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#cheap recipes
saltandlavenderblog · 3 months
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Sautéed cabbage and sausage recipe
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vidaamour · 29 days
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Cajun pasta;
Spice mix; 1 teaspoon each of the following.
Smoked paprika
Onion powder
Garlic powder
White pepper
Black pepper
Sea salt
Oregano
This will be used to season any chicken, sausage, shrimp or tofu You’re adding to the dish as well as the sauce.
In a large skillet cook and season your choice of protein, cook fully and set aside. While your choice of pasta boils, finely dice a shallot.
Roughly Chop and de-seed whole yellow or red bell pepper along with a fresh tomato, I remove the core, seeds and skin from my tomato before chopping.
Drain your pasta and set aside to cool. In a LARGE heated skillet melt some butter about tea-tablespoons worth along with a teaspoon or a squeeze worth of tomato paste and the diced shallot. Let it cook down for five to ten minutes depends on how hot your pan is.
Add in a cup and a half of heavy cream, your protein, and your vegetables. Let the heavy cream come to a steady bubble stirring occasionally before adding 2/3 cup of Parmesan cheese and the rest of your spice mixture. Mix and let it come to a bubble again before adding in your pasta and mixing it very well together.
Boom baby it’s literally that easy! Pro tip I used pre cooked grilled chicken from the grocery store and just seasoned it up in a pan at home.
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mermazeablaze · 5 months
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If you have leftover cranberry sauce whether homemade or canned, whole berry or jellied - do yourself a favor & make a parfait out of it. My mom used to make my brother & I cranberry sauce parfaits around the holidays.
She would coat the bottom of a plastic cup with whipped cream, then add cranberry sauce, top with canned (pitted) dark cherries/pie filling, generous layer of dark cherry/mixed berry/vanilla Greek yogurt, another layer of cranberry sauce & cherries/pie filling & then top with more whipped cream.
It's fucking delicious.
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spoonierecipes · 7 months
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Chicken and Potatoes
The icon recipe. 1/5 price, 1.5/5 energy, optional items make 2/5.
Ingredients
Chicken breast, preferably defrosted
Baby red potatoes
Pearl/boiler onions (optional)
Bell peppers (optional)
Butter/margarine
Olive oil
Worcester
Rosemary
Pepper
Cinnamon
Preferred chicken seasonings
Oven (350°f)
2 Aluminum pans
Skillet/pan
Cutting board
Object to stir
Steps
Grab a skillet, board, and the aluminum pan, preheat the oven to the set degree.
Get your poatoes and wash them, then set on the cutting board. Only cut them in half, put them into an aluminum pan. Coat in oil, rosemary, cinnamon, pepper, Worcester, and probably more if you want it. Set aside.
Get your chicken into a pan. It's okay if it's frozen, just run it under warm water to remove any frost or ice. If it's thawed, stab it with something. Fork or knife preferably. Use enough Worcester to make it soak in and for it to coat the bottom, or however much you have left. Whichever comes first. Then coat in seasonings to your own desire.
If you have bell peppers and onions, now is when you cut them. Peppers into strips, and onions only need the roots cut off, maybe the top if you need that gone. Make sure to check the onions to make sure they're still good, and to remove the little papery layer.
Your oven should be preheated by now, so put the chicken and the poatoes in. If you don't have the extra ingredients, just wait until the chicken and potatoes are cooked through. The chicken will take longer if it's frozen, but that's okay.
If you have peppers and onions, now you get the skillet. Turn on the stove, throw some butter in the skillet. Once it's melted and the pan is coated (just move it around a little), toss in the peppers and the onions. Cook until soft and warm, or longer if you want, just rememberto stir so nothing burns. The onions layers may start separating-- that happens, it's okay.
Once those are cooked, set aside. Either in a bowl or just cover the pan, whichever you can manage. Once everything is done, throw it together on a plate, and then you're done.
This is what it should look like. Mine is plated nicely, but you don't have to make it pretty. Just make it work for you.
