Recession Recipes .Net

RecessionRecipes.net, recipes for the end of the month.

Category : Recession Recipes News

Getting Ready For Winter in Middle to Late Summer

Winter is a hard time for many who are poor or on a fixed income.  The middle of summer may seem like a strange time to start preparing, but it’s the best time.  Certain things that you know you’re going to need in winter are cheaper now, or in season and fresh.

If you dry, can, or have a deep freezer, this is the time to start buying fruits, vegetables, and herbs for storage.  You can get information on canning and other food preservation methods at the National Center for Home Food Preservation website.

Buy dried beans, pasta, rice, and other dry foods when they’re on sale.  Stock up when you can afford to.  Remember to keep them in the freezer for a week at first to kill any grain bugs or moths that may be in them, then store them in an air tight container.  To keep bugs out, I usually put the food in a bag, and put the bag in a container sprinkled with a good dose of rock salt and cracked black pepper.  If anything gets in there, the pepper will irritate them, and the salt will dry them out.

If you, like me, eat a lot of bean soup in the winter, then this is a good time to stock up on full logs of salami for hanging.  The summer heat and dryness gives them time to get nice and hard without as much risk of the bad kind of molds or infestation.  You can later chop the salami into cubes and use them to flavor your soups.

Space heaters, blankets, and winter clothes are cheaper this time of year.  Check your things to see if they need replacing now, so you won’t be in a rush and have to pay more during the winter.  This is also a good time to stock up on candles, and make sure your reading lights are all in working order.  It’s nice to be ready in case of power outages, and to offset some of the cost of heating by not using the main house lights so often.

One thing many people neglect to prepare for in the winter is the effect wearing clothes all the time has on one’s skin.  Get foot fungus treatments as well as extra strength (actually extra greasy) lotions and creams when they’re on sale, to stock up for winter.  Shea butter is one of the best all around protective emollients.  It gets very hard in winter though.  So take some time to mix about a pound of shea butter with a liter of olive oil in your blender or food processor.  Put it in bottles, and you have some of the best lotion on Earth.

If you tend to have nipple pain in cold weather stock up on scraps of silk to insert into your bra or sew together into a body wrap.  If you start now, you’ll have plenty of time to make lots of them.

For spot treatment of chafing due to clothes rubbing against your skin, set aside 5 ounces of your shea butter and olive oil mixture, and blend in a tablespoon of aloe vera gel, and a teaspoon of oblipicha (sea buckthorn) oil.  It is very soothing, and the oblipicha helps to heal it faster.

Feel free to add your winter preparation tips in the comments. :-)

Homemade Tortillas With An Electric Tortilla Maker

TortillaRecently, I purchased one of the best small kitchen appliances I ever got: an electric tortilla maker.  Making tortillas at home used to be an hours long operation, and this was especially tough in the summer.  Now, I can churn out 20 tortillas in less than an hour.

If you eat tortillas often, then it’s definitely worth it to get a tortilla maker.  If you live in Europe, Africa, or Asia, it may be called a roti or chapati maker.  It’s basically a press grill with a handle opposing the angle of the grill, that you can  push to make sure your tortillas are thin without having to push the top down directly.

Choosing A Tortilla Maker

There are a couple of kinds of tortilla makers on the market for kitchen use.  There are large ones that restaurants that make their own tortillas use, and the small ones that make tortillas between 6″ and 8″.  You definitely want to get one that has an anodized aluminum coating or cast iron plates.

How to Use Your Tortilla Maker

If you get one with cast iron plates, they may take some time to season.  Before you use it, wipe it down with a bit of oil, and let it heat until the oil burns.  Then do it again a few times.  Don’t ever clean it with soap.  If something gets stuck to it, wipe it down with a damp cloth, and heat it until all of the water is completely evaporated.

The directions say to just put a ball of dough in the center of the bottom, put the top down and press, but it’s actually not that simple.  If you do it that way it’s harder to control.  So pat down the balls a bit so that you have a kind of a disk shape.  Place them a bit off center, about 1-2″ away from the back edge, and then press.  You may have to look to see how flat you’re pressing it, until you get the hang of it.  If you press them too thin, the tortilla will basically “explode” outward, or come out with holes.

If it doesn’t have a thickness control, which most small ones don’t, then you’ll have to take care about that.  They will be thinner on one side than the other, but this isn’t something to worry over.  Even on the thick side, they’ll be quite thin enough to do the job.

Tortilla Recipe

The recipes that normally come with tortilla makers often have oil in them.  This ends up making tortillas that are too flaky to hold anything.  So here’s my recipe for taco worthy flour tortillas.

