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Archives for June 2017

how to use lemons

June 30, 2017 by anne Leave a Comment

When life gives you lemons make lemonade. That isn’t all that lemons are good for. They are a perfect little fruit that cooks and cleans. Lemons are a staple in most kitchens and the versatility of this fruit and its relaxing fresh smell make it the perfect scent for so many kitchen cleaning products. First and foremost lemons are key to cooking and not just desserts. Though lemon meringue pie, lemon curd, and lemon bars are some favorites lemon has a strong role in cooking chicken, fish, and vegetables. It was the main source of citric acid before the process was sent to the lab.

As for cleaning you can reach for a lemon to get stains off your plastic storage containers, shine up your copper pots and pans (if you are fancy enough to have such a things), as well as bleach stains, disinfect surfaces, and just make your home smell good.

Season - You can find U.S. grown lemons year round. Most are grown in California with the main harvest happening in winter through early summer. During the other times, you may find them coming from Arizona, Florida, or Texas.

Buying - Look for lemons that are heavy for their size. A tiny lemon that feels heavy compared to the large lemon will have more juice. Lemons are frequently sold individually, instead of by the pound which may make you want to buy the biggest lemon on the table, but resist the urge. Instead look for the heaviest lemon to get your money’s worth. Stay away from lemons that look dull and dry.

Storing - lemons do just fine on the counter. If like me you tend to buy more than you need for a week you can put them in the crisper of your fridge to extend their life and save you the torture of wasting food.

Pairs well with - lavender, chicken, fish, herbs, blueberries, and garlic

Recipes:

  • Lemon and Arugula Rigatoni - A Couple Cooks
  • Vintage Lemonade - this takes a little longer to make, but it is delicious
  • Skillet-Roasted Lemon Chicken - Ina Garten this is a favorite recipe of mine that I make a couple of times a month
  • Lemon Squares with Lavender & Limoncello - Grab a Plate

Filed Under: ingredients Tagged With: lemonade, lemons

setting a grocery budget

June 28, 2017 by anne Leave a Comment

setting a grocery budget

I found that the hardest part of meal planning was deciding on a budget. There are a lot of reasons to meal plan. My main motivator is to stay on a budget, but setting a grocery budget wasn’t easy. I had a general I idea of what I thought we could afford but had no frame of reference as to if that was too much or too little. I can sometimes have expensive tastes and wanting to buy the best food is a blessing and a curse.

Stumbling on the USDA food cost guidelines gave me a much-needed framework. Each month, the USDA produces this chart. They largely use it to track fluctuations in food pricing when then helps to determine how much food stamp recipients get. I used it to give myself a reference for setting my own budget. I am using the April 2017 numbers for this article, but you can get the newer reports at the Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion website.

The USDA breaks down the budgets in a lot of ways, monthly, weekly, by age and gender. They also break it out to 4 separate cost plans; thrifty, low-cost, moderate-cost, liberal. To get to these numbers they assume you are preparing all meals and snacks at home. So this doesn’t include dinner out. The breakdown of what quantities of food groups, which was based on the food pyramid is less helpful in my opinion. Diving into that is also a longer post about nutrition, how the special interests helped the government create the guidelines. We will save that for another day.

USDA food costs - handy for grocery budget planning

I have been using the budget guideline for months now and I can tell you that most diets are possible on almost any budget. As many of you know we are in the process of growing our family. This made keeping costs down important. I fall someplace between the low-cost and moderate plans, $120 for a family of 2. as my starting point. I am so interested in meeting this goal I made a meal planning sheet this helps keep myself in check. A little frame of reference about our diet so you have a better idea about what I am buying.

  • we eat more than the recommended quantities of fruits and veggies
  • we eat meat, though we have cut back
  • we have enough food to pack our lunches (truth is that I can be lazy about this and we end up buying too many lunches)
  • we eat dried fruit and nuts as our main snacks & dessert

I can’t tell you which budget is right for you. Only you and your family can decide what is right, but here are some things to think about as you start deciding on your budget.

how important are organic fruit & vegetables to you

Buying organic is a personal choice and it can cost more than buying conventionally grown produce. While it is true organic fruits & veggies do cost a little more in some cases it’s not enough to make an extreme difference. For example, I bought basil at Trader Joe’s the other day and conventional was only about .30 cents cheaper so I opted for organic. This can have an impact on your budget so if you feel strongly about organic you may need to start with a higher budget than you think you need and see how your first few weeks come out.