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razzdrgn · 6 months
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ok it's time for razz recipes get ready for some cooking momence
i have an eviction trial in 2 weeks so im gonna teach you how to make extremely cheap recipes with as few ingredients as possible because i have no money to spend and enough mental disorders to make me love cooking but hate the amount of work that goes into it
todays recipe is: flatbread, probably of the mediterranean variety but i dont know actual recipes i legit just made this shit up after watching the bdg zelda recipes video
all you need is:
flour
water
a pan
and thats it. Its that easy
theres more you can use to make it better tho and ill bring those up as they come up but ill do the whole cooking instructions thing under this readmore
okay so. flatbread
i think its also called like. unleavened? but i dont really know what that means and im still confused after looking it up so im just callin it flatbread because it is bread that is flat
step one is to pour some flour in a bowl. i recommend about 1 cup, but i never really measure and do it by eye/feel so you can add more or less if you want.
first optional thing to talk about briefly before the recipe really starts is salt. i highly highly highly recommend adding salt to this, because it allows the bread to actually have. yknow. flavor. and not suck. but ive made this without salt and its also good so like, do whatever u want
you can also add other spices if you want flavoring like that. ive had success with garlic powder and red pepper flakes, but honestly cookijg is most tun when ur just wingin it so throw whatever spices you like in and see how it turns out
so once all ur dry stuff is in the bowl, you should gently mix/whisk it together. i usually use a fork or knife for this since flour sticks to shit a lot and the smaller surface it has the less its gonna stick. plus with a fork it helps get things in evenly really quickly.
once everythings in and mixed is when you add your water. id say like, roughly 1/3 to 3/8ths of a cup is fine, or adjusted for how much flour you have, you really do not need much, just enough that everything comes together. if you add enough that its a bit of a shaggy but congealed mass, you can turn it out onto a work surface and knead it/fold it a little to make it thicker. i didnt like it when i did this because of texture things so i like to add just enough extra for it to be a bit of a goop.
once you got your "dough" make sure your pan is on the stove heated to uh. 3? or 4? i hate that stoves dont have proper temp markings but thats about as hot as i make mine on whatever arbitrary scale it uses.
at this point you can add in the next optional thing, which is some sort of fat. this can be an oil of your preferred variety (i am canola gang because i like to fry things while also being allergy friendly), or you can just melt some butter which is what i usually do. hell you could use like, lard or crisco if you've watched too many b dylan hollis videos. a fat is a fat. its gonna help cook the bread more evenly, will make its "crust" crispier, and make it taste better.
all you gotta do now us dump your dough onto the pan and let it cook. roughly five minutes per side but you can flip it a few times if you need, just keep an eye on it. you wanna check the edges to make sure the insides are getting properly cooked all the way through, and make sure to press down on it to make sure its making full contact with the heated surface when possible as especially thinner breads can tend to curl up a bit
while its cooking in the pan you can optionally add some shredded cheese onto the bread. i recommend doing this right before adding your dough, and right after, to make sure the cheese gets properly incorporated into each side, but you totally can also just drizzle it on at any stage and let it melt by flipping the bread onto the cheesed side. i use an italian 4 cheese mixture from my cheap local supermarket chain and thats good for the kinda savory flavor i like, but experiment! use one cheese you like, or maybe a different blend (i also really like mexican cheese blends that u use for tacos or burritos).
once the stuffs nicely cooked and browned, its good to eat. i mean its technically been ok to eat this whole time none of the ingredients are necessarily bad to eat raw but obviously you dont wanna shove fistfuls of flour into your maw.
i recommend pairing this with an iced tea of your favorite flavor persuasion as tea is a nice smooth drink you can also make super easily, some refried black beans which you can get in a can super cheap and turn into a nice dip, and some yellow mustard, which honestly goes with this way more than i thought it would by adding a bit of a sour kick which i like. obviously try pairing it with whatever you have in your kitchen, i dont know what you have. maybe you got some eggs that are about to expire and want to make some kinda breakfast bread. maybe you wanna feel that kinda childlike wonder by combining foods so you mix it with some box mac and cheese and ketchup. maybe you splatter some tomato sauce and add some kind of cheese product to make it into a shitty pizza. i have done all of these things and they are certainly all things you can do if you also want to do them
thank you for reading my extremely long recipe post join me next time where i do uhhh. something else maybe. maybe ill do that iced tea method i talked about i feel like for some folks hot tea can be a bit unapproachable and ice tea can feel like its impossible to make but i promise you its way easier than you think
ok bye!! love you
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slowlycooking · 1 month
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hippieghost · 6 months
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It always amazes me when people don't know about the cheap biscuit donuts so I'm posting the recipe here
Here's what you need
Oil for frying the donuts
A pan deep enough to fry them in
Cinnamon
Sugar
Biscuit tubes
Now listen. Look at me. Look at me. Do not go for the nice flaky biscuits or the grands or whatever. Look to the little tubes. The cheap off-brand tubes that look like little hockey pucks.