  • 3 cups white flour (You can use whole wheat, oat, barley, rye, or millet flour for up to half of the flour.) 
  • 1.5 teaspoons salt (preferably crushed gray salt)
  • 1.5 teaspoons baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)
  • 1 teaspoon citric acid or cream of tartar  (you can also use baking powder instead of the soda and acid combination)
  • about 1.5 cups water
  • extra flour for kneading
  1. Mix the dry ingredients together in a large bowl.
  2. Slowly add water while stirring with your fingers or a spoon until you have a somewhat soggy dough.
  3. Turn the dough out onto a floured surface.
  4. Knead the dough until it is fully combined, and then for another 5 minutes or so.  You may need to add a little more flour at a time until you have a firm but elastic dough.
  5. Put the ball of dough into a plastic bag, or in a covered bowl, and let it set for half an hour to two hours.  I recommend at least an hour because this gives the organic acids time to break down the gluten in the flour and make it more digestible.
  6. Heat up your tortilla maker.
  7. Pull off some chunks of dough, and roll them into approximately 1.5″ balls.  Then flatten them a bit.  Have them waiting on a floured surface.
  8. One at a time, brush off the flour, and then place them into your tortilla maker, and press until you hear the “screaming”.  Then release the pressure.
  9. When each one is done, place it in a covered but not air tight dish, lined with a few paper towels at the bottom.  It’s important to keep them like this so that they get soft and flexible but not soggy.

These tortillas will stand up to beans, meat, or whatever else you like to put in them or use them to dip.

To make crispy chips out of them, brush them with a little butter and seasonings and bake them for about 15 minutes in the oven.

Save on Lunch Meats and Salami

Salami

Buy salami or other rolled lunch meats by the log or loaf instead of packets.  To get the best price and the best quality, buy online or by phone from the source, or go to your local farmers’ market or butcher shop.  If you live in an area where many people hunt, some butchers who take care of hunters also make and sell salami and jerky made from wild meats.

For regular turkey or chicken breasts, it’s pretty simple to roast your own.  However, if you want them in a nice loaf, you’ll need to use baking or butchers’ twine to secure them before you put them in the oven.

I don’t recommend making your own traditional salami at home unless you have a traditional space to do it in.  I do however, recommend an updated “freezer salami” if you find yourself blessed with a phenomenal sale on quality ground meat.

This recipe originally came from http://blessingsforlife.com/recipes/frugal/homemadesalami.htm and has been archived here just in case the site should ever disappear or change.

Make Your Own Beef Salami

Copyright by Yvonne Quarles 

This recipe was handed down by my Granny.   Salami was too expensive to buy from the market so she made her own salami from ground beef.  It tastes great and is very easy to make.

 Ingredients: 

 

  • 5 pounds of ground beef
  • ¼ cup of curing salt
  • 4 Tablespoons of dry red wine
  • 2 Tablespoons of liquid smoke
  • 1 ½ teaspoons of garlic powder
  • 2 Tablespoons chili powder
  • 2 teaspoons of crushed red pepper
  • 1 ¼ teaspoons of ground cumin
  • 2 Tablespoons brown sugar
  • Nylon netting
  • String

 

In a large bowl, mix all the ingredients together with your hands.  Blend the spices in thoroughly.
Cover with plastic wrap or aluminum foil and put in the refrigerator.  Let it stay in the refrigerator for 24-48 hours.  This lets all the seasonings blend in with the meat real good.  
After time is up take out of the refrigerator.
Divide the meat mixture into 4 equal portions.

Roll each portion into a log that measures about 2 ½ inches in diameter by 6 inches long.  

Cut a piece of nylon netting big enough for each log portion, leaving enough at the end to tie with a string (each netting piece will be about 8 inches long and about 8-9 inches wide).  Roll each log in the nylon netting.  Tie each end with a piece of string.  (Editor’s note: If you don’t like to heat plastics with your food, use animal casing for this step.  The best size for this is “beef middle”.)

Put the logs on a rack and bake in the oven at 225 degrees, for about 4 hours.

Let them cool all the way.

Remove the netting.  Dry with a paper towel.

When ready to serve, slice thin.

These logs can be frozen until ready to use.  Then thaw in the refrigerator and slice.

* * *

Yvonne is a wife, mother, nurse, gardener, and writer.  She strives to love the simple life.  Her byline has appeared in various e-zines, and she is a staff columnist for The Kitchen Detective mag. and Living Herbal. Visit her current web site at Inkspillers Attic.

Instructions:

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Welcome to Recession Recipes .Net!

Healthy and Cheap Welcome to our new site!  Here, we feature recipes that are both inexpensive and delicious.  We also invite readers to contribute recipes.  If you’d like to post articles, feel free to register and submit them.  Aside of recipes, we welcome money saving home making, employment, and small business advice.

We believe that it is possible to eat healthy on a budget.  Though we won’t bore you with a lot of diet talk, we do aim to help raise awareness about the balance between health and cost, so that you learn how to get the most out of your money.

We’ll also teach you the tricks American grandparents and great grandparents used to get through the Great Depression and other historical situations in which many people had to live with less.  Some things you read here may surprise you, but try them and you’ll see that saving money was easier than you thought.