Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Find of the Week


Over the weekend I happened upon a yard sale out in the country, so as one might expect, curiosity made my car turn into the driveway. I was sure it was way past sale season, being that it's the end of October, but on a warm 70-some degree morning it just felt right.

The sale was a very small one, and I learned it was made up of leftovers from a yard sale they had earlier that summer. I was met with a good morning and a "Just ignore the price tags. Everything is name-your-price today." Just walk by her table, barely say "Would you take..." and she would say yes. I left with a few old Taste of Home and Quick Cooking magazines, since I love browsing recipes and am eager to try a few new ones this winter. I had been meaning to get to the library to borrow some but this deal was even better, because I don't have to worry about returning them, I can cut out recipes if I feel like it, and I don't have to stress out about my kids getting ahold of them. The other thing I found was something I have had on my yard sale "to-find" list for two years. I've been wanting a jar tall enough to store dried spaghetti noodles. My pantry is all on open shelving in my kitchen, due to a tiny house and very limited storage and cupboard space. I didn't realize how hard it was to find a tall jar until I decided I wanted one! In the picture above I have a gallon jar standing next to it for comparison. These gallon jars have always been the tallest jars on my shelves; they are even taller than Ball half-gallon jars. The new spaghetti jar towers over them all, and is absolutely perfect for what I need!

Have you found any exciting-to-you deals lately?

Monday, October 16, 2017

Deal of the Week

All summer there has been a produce auction going on just down the road from us. The auction is held twice a week, and I have been a frequent goer, to browse, bid, and enjoy a little bit of fresh air away from home to help keep me sane.

Being a former farmer's market salesperson, business manager, and hired hand, I heard plenty about food/produce auctions from other vendors, but didn't really know how they worked. It got my curiosity though, and with my love for food, this became something that I wanted to experience for myself. So when the auction opened up here in my town last summer, I was pretty excited! Being that I live in Amish country, it is owned and operated by a couple of amish families. There are lots of vendors from the community that bring all sorts of things to sell- from flowers to green beans to fresh homemade pies and butter. 



Now that I'm a housewife and am in charge of purchasing groceries, I have found it very helpful to keep on top of the going rate for fresh produce, and have enjoyed expanding my education in this department especially being a gardener myself. Dreaming of running a little roadside stand one day, I now have an inside peek at what people pay for wholesale produce, and can measure how much profit they might be making when they resell at their own stand. While I have no desire to resell other people's produce, I DO have an idea how much I could get for my own vegetables, should I have an abundance and decide to take it to auction to be sold. 

Our current gardening/canning plan is to pick a couple staple products to grow each year, but plant enough to last us for a few years. For example, next year we will need green beans. Instead of planting enough for us for a year, we plan to grow a large patch of beans, can enough to last three years, and then not have to worry about them for awhile. We planted three rows of beans the summer of 2015, and they will last us until spring 2018. If we plant four rows of beans, we'll be able to take at least a bushel to auction every week, earning us a minimum of $20 per week, for not much extra effort. (According to this year's going rate of $22-36 per bushel of green beans. Auction keeps 10% of earnings.)

Okay, I've gotten a little sidetracked here. While some prices raised my eyebrows at the auction, there have been other times I've found great deals on things I could use. Last week, well... if I was trying to watch my spending, I should've not taken the checkbook, and only limited myself to the amount of cash I had on hand like I normally do. But I did have it along with me, and I ended up needing to use it. Even though my grand total spending for the day was high, I stocked up on some great deals. 

Eggs. I bought 24 dozen eggs for $0.50-.75 less than I normally pay per dozen. Yes, 24 dozen is a lot of eggs for a family of two adults and two small children, but we can go through an easy 3 dozen a week. Because these are fresh eggs, they will last much longer than any you'll find on the grocery store shelf. I now have enough to last us into December, but I saved between $12.00 and $16.00 doing so. To me, this is a HUGE savings. 



Acorn Squash. This is my favorite. It has great sentimental qualities to me, as this is the squash variety I grew up on. My mom would cut them in half and bake with a pat of butter, chopped walnuts, a dash of cinnamon, and a splash of maple syrup, and it was the most delicious thing ever. Aaron however, grew up on Butternut squash, and that is the only variety he really cares for. Since I'm a general squash lover, I gladly grow his variety to feed us all through the winter. But at the auction I got a box of 40 acorn squash for $0.10 a piece! At that price, I decided it would be an excellent way to feed Adam and me lunch on the days Aaron works away from home. I can put the squash halves in the crock pot and have an easy meal for two for less than 50 cents, including the cost of the toppings! (I will omit the walnuts, to keep cost lower.) That's better than sandwiches, because the bread alone would cost the two of us about 40 cents per meal.