You want these guys
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Every tube has 10 biscuits
Cut every biscuit into quarters so they look like this
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This is your prima materia of donut, your essence of the witchcraft we're about to do.
Next, heat up some oil in a large skillet or pan. You want enough that the oil can completely cover the donut.
Once it gets hot, put the biscuit pieces in and fry them until golden brown
Then drain them on some paper towels or bags. Let them cool but only enough that you can handle them.
Step 2, the good stuff
Your gonna pour some sugar and cinnamon in a little paper bag. You can also do this with powdered sugar by itself. I like to set up a bag of each. Once it's in the bag, shake it up a bit, then add some of the donuts and shake it up again to get a good coating
Depending on where you live each roll of biscuits is usually around a dollar, give or take like fifty cents
Every tube makes 40 donuts
You're welcome.
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bookshopwitch · 3 months
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mug cake for when you're actually broke and need to eat (4 ingredients, no sugar, no eggs)
disclaimer: this recipe obviously assumes you have access to the ingredients needed. sometimes you won't. this is for people who do. it's all non-perishable staples, and things you could get in a food bank.
you will need (measurements are not precice, i do this by eye):
2 tbsp of plain or self raising flour 2 tbsp of hot chocolate powder or cocoa powder (or melted real chocolate if you happen to have it) 5(ish, until cake batter consistency) tbsp of cold water or milk (if you have it) 2 tbsp of any fat (i usually use vegetable oil)
method:
put it all in a mug (go for a bigger mug or a bowl if using self raising as it will rise when cooked) mix mix mix until no lumps microwave in 10-20 second bursts until a fork or knife comes away a little crumby but otherwise clean let sit for a minute so you don't burn your mouth eat <3
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lover-of-cartonz · 3 months
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if ur ever looking for an easier, cheaper and more balanced meal ive got the "recepie" for you
it's just instant noodles with eggs and veggies but it fills me up, and while it is high in sodium, is helpful if cooking is a bit of a challenge for you/you'd eat something worse for you otherwise
basically all of this can be changed to taste/appetite, but i have a big stomach, so I'll be making a larger bowl. recepie can easily be cut in half.
ingredients:
- 2 eggs
i love eggs and they're good for you duh. i eat lots of eggs because they help meet daily nutritional needs and if you buy an 18 pack, they can be kinda cheap; as well as the fact they can be easily used up if they're about to go bad
- seasoning salt (optional)
can be found at dollar store, can be replaced with reg salt and spice of choice
- frozen variety vegetables
i buy frozen because they're already chopped, alot cheaper, won't go bad (unless you thaw and refreeze them), and obviously vegetables are good for you. pick any veggie you want, i usually go with carrots, broccoli, or parisian mix.
- 2 packs of mr.noodle
base of the meal, cheap as hell. especially if you buy a full palette of them.
- butter/oil/lard
to fry the eggs
- spices & herbs of choice
spices really make this bad boy. i usually use garlic, paprika, pepper, oregano and ginger but honestly, throw pretty much a little of anything in here. as i type this, im using a bit of curry powder and sage in addition to the other ones.
steps:
- begin with a frying pan or pot. ive even used a steel mixing bowl, get crazy with it. set the stovetop to low-medium heat, on my stove i use 3.5/9. add butter and once it's melted and spread out easily, wait a minute for it to heat up more.
-crack the eggs in, there should be a nice sizzle. i like my yolks runny, and it mixes better with the "broth" later, so take a fork and carefully try to grab the clear membrane around the egg yolk. attempt to pull it off slowly, but if it doesnt come off fully, no biggie. this is just so the egg cooks more evenly while leaving the yolk soft. i use the seasoning salt to sprinkle onto the eggs, the broth does not need it.
-continue to cook until the white is solid. the yolk should still be almost all soft by now, but even if it isn't, itll still go well with the rest of it.
-put them into a bowl from the pan. if there are egg bits stuck on the pan after, they'll come off.
