How to menu plan to save time & money

How to menu plan to save time & money

How to Menu Plan
When I first moved out of home and in with my future husband, we went through quite a few of the general running-of-the-house role sharing tasks together. We soon found out what we were a) better at doing and; b) preferred doing.

One of the everyday jobs that I was happy to take away from him (for the most part), was cooking. He enjoyed cooking, and we even cooked together at times (because it seemed so romantic!) – but the cooking was best left for me because frankly, I enjoyed to eat dinner well before 9pm. His ‘measure twice, cut once’ mentality and my predisposition for becoming hangry (angry when hungry) was going against us.

Eventually though, cooking became tiresome for me. Every night after work, I would sit down with a pile of recipe books, glazing over them wondering; What are we going to eat? What could I be bothered to cook? What do we even have in the pantry/fridge? I couldn’t be bothered driving up to the shops now…

I just want to eat!

Every night, the same uncertainty was making cooking a chore & less enjoyable. So finally, my desire of being organised conquered – I employed the help of some brightly coloured sticky page markers and began what was to become, my life-long helper – the menu list.

As we were new to cooking for ourselves and we each had opinions on certain meals & flavours – our experiments, trials & errors became the foundation of the ultimate menu list. The recipes that got the thumbs up, ended up with a sticky page marker, the ones we weren’t so fond of, never got another look-in. Simple.

Note: You can go on and skip step 1. (creating a menu list) and go straight to step 2. (the menu plan) if it seems a bit much for you. I admit, it does take some time (give it a few hours at least). But you will reap the rewards on a weekly basis if you put in the time to begin with.

Stage 1. The menu list.

Can you imagine having all your favourite recipes at your finger tips – book title, page number, must have ingredients for the shopping list, at a glance? That’s what I imagined, so I created a spreadsheet with this simple system. It was easy once all the favourite recipes were marked. Here’s what I did:

Firstly I sub-titled sections on the spreadsheet in groups ie: beef, pork, chicken, fish, vegetarian etc. I then went through every page I had favourited and slotted the following information in the corresponding columns:

Column 1: Brief description – this isn’t the recipe title, as sometimes they can be a little fancy or long. This is my own brief description eg. Goulash beef & pasta.

Column 2: Recipe book & page number – this was a code, and didn’t include the full details. For example, Marie Claire’s Cooking, page 26 – became C26. And Family Circle Quick Pasta Recipes, page 36 became P36. Too easy!

Column 3: Ingredients to put on the shopping list – this is where you only include the things you know you’ll need to buy, rather than what you will already have in the pantry or fridge as a staple. You wouldn’t put pasta, stock, onion, tomato paste for example, but items such as sour cream, green capsicum would go in this column.

The third column takes time & patience. If you don’t do this section, it won’t put things into a spin – but it will save you time on a weekly basis as you won’t be opening recipe books to check what you need to buy.

Once you have this Holy Grail set, you are set. You can also add and remove as time goes on – as you can see from my list!

These pages have seen better days. They’re over 5 years old!

Stage 2 – Menu Planning. 

I used to use scrap paper and write the days of the week, with my codes from column 2 in them – and leave the bottom section as a shopping list. Until I found a menu planner notepad at kikki.k! There are quite a few around, even a search on etsy found a few well designed planners. Whatever works for you here, just get it on paper.

You’ll find that with a menu planned out – you’ll shop quicker, there’ll be less food wastage, you’ll spend less at the supermarket and spend less on take-away dinners!

 

Super Easy Halloween Dessert

Super Easy Halloween Dessert

This super-easy, super-delicious dessert also looks AMAZING and is perfect for both kids and adults alike. It looks as amazing as the Ice-Cream Soda (Spiders), and you can also get creative with different colours & flavours of jelly.

This one has been specifically created for an after dinner dessert on Halloween (for dinner, we are having Smoked Pork “Ghoulash” – keep an “eye-out” for that one on the blog soon). OK, enough with the sub-standard puns and on with the recipe for:

Scrambled Zombie Brains!

A few handy notes on the ingredients:

  • Pre-make the jelly ahead of time – it requires 4 hours to set. Using a fork, break up the jelly into blobby chunks.
  • You can either make your own plain sponge cake, or buy it from the supermarket. Cut the sponge cake into bite size pieces (don’t worry about being neat).

Assembly of Zombie Brain Trifle:

1. Scoop a layer of jelly into the bottom of a glass or clear dessert dish.

 

 

2. Scoop a layer of thick vanilla custard next.

 

 

3. Then a layer of cut up sponge cake. Adding the layers in this order means that the sponge cake gets scooped up with enough custard so it’s moist to eat.

 

 

4. So at this point, the Zombie brain needs a little more “ewwwww” factor, so we are going to add a drizzle of red food dye. If you use the little plastic squeeze bottles, you can easily rim the glass with food dye and let it ooze down into the cake and custard.

 

 

5. Last of all, top with more custard and jelly – half on each side of the glass so you get to see them both when looking into the dessert. A total visual feast!