I spent a bit more on produce that day, but that will be another post for another day. It's a big story.

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Cooking for a Crowd: Episode 10 - Sloppy Joes

It was a beautiful Saturday afternoon. I stepped outside to enjoy a breath of fresh air and a leisurely walk to check on the garden. Feeling the soft green grass beneath my feet, everything in me is set to ease in the calm, quiet outdoors. Walking past the rope swing hanging down from a tall but weathered tree, I remember. Crowd meal tomorrow.

Oh yeah.

Oops. Somehow even though it was written on my calendar in black letters, which I had seen previously in the week, it had slipped my mind, and I had the rest of my Saturday to throw something together. 

I'm such a wing-it person. It seems like these last-minute things are attracted to me. I try to plan ahead, but somehow ... it just doesn't work for me. I'd love tips and tricks, if you all wouldn't mind filling the comment box below to help me out. I need help.

My original plan (from months ago), has been to make a certain yummy summery casserole for my next crowd meal, but that plan kept getting shoved off month after month due to either lack of time, or lack of desire to use the oven for cooking. Well, this particular weekend we had record-breaking, sweltering hot temperatures. In fact we - north-central Michigan - went on record as the second warmest place in the United States that weekend, at 91*. This being said, it was no time to be slaving away in a hot kitchen. Thus our decision to put off that casserole yet another month, and find something more friendly to warmer weather. 

I wasn't prepared, so my meal had to be fast enough to throw together in an evening (or the next morning), and I had to be able to find everything locally for a half-decent price, regardless of sales. We decided on sloppy joes, since that was something I could heat in the crock-pot, and also went well with cold sides. Aaron really wanted potato salad, so the sloppy joe meal idea was kind of formed around that. :) 



Main Dish
I was hoping to find meat for around $2.00/lb, so I went to the "cheap store" in town. It just opened this summer, and I have been there twice to get meat on sale, both times around $1.79/lb. So while I was hoping for a sale, I figured their non-sale price couldn't be too much more than that. Unfortunately it was not ground beef sale week, so I paid full price, which I believe was $2.39/lb. My goal was to get 10 lbs and spend $20 on meat, but I ended up getting closer to 9lbs and spending $20.82. I had a few pounds of cheap ground beef in the freezer at home, but I wasn't sure exactly how much and didn't want to have to wait for it to thaw before I could get started cooking. I need to gather all those random containers and compile them for my next beefy crowd meal. If I can remember to plan ahead. Anyhow. The worst thing about buying cheap meat at a non-sale price, is that this stuff was 73/27 beef-fat ratio, which means over 1/4 of it disappeared when I cooked the meat. I really, really dislike buying meat at this ratio, even if it is a half okay price, because I feel like whatever money I'm trying to save all drains out in grease. By the time I added my filler ingredients to actually turn the meat into the meal, my cost into the sloppy joe was around $23.50. I was able to find hamburger buns at retail for a nice low price of $1.09/package, which isn't much higher than the Aunt Millie's Bakery Thrift Store, but I get an extra week shelf life! I bought 6 packages of 8, totalling $6.54.

Sides
For sides, we went simple. Aaron got his potato salad, and we decided on baked beans as the second option. Looking back, I wish I would've gone with something of lighter fare, like watermelon or a veggie tray, just to give the meal more variety. This actually really bugged me. A well-rounded meal should not consist of only heavy foods. At least not on a super hot day. My cost into sides was around $12.05 between the salad and beans. I used 4 28-ounce cans of beans, in case ya'll are trying to calculate numbers for your own event. 

Leftovers
There was quite a bit of food leftover, due to less people eating than originally anticipated. I'd say there were 25 mouths to feed. We brought home half of the sloppy joe meat, two packs of buns, and several servings of potato salad. It was at least $14 worth of leftovers, and was enough to feed us for two suppers with both salad and sloppy joe and a couple more lunches of sloppy joe. 

In conclusion, my total bill for the meal was $42.09, which is a couple dollars over what I try to spend when cooking for 40. I'm not really sure how to calculate the per serving cost here. Do I divide the total expense by 40 [$1.05/person], or by the 25 [$1.68/person] I actually served? Do I subtract the cost of leftovers, and divide the remainder [$28.09] by 25 mouths [$1.12/person]?