-put water, ¼-½ the bag of frozen vegetables, spices, and flavour packets into the pan. crank that baby to max heat. once it's boiling, put the noodles in. could probably turn the heat down a bit now. cook until the veggies are soft enough to be poked by fork without much effort. if there's not enough water, just add a bit more.
we're done! put the noodles into the egg bowl, or if you're crazy like me, put the eggs into the pan of noodles.
now, this makes alot of noodles, so for some it should probably be halved, but it works for me, and it works if you haven't eaten all day and are ravenous.
enjoy! (i hope)
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saltandlavenderblog · 4 months
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Easy chicken and cabbage stir fry recipe
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vidaamour · 4 months
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Vegetable soup
I’m back with another soup recipe that’s vegan this time cuz ofc it is :)
Crock pot or stove pan is up to you.
Ingredients:
Potatoes
Black beans
Kidney beans
Chickpeas
Stew tomatoes or fresh tomatoes
Corn
Vegetable broth
Seasonings;
All purpose adobo
Black pepper
Sea salt (if you need salt)
Serve it over cooked wild/purple rice or white rice. You could also add cooked tofu or something for extra protein if you wanted or needed
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spiffy-sea-dragon · 1 year
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Low Spoon Meals
- Overnight oats - just mix rolled oats, milk and your choice of fruit, toppings, thickeners etc. I like this because it’s easy to just dump things and you can prep it in advance during times you have more spoons.
- Sandwiches - Again, can be prepped ahead of time and requires little assembling. Your choice of bread, sauce, veg and protein. I like wholegrain bread with spinach, deli turkey, guacamole and spicy mayo. You can simplify or fancy it up as much as you like. Ham and cheese works too. You can also toast them and them bam you’ve got a toastie. Sandwich presses are your best friend.
- Frozen fish and frozen veg - Get a sheet tray. Put some foil or baking paper on it. I like to add a frozen fish fillet (but you can use fresh or chicken), and a bunch of green beans (or veg of your choice). Drizzle olive oil. Add spices (I use garlic powder, paprika and salt) and then I usually put in the oven for about 20 minutes at 225 C (440 F). If the fillet is smaller, check it at 17 minutes. Best part? Just remove the foil/paper for easy clean up.
- Wraps - Take a tortilla, a veggie, a protein and some sauce. My favourite is a wrap with tuna, shredded carrot, spinach and spicy mayo. I buy my carrots pre-shredded to make it easier.
- Grilled cheese and tomato soup - Empty a can of tomato soup into a microwave safe bowl and zap it, taking it out and stirring every 45 seconds. Then toast two pieces of bread and stick some cheese between those bad boys. Once the soup is ready, zap the grilled cheese in the microwave for 10 seconds to make sure it melts. Or if you don’t own a toaster, just microwave the whole thing. Then enjoy!
Noodle soup - In a pot, boil water. Add a chicken bouillon cube, some frozen veggies and hokkien or udon noodles. You can also add frozen dumplings. Just boil it for a few minutes then done. I pre-boil my water in an electric kettle and add it to the pot to save time.
Eggs - Pretty good. Can quickly scramble them, hard boil them. Can even cook them in the microwave.
Some meals to have on hand for really bad days
- Instant mac ‘n cheese - Not everyone likes this stuff and it’s not the healthiest, but it’s good in a pinch. I always keep some on hand. To make it gourmet, add some garlic powder to it.
- Instant powdered mashed potato - Again, not everyone’s favourite, but it’s so good and easy. Just add boiling water to powder and bam you’ve got mashed potato. Add butter to make it gourmet.
- Instant noodles - Goes without saying.
- Frozen bread - Did you know you can freeze bread? Take a slice of frozen bread and zap in the microwave 10 seconds for quick sustenance.
- Microwave rice - This is good by itself but also great to add an extra something to meals without too much extra effort.
- Frozen dumplings - if you have a rice cooker, you can put water in the pot and steam these in the top with a steamer. Or you can boil them in water. Or you can put them in a bowl with water and nuke them in the microwave.
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Macaroni and Tomatoes!
Ingredients:
1 lb (16 oz) box of macaroni
1 32 oz can of tomatoes
Butter or Bacon Grease, to taste (Use the butter, man)
Salt, to taste
Seasoning of choice (e.g., Lawry's seasoning salt, beef bouillon cubes, onion powder, garlic powder, or any preferred seasoning)
Instructions:
In a large pot, combine tomatoes, water (use the tomato can to measure), and butter/grease.
Bring to a boil over medium-high heat.