 

 

Get creative!

As an alternative to Scrambled Zombie Brains, you might want to substitute the green jelly with blue jelly, and make Gargamel’s Minced Smurfs!

Recipe: Cumin Chicken & Cauliflower

Recipe: Cumin Chicken & Cauliflower

The idea for this recipe first came from a cauliflower salad my mum had made, where she simply splashed some vinegar in with steamed cauliflower trees and seasoned it with salt. Simple yet yummy! So I started a meal one night with having this as a side and thought some chicken would go well with it. I hadn’t finalised in my head how I was going to flavour the chicken yet, so as I’m cooking over the wok, I think out aloud “Hmmm, I think some cumin would be nice with this.” To my son’s horror, he replied, “What! Human???”
Cumin spice. Otherwise known as Human in our house.
Cumin Chicken & CauliflowerIngredients (serves 4):

400g chicken breast fillets, diced
1/2 cauliflower head, separated into bite sized trees
2 garlic cloves, chopped
2 tbsp Apple Cider vinegar + 1 tbsp extra
1 tsp cumin

Method:1. Add chicken and garlic to a hot wok with oil and brown.
2. Add cauliflower, cumin and 2 tbsp vinegar. Stir well until evenly coated.
3. Cook for 10 minutes on high heat, with a lid (to help soften the cauliflower).
4. Stir occasionally and towards the end, add the extra 1 tbsp vinegar and season with salt & pepper.

Serve with long grain rice and sprinkle a little cumin to colour.

1. Using a deep cookie cutter, pack the rice inside until level to the top.
2. Gently remove the cookie cutter to reveal your shaped rice!
Styling notes:
Off-White Plate – Target
Heart shape cookie cutter – Daiso
Baking crispy cookies

Baking crispy cookies

When I say crispy cookie, I don’t mean hard like packet biscuits. What makes these so crispy is the addition of oats.  These are so easy to make, don’t take too long, plus they keep very well too – they stay crispy all week!

This recipe is from my 500pg book titled, ‘The Art and Soul of Baking‘ and I’m sharing my variation on the recipe:

Crispy Dark Choc Chip Cookie Recipe

Ingredients:

110g unsalted, softened butter
1/2 cup firmly packed light brown sugar
1/4 cup + 1 tbs granulated sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
1 cup unbleached, all purpose flour
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
3/4 cup old-fashioned rolled oats (not Quick Oats!)
3/4 cup dark chocolate, roughly chopped

Variation:
Add 1/2 cup dried cranberries.

Method:

1. Pre-heat the oven to 180c and line baking trays with baking paper.

2. Mix butter & both sugars with a stand mixer on medium speed, until smooth & blended – about 2 minutes.
Add the egg and vanilla and blend well.

3. Add flour, baking soda & powder and salt. Mix on the lowest speed until there are no patches of flour.

4. Add the oats and chocolate (and cranberries), blend on low until just combined.

5. Use a small spoon to portion 2cm mounds onto the baking sheets, spacing them about 2″ apart.
Bake the cookies between 13-16 minutes.
Transfer to a cooling rack.

Storage:

Either in an airtight container, or like me – in a vintage cookie tin lined with a tea towel.

These are also great in lunch boxes throughout the week!

Original recipe ingredients and method can be found in:

Title: The Art & Soul of Baking, © 2008
By: Sur La Table with Cindy Mushet
Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC
Recipe: Cherry Oatmeal Cookies
Page: 274

http://www.surlatable.com/

How to make Moroccan Paprika Chicken

How to make Moroccan Paprika Chicken

Couscous is not only light & fluffy, but just like pasta & rice, it’s very versatile too. You can keep it simple with sautéed onion, baby capers and drizzled olive oil – or dress it up with additional ingredients like pumpkin and zucchini.

This recipe is super easy and very colourful too. It’s from a book titled The Thrifty Kitchen, by Suzanne & Kate Gibbs. The book not only serves as a fantastic kitchen resource, is packed to the brim with full page recipes accompanied with photos – but it also houses a lot of quick ‘snapshot’ style recipes, no longer than a paragraph long and with no accompanying images. And that is where I found this beauty!

Moroccan Paprika Chicken

Ingredients:

2 zucchini & 250g pumpkin, diced
3 cups chicken stock
2 tablespoons preserved lemon, sliced*
2 cups instant couscous
4 chicken thigh fillets (or 3 chicken breast fillets)

*If you don’t have preserved lemon slices, still try this recipe and add lemon wedges to serve instead.

Method:

1. Boil the diced zucchini and pumpkin in the chicken stock for 5 minutes.
2. Add 1 tablespoon olive oil, preserved lemon and couscous to the pot.
3. Take off the heat and leave covered for 5 minutes.
4. Season chicken fillets and grill each side until cooked and golden.
5. Slice chicken fillets and dust with paprika.
6. Serve couscous topped with chicken slices and a sprig of mint.