-bottle of red wine from Trader Joe's. I think it cost $1.00 per serving.
I'm also attacking the door of condiments.
Mustard: (all of these ideas should be "to your taste" -- after all, it's your house.
* mix with plain yogurt, salt, pepper and horseradish or wasabi for a sauce for poached fish
* almost empty jar or bottle makes a fine salad dressing container. Add olive oil, mashed garlic, salt, apple cider vinegar and a dash of hot sauce
* mustard is what defines something as "devilled" so add it to egg, tuna, chicken, potato salad, etc.
* spread mustard on chicken skin and coat with breadcrumbs before baking or roasting
* mix mayonaise into mustard for your own sandwich spread
* my neighbor Greg adds honey, hot sauce, and mustard to cooked chicken wings for a lovely glaze; frankly it makes a great dip too
* rub mustard and brown sugar into the scored skin of a smoked ham while warming in the oven. You can stud it with whole cloves for dramatic effect
* a vegetarian friend serves mustard on the side of all her steamed vegetables (pierogi and knishes too)
* add to ground beef for that "je ne sais quois"
I'd love any ideas you have -- if you're reading and feeling generous, or hungry. I'm thinking of hitting the cheese drawer for my next blog, and there will always be a condiment corner. Also, I'll get those stats on food waste for next time. Until then, eat well, waste less, and be happy!