Season generously with salt and your choice of seasoning. Feel free to get creative with your seasoning choices!
Add macaroni to the pot and cook according to package instructions or to preferred doneness. (I like mine still pretty firm, personally)
Serve hot.
Servings: Approximately 6-8.
Absolutely, let's dial it back a bit:
About the Recipe:
Growing up in Appalachia, tomatoes were a big deal in our house. And one dish that always hit the spot for me was what my Grandfather called Macaroni and Tomatoes. it gave mac and cheese a run for its money in my book (gasp!).
Funny thing is, after my grandpa passed, it kinda fell off the menu 'cause nobody else was into it like I was. Imagine my surprise when I found out that most folks away from here never even heard of it!
This recipe? It came from the Great Depression for a reason. It's cheap as shit, and one pot will feed you for a while. No fancy shit, in fact, you probably have most of this in your cabinet. You can spice it up however you like - I've listed my go-to's above, but feel free to do your thing.
Now of course, if I can offer some advice? The type of tomato you use for this matters. Growing up we had three Gardens, one nearly entirely full of tomatoes- so we used those- canned during the summer, but good for use year-round. Real fresh tomatoes are going to have a lot more flavor, depending on where you get them. A part of me believes there must be some kind of magic in the dirt of these mountains because the tomatoes here are better than anywhere. Sweet, but acidic, and flavorful. You don't want to use hot house tomatoes on this. You will regret it.
Also if you google this recipe they will tell you to cook the pasta separately. That is how you get mushy pasta do not listen to those absolute clowns.
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noitanorjassa · 1 year
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17.12.2022
Ok so. The cheap recipes i have survived with (on student exchange on norway). Also general info for max cheapskateyness, like where to find sales etc.
1. Fried noodles with salted peanuts
Noodles 5 pack 1.7e (the cheapest ones)
Peanuts 200g 2.3e
Any spices you find! Most preferably: paprika, curry, chili, ginger (ground), garlic 2 -4 cloves or 1 teaspoon of ground garlic + soy sauce (forget kikkoman it's hella expensive? Go to an "ethnic" store to find a bigger bottle of soy sauce, i used "healthy boy brand" thin soy sauce, the 1l bottle will last all eternity)
Boil the noodles or let them sit in a cup with boiling water until soft (for the love of god and all holies do not touch the cheap noodles' own spice packet)
Pour out excessive water
Take a small pan and pour the noodles in (if u use fresh garlic crush them or cut em up and fry them a lil bit while the noodles "boil"
Add all the spices, a bit of any oil (or butter) and 1-4 teaspoon/s of soy sauce
Stir fry until the noodles look sticky and fried
Add salted/chili peanuts on top
2. 4 ingredient pasta
Tips! Cheapest pasta is usually spaghetti that you can buy in bulk, like in spar norway 1kg of cheapest spaghetti is 18 kr (1.7e). Use ripoff brands that the shops have, lile "x-tra" "first price" or "eldoraro" in here. Cheapest crushed tomatoes pack is 70 kr (0.65e) for 250g.
Start boiling the pasta of your choice and simultaneously start cutting the garlics. You can also use garlic crusher, it's faster. Add a little bit of salt to the pasta water.
Fry your garlics. Add in drained chickpeas (any beans work) 9 kr/0.9e per pack. Add in the crushed tomatoes.
Add in any spices you can find, preferably: onion, rosemary, herb mix, chili, pepper
Drain the pasta and add in approx ¼ or ⅓ of the sauce
Leftover sauce goes to a box and to the fridge. I do not recommend storing pasta for further eating, it can go bad too fast
3. Seljanka soup
You will need:
Cheap crushed tomatoes, potatoes, (canned) mushrooms, cabbage, bay leaf, russian pickles (or fermented pickles w garlic and dill, do not add in those with sugar!) Or just 1 table spoon of cooking vinegar, cheap frozen vegetable mix (with carrots and celery etc), salt, pepper, clove spice, herb mix w rosemary, any beans, onion, garlic
Start with peeling and dicing the potatoes, cut onions and garlics. Start boiling them with ¼ of full kettle volume of water + add the bay leaves (2 will do for 3l of soup)
Add in cut cabbage, vinegar, pickles (cut) and the spices. Add the crushed tomatoes and water if it's too stewy.
