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Blog: Living on a Shoestring

How I make treasure from trash and live on a tight budget - happily.


Showing 9 posts in the Food Tips and Info category for this blog.
A Baked Bean Surprise!
Tuesday, October 14, 2008

 I just had to share this with you... have you tried baked beans (in tomato sauce) with peanut butter?
It's absolutely delicious :p
I looked in my cupboard to get some mild chilli pepper to add to them but sitting next to it was the peanut butter so I just scooped a few teaspoons in the saucepan with the beans and heated them up. Eaten with toast of course.

Very yummy - go on try it, you might like it too!

Monique

Images:
   

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Top 10 Ways to Use up Flat Cola
Monday, October 13, 2008

Top 10 Ways to Use up Flat Cola  

Do you end up tossing out half cans or bottles of flat cola? Save it
to cook with. Believe it or not, flat cola has many applications in
the kitchen. Use it in recipes for savory roasts to decadent
desserts without imparting any cola flavor. Experiment using diet
colas, but keep in mind that long cooking times at high temperatures
can turn diet colas bitter. The cola should be at room temperature
when you begin cooking. Other sodas or seltzer may be substituted in
many of the recipes.

1) Make a Cake
This easy sheet cake is wonderfully decadent and rich. The cola
enhances the flavor of the chocolate without adding cola flavor.
Loaded with chocolate chips, you can use your favorite chocolate
frosting or sprinkle liberally with powdered sugar.

 
2) Make a 7-bone roast
7-bone roasts are one of the few remaining beef values these days,
economical and flavorful. You won't taste cola, but the gravy is to
die for! Oven-baked pot roast and vegetables is enhanced by a rich
gravy. Can also be made in a slow cooker.

 
3) Make a ham
Southern ham cooked in cola must be tried to be believed. Bone-in
ham is first boiled in cola with an onion, then baked in a glaze of
mustard, molasses, and cloves.
 
 
4) Make a barbecued pork sandwich
Start with boneless center cut pork loin or pork shoulder and
marinate for a day in a mixture of cola, Worcestershire, vinegar,
and garlic. Then slow-roast about 3 hours with a cola and Jack
Daniels sauce for utterly delicious pulled pork sandwiches. Try this
with different sodas, such as root beer and cherry or use brisket
instead of pork.

 
5) Make a molded salad
Perfect for Thanksgiving, potlucks, or family dinners, make this in
a pretty molded shape for extra pizzazz. The salad uses cranberry
sauce, gelatin, pineapple, nuts, and cream cheese for a rich
texture. Goes together quickly.

 
6) Make spareribs in the crock-pot
Start these ribs in the crockpot and finish with a cola sauce on the
grill or under the oven broiler. Plan at least a day ahead for pre-
cooking in the crockpot, refrigeration overnight, and then finishing
on the grill or under the broiler.

 
7) Make a sweet and sour brisket
Cola in the sauce helps tenderize brisket. Flavoring ingredients
include onion, fresh ginger, garlic, Dijon mustard, red wine, honey,
vinegar, soy sauce, and cloves. Ginger ale may be substituted for
the cola. Make the brisket the day before and reheat for best flavor.

 
8) Make a prime rib roast
Plan a day ahead to marinate this roast in a mixture of olive oil,
cherry cola, Worcestershire sauce, oregano, thyme, onion powder,
garlic, and a special Greek seasoning blend before grilling and
smoking.

 
9) Make beef jerky
This beef jerky marinade can also be used on meats to be cooked on
the grill or broiled. Marinate from 2 hours to overnight. The cola
helps break down the fibers and tenderize the meat.

 
10) Make a baked brisket
Cola not only tenderizes this brisket, it also makes a fabulous
gravy. Requires no marination, but plan on up to three hours of
cooking time to cook the brisket.

I copied this from an email today - I thought to share it.   (And I have added Cola to my online shopping list which arrives tomorrow, I'll be trying it out with the gammon! )

Monique

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Just Bananas
Sunday, June 22, 2008

When you get your bananas home from the supermarket, before you put them in the fruit bowl - take them off the 'hand' and put them in seperately.  

If bananas are left together they ripen faster.

Monique

PS: Apparently if you peel your banana upside-down you don't get those stringy bits.  I keep forgetting to do that and only realise when it's too late!

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Measuring Cups
Friday, June 13, 2008

Measuring Cups
Before you pour sticky substances into a measuring cup, fill with hot water. Dump out the hot water, but don't dry cup.
Next, add your ingredient, such as peanut butter, and watch how easily it comes right out.

Monique

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Cookies/Biscuits Stuck on Tin?
Thursday, June 12, 2008

Have cookies stuck on the cookie sheet? Try sliding a piece  
of dental floss between a stubborn cookie and the baking  
sheet, then gently pull forward to enjoy an unbroken treat.  

One might be able to apply this to other things too, like getting the pizza from the oven tray off in one piece etc.

Copied from an eZine.

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Upside-down Tins!
Tuesday, June 03, 2008

I store my food tins upside down.

I started storing my cat food upside down because my cat prefers the jelly/gravy more than the meat.    I found it makes the contents come out easier.  Now I do it with all my food tins in the pantry.

Anything for a simpler life!

Monique

 

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Ice Rice Nice!
Saturday, May 31, 2008

I sometimes buy packets of rice (the flavoured ones with dried veggies inside - this is as close to a ready meal as I get!)

I store them in the freezer. I know that rice sometimes harbour nasty bugs inside so if I store them in the freezer it kills them off and I can rest easy.

I also store my brown rice and easy cook rice inside the freezer too in plastic boxes.

Monique

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Cooking Cabbage without the Pong!
Friday, April 04, 2008

I have found a way to reduce the amount of cabbage smell that eminates in a kitchen when it's cooking!

Wanna know the secret? Freeze it!

Cut up your freshly bought cabbage, wash it, pat it dry with kitchen paper and portion it into ziploc bags -press out the air and seal. Then pop in your freezer.

When you come to cook it it takes about 1-2 minutes in a pan of boiling water OR alternatively stir-fry it in a little olive oil which I like to do. Delicious!

And, quite by accident, I found there's no lingering cabbage smell in the kitchen so now I get to eat cabbage more often in my diet and we all know it's very good for you!

Monique

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Emergency Bread
Friday, March 28, 2008

 

Emergency Bread.  I have used this for over 10 years now after finding the recipe in an antiquarian cook book. It has served me well and it's tasty too.

1lb Flour (Plain)   

1 Teaspoon of Salt 

2 Teaspoons of Baking Powder  

Water or milk to mix.

Sift the flour in a bowl, add salt and baking powder, mix to a soft dough with water or milk; knead lightly on a floured board; form into rolls (don't overwork the flour, when not shaped into perfect rounds the rolls take on a rustic look and you get lovely cripsy top).  [Pre-heat] Bake in a hot oven....check after 10 minutes should take between 15-20.

Remember to grease the oven tray before adding the dough rolls.   At the end i dampen the tops with water and sprinkle with sesame or Poppy seeds.

This recipe can be reworked too. In the past I have added herbs to the recipe and cheese.

These are lovely warm slathered with butter or plain for dipping in soup.

One thing I have found though is these must be eaten on the day they are made, they don't keep. But it only takes a few minutes to prepare and make these so it's not a great inconvenience.

Perfect for when you have no bread in the house and you can't get to a shop, and I tell you these are tasty too.

Monique

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Author:
Monique (Contact)
Somerset United Kingdom
About Me:

I work from home as an eBayer and I search for missing persons in the UK. I live with Mr.Smith, my tabby tom cat.

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