Tag: shortbread

Money Saving Tip: Rice, the Ultimate Budget Extender

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Welcome to another money saving tip! I know a lot of us are already squeaking by with our grocery budgets since the prices continue to increase and now many folks are bringing home less pay than they did before (not to mention those without jobs!) so this is a series I add to from time to time with tips and ideas to get more out of your grocery budget without requiring more from your wallet.

Today’s tip: How to extend your grocery budget using Rice! 

In this post I’m going to show you:

  • How to get rice for about 1/3 of the price grocery stores charge
  • Creative ways to use rice to extend your meals
  • Recipes that utilize rice in budget conscious ways.

Let’s start with how to save money when it comes to buying rice…

So here is long grain rice in a grocery store for price comparison.

It is $5.20 for five pounds, so $1.05 per pound.

But this 50 pound bag of the same variety of rice purchased at Sam’s Club costs just $17.84 , which comes out to about

35¢ per pound.

This same amount of rice, if purchased for the same going rate as the five pound bag, would run $52.90, a savings of over $35.00 – and we’re not even counting tax!

BUT WHAT DO I DO WITH 50 POUNDS OF RICE? 

1. Store it.

Since rice has such a long shelf life (if stored in airtight containers at 70 degrees it is capable of lasting up to 30 years) this is a great food source to purchase in bulk and save some big dollars. You know how we can go to the grocery store and use a coupon to save $1.00? Well think of buying rice in bulk as having a coupon that saves you over $30.00!

I don’t store grains or dried beans in their original packaging because it really isn’t designed for long term food storage. So the first thing I do when I buy a bag of rice is divide it up into containers. Clean 2 and 3 liter coke bottles are ideal for this. I also fill up my pantry container. This go around, I was short a few 2 liters so I temporarily stored some in gallon zipper seal bags until I have more 2 liters to use.

If you don’t have a lot of pantry space, you can simply store these two liters under beds, in coat closets, even in that unused space between the back of your couch and the wall!

To wash coke bottles: Rinse well with warm water. Add 1 tablespoon of bleach and fill halfway with water. Put lid on and give a good shake. Rinse well again. Leave lid off and allow to dry for two to three days, or until they are completely dry inside.

2. EAT IT

Rice is a primary food source for over half the world’s population and a great way to make any meal go further. I love to use rice as a means of extending my meals and trimming my grocery budget. It can serve as a side dish, an entree (when cooked with meat and veggies in it or topped with a little meat and sauce), breakfast, or dessert.

How to use rice to make your meals go further:

•Make it part of the entree. A great way to do this is to prepare your meat in some type of sauce. Then, combine the two either by stirring the rice into the sauce or by serving the meat over the sauce.

A great example of this is my Sticky Chicken Recipe. you can prepare sticky chicken using skin on chicken legs, then serve each chicken leg atop a bed of rice, with a generous spoonful of the sticky chicken sauce poured over. By adding rice to your entree, you can easily use half the amount of meat you normally would, which can make a serious dent in the most expensive part of your grocery budget.

•In Soups and Stews that call for diced potatoes, use uncooked rice instead. Allow half an hour for soup or stew to simmer so rice can cook.

•Use cooked rice in place of oats or bread crumbs in meatloaf and hamburger patties to make them go further. 

•Serve rice as breakfast or dessert – check out this simple preparation for that.

•This is not food related BUT we keep a rice hot pack around our house for those aches, pains, and headaches that arise from time to time. Take a clean tube sock, fill halfway with rice, and tie a knot in the end. When you need a good hot pack, just heat in the microwave for about a minute or so. Be careful because it gives off a moist heat and can burn skin if too hot when placed directly on it. This is a long lasting heat source that can be made in a jiff!

•Freeze it for quick suppers on busy nights – Whenever I make rice, I like to make double the amount I need so I have some for another meal without having to cook twice. Allow rice to cool until warm but not cold, then place in zipper seal freezer bags and smooth flat (this helps it thaw faster). Whenever you need cooked rice, thaw in the microwave or add it frozen directly to dishes that have to cook so that the rice has time to heat up before serving.

RECIPES!

Here are just a few recipes from SouthernPlate.com that utilize rice in fun and economical ways to inspire you.

This recipe actually uses inexpensive stew meat as the “steak tips” and I usually find that on sale.

It doesn’t get any simpler than this….and it’s so good!

For more posts in my money saving tips series, please see below.

Money Saving Tip: Rethink Bulk

Money Saving Tip: Go Bananas

Get 8 Meals from 4 Pounds of Ground Beef

35 Ground Beef Recipes To Stretch Your Food Dollar

Related posts:

Lavender Dark Chocolate Tart

This time of year, it seems like there’s an occasion for a fancy party every time you turn around. Graduations. Mother’s Day. Bridal showers. Baby showers. Wednesday night. Ok, maybe not Wednesday night… although with a cup of tea and a slice of this decadent tart, it might seem like a special occasion.  Of course, it’s perfect for all of those other situations too.

The crust, made from pulverized shortbread cookies, is light but intensely buttery. The dark chocolate ganache filling is rich, rich, rich and velvety smooth. It’s sweetened with just a smidge of honey and infused with a touch of lavender – not so much that it tastes like perfume, just enough to give it a subtle hint of springtime flavor – and it literally melts in your mouth (and on the counter if you leave it out and your house it too warm.) Top it all off with some fresh raspberries and grab some friends to share it with. A little bit of this goes a long way, so there’s plenty to go around.