how much meat do you eat

Meat eats up a good portion of my budget. We eat more veggies than meat, but it still takes a chunk. The impact of meat on the budget gets even bigger when you consider buying local meat or organic meat. If you eat bacon for breakfast, chicken for lunch and meat at the center of your plate at dinner time you are going to spend a lot more money than the person that gets their protein from eggs, legumes and other foods.

if you can afford it are you doing it

If you have more money coming in than the average family you really should find ways to get local and organic food into your shopping cart. It is better for you, your local economy, and the environment. Every purchase you make is a vote. A vote for the kind of food you want to see grown and produced. Since you have more money to spend you have more votes and by making those choices you help encourage more organic food production which in turn brings the price down for those that can’t yet afford to make that choice. If you can handle that higher budget reach for it and get all the best stuff.

where are you shopping

Learning which store has the best price can take some time, but it will make all the difference on your budget. It took me a while to get used to the layout and learning how to release a grocery cart at Aldi was a whole other learning curve, but they have great prices. It makes my budget stretch so much further. Shopping at Whole Food’s is a feast for the eyes, but it will catch up to you at the checkout. Costco and Sam’s Club can offer some great deals, but only if you are eating items in that large of a quantity. Blowing $6 on a huge tub of greek yogurt might not be your best buy if you only eat it once a week and could buy a smaller quantity for less money. Sure the larger container is a better value, but if you don’t use it you aren’t actually saving yourself any money. Seasonal produce at the farmers markets should be a stop you work into your week. Seasonal fresh produce can often time offer great savings and if you are willing to go at the end of the market you might even find some really great deals. The selection may be smaller, but farmers will want to sell what they brought and might be willing to sell it cheaper if you ask nice.

are you willing to cut back something else

Maybe you feel strongly about organic food, but your budget is tight. Do you have a $5 a day coffee habit you could cut back on? Maybe start getting your books from the library instead of buying them. There are lots of ways to adjust household budgets that will help you bulk up your food budget. Since food is what fuels you and is a large factor in determining how healthy you are it can be one of the most important choices you make. Shouldn’t you put as much money towards that as you can?

Have you set a grocery budget? How did you decide what that budget should be?

 

feature photo by: Nicolas Barbier Garreau

Filed Under: featured, meal planning Tagged With: food costs, grocery budget, grocery shopping, meal planning

what is citric acid?

June 23, 2017 by anne 1 Comment

I don’t usually go too deep in label reading. If there are ingredients on there that aren’t something I stock in my house I usually pass. Lately, this struck me as uninformed. If my goal is to be informed about the food I put in my body then that should mean that I also learn shy I am passing on certain ingredients. Without that, I am just following the hype of the latest article and going on blind faith that someone else is actually looking out for mine and my families best interests.

I started with citric acid because it is found in so many products and is frequently the only added ingredient I don’t know. Like something as simple as canned tomatoes. All the ingredients seem just like what I would do at home and then I come to citric acid. I have at least a dozen items in my pantry or fridge that list this as an ingredient and I keep buying them. Should I be?

What is citric acid

What is it seems like the best place to start. Citric acid comes from the juice of citrus fruits. It is extracted from them and turned into a white powder. This is what I have always kind of assumed. I mean citric acid sounds pretty self-explanatory after all. This next part shouldn’t come as a surprise but it does. The common citric acid you find today isn’t made from citrus. It is made from feeding a mold variety, A. niger, which is found on onion, grapes, and apricots.

It is like Halloween for the mold picked to make citric acid. It gets to be hopped up on sugar and then left to its own natural process to create the by-product citric acid. There are a few other steps in there and some chemicals added to complete the process, but that is gist. The mold used is referred to as black mold, but it is not the variety that you might find in your house that would, rightfully, cause panic.

I liked the idea of citric acid when I believed that it was from citrus. It made it seem like the same process as me putting lemon or lime juice on my guacamole to keep it from turning brown. Knowing that it isn’t as natural as I was assuming is a little disappointing. Knowing that is it largely a natural process makes me feel a little better about it.

