Rocky wrote:
The easiest, quickest, cheap alternative to the microwavable rice is the puffed brown rice that is sold as cereal in plastic bags. No cooking at all! It can be found in the cereal aisle at Walmart for less than $1. It is more nutritious, too. There are no added ingredients. Not as appealing, maybe, but I have found them a nice addition to some soups, and microwavable Indian entrees.
I've never thought that puffed brown rice could be anything but cereal. Do you substitute it for rice? It can get really soggy if it's exposed to anything remotely liquidy so watch out. I don't like it when it gets soggy. I wonder what can be done with it? I never thought of it as anything but cereal and it's really terrible in milk.
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My own nominee for the cheapest, easiest, most nutritious meal is oatmeal, sold in bulk often for less than $1 a pound. Uninspiring, I grant you, but easily modified with raisins, nuts, cinnamon, apple sauce, yogurt, etc. Regular oatmeal cooks fine in the microwave. You don't have to buy the packets which are marketed as "Microwavable." I add the extra ingredients after cooking, to help cool it off, so I can enjoy it sooner.
The best thing about oatmeal is it's so filling. It's great with raisins. A package of Sunmaid boxes isn't too expensive. You can put one in the microwave for ten seconds, then, put it in your bowl of oatmeal and it's so good warmed up like that. Another thing that's great in oatmeal is half and half or cream, but it's way to fattening to add too often.
A really good cheap meal: roasted potatoes. I quarter red potatoes, toss them in a bowl with olive oil, kosher salt and pepper, then, put them on a cookie sheet and into a preheated 425 degree oven. I bake them for thirty minutes, take them out and let them cool for about fifteen minutes. It's cheap and filling. I can find a bag of them from Campbell Farms at SWMC for $2.50, but it might be a "Thanksgiving only" special.