As I am about to leave University I might as well share some of my discoveries... and with Sirian's post (which I wish I had before I got here) I don't need to say to much.
1. Fruits! The more the merrier. Depending on how close your nearest store is buy once or twice a week. Fruits definately fall into the 'not so cheap' variety, but with them you can drop your pop, chips and salsa and you will find yourself to be a much happier person. Apples and bananas have the advantage of making good sandwiches.
2. Curry. Check out chef2chef.net (or .com) for recipies (or e-mail me). If you put it in the fridge it will last a week, and actually tastes better the next day, excellent for batches and goes well with rice.
Basic curry:
- Dice Apples or Potatoes and put in a casserole with some butter or oil - on relatively low heat.
- Spice - salt, pepper, curry powder
- Add garlic and onions to taste
- Add vegetables as you chop them - I.e. as you finish chopping it up just toss it in. This is the easy fast and student way of doing it.
- Add your base food: Fish, chicken, beef, lamb or whatever. Cook until meat is done.
- If you have to add some water (not needed if you started with apples) if it doesn't seem to be getting the right consistency.
- If you want it milder add 250ml of plain yogurt and/or coconut milk.
3. Breakfast - Vary your weeks by the specials. Yogurt and cottage cheese (with some jam for flavour), cereal, sandwich, instant oatmeal...
4. Acquire the following skill/habit - Make food with whatever is in the fridge. My fiance has this skill and it is a life saver (at least financially). It takes some practice and often a bit of extra time, but it will save you a lot of wastage.
5. Use tofu as a meat substitute - It does take a while to figure out how to flavour the stuff, but it's cheap and nutritious.
6. Ask for cookbooks for your birthday and other appropriate present days, mothers and grandmothers are usually more than happy to provide these. Also next time you are home, raid the recipie stash.
7. Spagetti... like Sirian said it's fast and easy. The spagetti itself is max 30-40 minutes and the sauce depends on the amount of fresh stuff. There are alot of good sauces out there:
- Basic: Heat a can/glass of store bought sauce
- Intermediate: Heat a can/glass of store bought sauce, flavour to taste with spices (garlic and onions mostly) and add meat and vegetables (tofu, canned corn, ground beef, fish - whatever). If you make too much it either becomes soup or chili the next day.
- Advanced: From scratch - Can of diced tomatoes (pre-flavoured if you are lazy), vegetables to taste, spices and tofu or meat of choice. Also becomes soup or chili.
- Master: Clear, oil based sauces. Excellent for variation, but take a lot of practice (4-5 years will usually do the trick).
8. Cook with someone. It's way more fun, saves money, and allows you to do more stuff.
9. If you are not getting enough nutritional value (for example during exam time) make sure you have nutritional supplements. It wil lkeep your immune system up even when you are doing your best to crash it.
10. If price isn't too much of a concern look for a food delivery service. There may be a service that delivers groceries to your door, and that may allow you to order online (http://www.spud.ca is an example). Excellent time-saving and it forces you to plan your purchases. As a side benefit impulse buys go down so you may actually save money. Fish and meat you should buy seperately.
Enjoy!
1. Fruits! The more the merrier. Depending on how close your nearest store is buy once or twice a week. Fruits definately fall into the 'not so cheap' variety, but with them you can drop your pop, chips and salsa and you will find yourself to be a much happier person. Apples and bananas have the advantage of making good sandwiches.
2. Curry. Check out chef2chef.net (or .com) for recipies (or e-mail me). If you put it in the fridge it will last a week, and actually tastes better the next day, excellent for batches and goes well with rice.
Basic curry:
- Dice Apples or Potatoes and put in a casserole with some butter or oil - on relatively low heat.
- Spice - salt, pepper, curry powder
- Add garlic and onions to taste
- Add vegetables as you chop them - I.e. as you finish chopping it up just toss it in. This is the easy fast and student way of doing it.
- Add your base food: Fish, chicken, beef, lamb or whatever. Cook until meat is done.
- If you have to add some water (not needed if you started with apples) if it doesn't seem to be getting the right consistency.
- If you want it milder add 250ml of plain yogurt and/or coconut milk.
3. Breakfast - Vary your weeks by the specials. Yogurt and cottage cheese (with some jam for flavour), cereal, sandwich, instant oatmeal...
4. Acquire the following skill/habit - Make food with whatever is in the fridge. My fiance has this skill and it is a life saver (at least financially). It takes some practice and often a bit of extra time, but it will save you a lot of wastage.
5. Use tofu as a meat substitute - It does take a while to figure out how to flavour the stuff, but it's cheap and nutritious.
6. Ask for cookbooks for your birthday and other appropriate present days, mothers and grandmothers are usually more than happy to provide these. Also next time you are home, raid the recipie stash.
7. Spagetti... like Sirian said it's fast and easy. The spagetti itself is max 30-40 minutes and the sauce depends on the amount of fresh stuff. There are alot of good sauces out there:
- Basic: Heat a can/glass of store bought sauce
- Intermediate: Heat a can/glass of store bought sauce, flavour to taste with spices (garlic and onions mostly) and add meat and vegetables (tofu, canned corn, ground beef, fish - whatever). If you make too much it either becomes soup or chili the next day.
- Advanced: From scratch - Can of diced tomatoes (pre-flavoured if you are lazy), vegetables to taste, spices and tofu or meat of choice. Also becomes soup or chili.
- Master: Clear, oil based sauces. Excellent for variation, but take a lot of practice (4-5 years will usually do the trick).
8. Cook with someone. It's way more fun, saves money, and allows you to do more stuff.
9. If you are not getting enough nutritional value (for example during exam time) make sure you have nutritional supplements. It wil lkeep your immune system up even when you are doing your best to crash it.
10. If price isn't too much of a concern look for a food delivery service. There may be a service that delivers groceries to your door, and that may allow you to order online (http://www.spud.ca is an example). Excellent time-saving and it forces you to plan your purchases. As a side benefit impulse buys go down so you may actually save money. Fish and meat you should buy seperately.
Enjoy!