Why is citric acid used

  • flavoring agent - sodas
  • preservative - many processed and canned foods (even your own home canned tomatoes)
  • emulsifier - ice creams and other fatty frozen treats

It has a sour taste overuse use could change the flavor of a product unfavorable. If you have ever had sliced apples that tasted a little off and not as sweet as you would have liked, too much citric acid might be the culprit or you might just be buying bland apples.

You can buy the citric acid powder in the canning section to help preserve foods you can from your garden or farmers market. It also has applications as a cleaning agent used in a much larger quantity than you would find in your food but might be a good option to get rid of some hard water stains. Which, if you have had hard water, you know is a real bear to get rid of.

Pros: It makes your flavored beverages taste citrusy and your can goods have a longer shelf life.
Cons: The most common citric acid doesn’t come from citrus. Because it comes from a mold this means some people can be allergic to citric acid.

Will you still buy products that have citric acid?

What other items listed in the label ingredient list give you pause? Leave them in the comments and maybe your question will get answered in a future post.

 

Articles used in research:

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citric_acid
  • http://www.livestrong.com/article/138579-uses-citric-acid/
  • http://www.ehow.com/how_8334314_make-citric-acid-powder.html
  • http://classroom.synonym.com/make-citric-acid-2381.html

Filed Under: label reading

meal planning template and grocery list

June 1, 2017 by anne 3 Comments

meal planning template and grocery list

I have been looking for a meal planning template for a while. For the past year, I have been making an effort to add meal planning into my weekly routine. I like to be organized and have cute little tools to help me get things done so I, of course, needed a template not just a piece of regular paper.

I searched Pinterest and even had my brother design one for me, a design you may see down the road. None of them were quite right. Most took up too much paper. Some were too detailed with breakfast, lunch dinner and snacks. Others were too flowery and just not my style.

After a lot of trial and error and using versions I drew on paper I finally found a layout that makes it easy for me to write down the week’s plan, my budget and my grocery list on the same page and I have turned it into a PDF to share with you.

my meal planning template

I have some favorite features on this meal planning template. Like it is also my grocery list so I don’t have to carry two pieces of paper to the store. When I fold it in half the sheet of paper is an easy size to carry around as I shop.

meal planning & grocery list in one

plan, list & go

This sheet makes it easy for you to plan the recipes you are going to make and write them in the top section of the page. By keeping my budget at the top it also helps remind me to not to plan lavish meals of lamb, seafood or other pricey dishes. Not that we eat like paupers by any means. The treat area lets me feel like I am splurging just a little while staying in budget. This usually reads, hummus & pretzels.

When I am done finding the recipes all I need to do is make my list at the bottom. Starting at the beginning of the week and going all the way through Sunday I am sure not to miss writing down the ingredients for an entire recipe. Though I somehow frequently forget an item or two. This list also has more room for the areas of the store I spend the most money in, produce & pantry staples, which never seemed to be the case on other forms.

The size is also super convenient for me, as I mentioned. I tried using one sheet and doing it vertically, but it was cumbersome to carry around the store and see the entire list at once. It just kept flopping over. This horizontal version makes it much easier, even allowing me to fold it in thirds for an even smaller piece to carry or stick in my pocket from store to store.

date checking at the store

When I was using two pieces of paper, one for the menu and one for the grocery list, I would leave the menu at home. Then at the store, I would forget what night I was cooking a certain dish. So, I am looking at the whole chickens with a few dates and can’t remember if these will still be good on the night I need to cook a whole chicken. Or I would want to get asparagus for dinner, but I was shopping too many days out and my asparagus was going to be dry and lackluster by the time I cooked it. This allows me to make quick decisions, to change my plan on the fly, or rearrange some side dishes so the asparagus would be as fresh as possible when I wanted to cook it.

If you want to use this meal planning template & grocery list, simply sign up for my email list. If you are already on the list this is heading to your inbox as we speak.

If you do use it and have feedback please let me know. I would love to make this the most useful tool it can be. If you don’t do your shopping on Saturday or Sunday like I do and would like the days of the week in a different order we may be able to work something out.

Filed Under: featured, meal planning Tagged With: free download, grocery list, meal planning template

As a home cook and gardener, a former grocery store manager, and an advocate for improving our food system I have thousands of hours of research and real-world experience on how to get good food on our plates. My new challenge and my main focus is how to encourage my daughter to love food & eating as much as we do.

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