Let boil for 10 min
Add in the canned mushrooms (rinsed) and the frozen veggies and beans
Let boil for 10-20 min or until the potatoes are soft
You can either freeze or store the leftovers in a fridge
Price info: 1kg cabbage 5-20kr /0.4-2e, 2kg of potatoes 20-40kr/2-4e, jar of russian pickles 20-30kr, spices all mentioned probs like 10e (only gotta buy these once!), 2/3 big onions 20-25 kr, 2 garlics 23kr
4. Marinated beans + mashed potatoes
Take a container or a bowl. Add in 1 packet of rinsed chickpeas. Add in 2-4 tablespoons of soy sauce.
Add a bit of oil so the beans wont dry when storaged in the fridge
Add spices, preferably garlic, herbs, ginger, chili, pepper (no salt needed since the soy sauce is very salty)
Let sit for 1-2h in the fridge
Boil peeled potatoes. Pour out water. Mash them with a masher or a fork with a bit of added water/milk/melted butter if u can afford it. Add salt.
Other valuable info!
Cheapest stores (in norway) for vegetables/canned things: kiwi, extra, obs
Cheapest store for sales: obs, eurospar
Best "kuppdisk" (-50% shelf for soon to expire products) Any big markets such as eurospar and obs. Here u can find cheap meat/dairy/veggies. They have kuppdisk for veggie section, dry section and meat/dairy/frozen goods section
Download the app "e tilbundsavis" to get info what is on sale where. It's in norwegian but very easy to understand (use google translator to search items in the app, like "coffee" or "chips")
Cheapest instant coffee is friele but it tastes like crap. Nescafe brasileiro is tiny bit more expensive but so much better.
Learn to make your own popcorn in a kettle, there's youtube tutorials for that. So much cheaper than micro popcorn.
For alcohol you are damned. I would suggest buying the cheapest big (0.75 litre for 30kr) vodka bottle and mixing it with different sodas/juices. Note! Only Vinmonopolet store sells other than beer like normal stores. Check opening times, they are strict. U gotta be over 20 to buy vodka in norway, wine u can get at 18. Or ask someone u know to buy vodka for u. Or when traveling to norway get your vodka as a "gift" from the airport in your home country. It's still cheaper.
There's snack sales from time to time like 5 bars of 200 choco for 100kr. It seems like much but normally one 200g bar is 44kr. Also chips can get -50% sales, check the "tilbundsavis" app every other day so u wont miss them.
Do NOT shop in Joker mini stores or gas stations. Hella expensive. Uh oh. And for the love of All do not doordash, u will bancrupt yourself (unless u are rich but then u don't need these tips anyways).
Make as much from scratch as u can. There's plenty of "cheap/simple cooking for idiots" type vids on youtube.
For snus/tobacco i don't know the prices bc i don't use them. Probably quite expensive. Check how much u can take with u from home without taxes if u use them.
People with ovaries! Period products are expensive too. Cheap brands work just as fine. Or take a couple extra packs with u.
The winter is long and it's recommended to take vitamin supplements (especially vitamin D). There's sales for those too, team up with people u know for things like "3 for 2" in vitamins. Usually the sales start when it begins to get darker, in september.
If you have an injury/need the hospital, u can use your insurance or european health insurance card (for eu citizens it costs like 10e but then u can use the eu/schengen area hospitals with the same pricing as locals). There's student health services for free but those are for not for "major injuries", more like for check ups and teeth care.
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slowlycooking · 9 months
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spoonierecipes · 7 months
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Pigs in a Blanket
1/5 difficulty, 1/5 price
Ingredients
2 Lil Smokies packs of choice
Premade crescent roll dough
Items
Cooking spray
Knife
Oven (whatever degree the crescents say)
Oven-safe flat pan
Cutting board
Steps
Set out knife and cutting board. Spray the pan with cooking spray and put somewhere safe.
Grab and open the crescent rolls, carefully separating a triangle at a time. Cut into small strips, but make sure they can cover the lil smokies. It doesn't have to be pretty.
Slowly wrap the smokies in the crescent strips, then set them onto the pan. If done really well, one crescents thing can do two lil smokies packs.
Pop them into the oven, take them out once the dough is puffed and golden in color. Don't be alarmed if the bottom is kinda soggy-- it's still cooked! That's from the smokies juices and the cooking spray, it won't hurt you.
Optionally, you can also make some mac and cheese to go with this. Helps offset the saltiness and gives you more to eat.
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