Am I the only person I know who picks up TV dinners and divides dollars by calories?
Big ol' Tombstone extra-cheese frozen pizza: $3.50. Two meals.
Two bell peppers: $3.98. Mistake.
Big ol' Tombstone extra-cheese frozen pizza: $3.50. Two meals.
Two bell peppers: $3.98. Mistake.
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Anal-retentive? Me? Hahahahahahaha.
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Anal-retentive? Me? Hahahahahahaha.
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hmm, no, haven't tried that! i will geek out over the cost of a recipe or a meal every once in a while.
*tucks a calculator in my purse for my next shopping trip*
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But they don't do dollar per calorie on TV dinners. Fortunately, that's usually pretty easy math. Above a penny per calorie is just not worth paying. I can go to a cheapy restaurant for that price! Half a penny is getting pretty good, especially if it's not all fat and starch.
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These peppers were bought with tikka masala in mind. I also got tofu, though I forgot the heavy cream and will have to pick that up later. The recipe "feeds four". Tombstone beats it handily on price, as do at least two of the places my coworkers and I go for lunch. (O'course, it'll be tikka masala. That's worth something.)
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When making food for myself, I tend not to really "cook" so much as throw stuff together. Frex, I just got done eating some "Imagine" brand creamy tomato soup to which I added a hunk of cheese, a handful of tortilla chips, and a handful of nuts. Each ingredient is expensive to buy ('cos all organic except the nuts, and nuts are expensive), but I can get 4 meals out of it with ingredients left over.
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Right, fair enough.
(I think Trader Joe's might have it in a single-serving pouch, btw.)
And I bet that beats both the other options.
...but I can get 4 meals out of it with ingredients left over.
*nod* For me, leftover ingredients have zero value because they don't get used... but as you say, if I got the hang of "throwing stuff together", that would improve.
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Are bell peppers out of season? I've paid that much for red peppers before, but never green.
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That's pretty impressive!
Are bell peppers out of season? I've paid that much for red peppers before, but never green.
I found the receipt. Turns out these two were $3.49/lb for these, together they weighed 0.96lb, price $3.35. (Anal-retentive? Me? Hahahahahahaha.) I doubt they're too far out of season in California -- vining stuff like peppers oughtta have a fairly long growing season here -- but yeah, it's probably the tail end of it.
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That's chili and cornbread. Homemade, starting from beans I soaked myself, with no meat. :-D
That still seems excessive. Are the food costs really high there?
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I wouldn't know unless I could compare to someplace that's "average". I gotta admit, though, fresh produce and raw ingredients (especially meat) are NOT the most inexpensive way to eat. People (around here) who sneer at the expense of prepackaged food should maybe look again.
I've decided that's the great unifier between Republican and Democrat, by the way. Sneer at women who don't cook.
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When I was a working mom, they sneered at me for not spending more time with my kids, and for not baking cookies for class treats. When I was a stay-at-home mom, I was sneered at for being lazy, having all that luxury, and for 'showing us up', despite the fact that I most certainly didn't try to show anyone anything, let alone 'up.'
And I get my share of sneers cooking my own food, too. Ya just can't win.
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And sadly, a lot of it seems to be based on sneers. The more I realize that, the more I value my friends who don't seem to get into that game. (I'm thinking, say,