I recently signed on as a Blogger Ambassador for Walkers Shortbread, and I’m really excited about this partnership. I’ll be honest – when they first approached me, I said no. But as I talked to them more, I could tell that they were really passionate about their product. And their passion totally rubbed off on me. I’ve always known that Walkers is delicious, but I didn’t know that the company is still run by the same family that founded it in 1898, that it’s made with butter from free-range, grass fed cows, or that the company is committed to baking without GMO ingredients, artificial flavors/colors, or preservatives. In fact, their original shortbread only has four ingredients (butter, four, sugar, and salt) – the cookies I make in my kitchen are more complicated than that! It’s no wonder that they taste so good! (Yup, I totally drank the kool-aid. BTW, they aren’t paying me to say this, although they did send me some cookies.)

Walkers also gave me a code for 20% off full-price items: HDSpring. It’s good on their website, WalkersUS.com, until May 24. There are all sorts of fun things on there, so be sure to poke around! (Also, try the stem ginger shortbread. OMG!)

Lavender Dark Chocolate Tart

Author: Lauren Keating (Healthy-Delicious.com)

Serves: 16

  • 10 package Walkers vanilla shortbread cookies (from 5.3 ounce package)
  • ½ cup whole white wheat flour
  • 2 Tablespoons coconut oil or butter, softened
  • ½ pint heavy cream
  • 2 Tablespoons honey
  • 2 Tablespoons dried culinary lavender
  • 12 ounces dark chocolate chips
  • ½ pint raspberries
  1. Heat oven to 350*F.
  2. Pulverize the cookies into a fine powder, either in a food processor or by sealing them in a heavy plastic bags and rolling over them with a heavy rolling pin. Add the cookie crumbs, flour, and oil/butter to a mixing bowl; mix well. Press into a 9-inch tart pan. Bake 20-25 minutes, or until golden brown.
  3. Add the cream, honey, and lavender to a saucepan set over medium heat. Bring to a simmer; reduce heat to low and let the cream steep for 15 minutes.
  4. Pour the chocolate chips into a mixing bowl. Set a mesh strainer over the bowl; pour the infused cream through the strainer. Discard the lavender; stir the chocolate and cream until the chocolate is completely melted and smooth. Pour into the baked tart crust. Refrigerate 30 minutes, or until chocolate is set. Remove from pan and top with raspberries.
  5. Serve chilled or at room temperature.

Calories: 235 Fat: 15.5 Carbohydrates: 24.9 Fiber: 1.0 Protein: 2.7

3.2.1652

 This post was written as part of the Walkers Blogger Buzz Ambassador program. I did not receive monetary compensation, but I did receive cookies to help inspire my recipe. 

Gingerbread Shortbread with a Nutmeg Glaze

Flavors have seasons just like vegetables and fruits do.  I’m slowly working through my gingerbread obsession this month.  I’ll have to put it  aside come the New Year, but that’s ok with me.  I get how it works, and I like the twinge of urgency that the short season brings to my favorite tastes.  It’s eat it or lose it, so let’s get to it!

This is a subtle gingerbread shortbread with a really wonderful nutmeg glaze.  The glaze really makes it.  I’ve been so excited by spice glazes and frostings this season.  The intense sweet combined with the warm spice is unexpected and lingers on the palate.

Gingerbread is defined by a combination of spices like ginger, cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg, along with the distinctive presence of molasses.  It can range from a moist cake, to super spicy dense cookies.  I like to take those defining ingredients and use them to bring the essence of gingerbread to other things, like scones, pancakes, and this shortbread.  As gingerbreads go, the flavor of this shortbread  is comparatively mild.  You can also form this dough into a log, chill it, and slice into cookies.  But don’t forget to glaze them.  It’s the combination that makes this recipe so good.

What You Will Need

  • 2 sticks (1 cup) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 1/2 cup confectioner’s sugar
  • 1/2 tsp ginger
  • 1/4 tsp ground cloves
  • 1/4 tsp each: cinnamon, cardamom, allspice, nutmeg
  • 2 Tbsp molasses
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 cups plus 2 Tbsp all purpose flour
  • for the glaze

  • 1 1/2 cups confectioner’s sugar
  • milk or cream to thin
  • freshly grated nutmeg

Instructions

  1. Set oven to 350F
  2. Cream the butter and sugar until fluffy. Beat in the spices, molasses, and vanilla.
  3. Mix in the flour until a soft dough forms.
  4. Spread the dough into a 9 inch tart pan with a removable bottom. Use your fingers at first to distribute the dough and then smooth it out evenly with a spreading knife.
  5. Bake for 35-40 minutes. The shortbread will still be pale in color.
  6. Make the glaze by mixing the sugar with enough cream or milk to form a spreadable glaze. Add freshly grated nutmeg to taste. I like quite a lot. Start with 1/4 teaspoon and adjust to your liking.
  7. Let the shortbread cool before glazing.

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http://theviewfromgreatisland.com/2013/12/gingerbread-shortbread-with-a-nutmeg-glaze.html

*Recipe from [The View from Great Island|http://theviewfromgreatisland.com] All images and content are copyright protected. If you want to use this recipe, please link back to this page.

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