Saturday, November 17, 2012

Thrifty Tip - Have a Cooking Party

This article, entitled Weekend Cooking Party comes from Dawn Wells at partner site slopswap.com.

Busy days can lead to frustration when it comes to making dinner. Who feels like cooking a meal after a hard day?s work? What?s the best way to avoid the drive through or delivery? Use your weekends off to prepare all your meals for the upcoming week.

We?ve all been there at least once and if you?re like me, more times than we wish to admit. We go to the grocery store and spend a ton of money so that there will be food in the house. We then make a promise to cook each and every night since the food is already there and ready to be consumed.

Then I?m exhausted from my day and don?t feel like cooking. It?s way to easy to pick up the phone and order take out. We spend twenty or thirty dollars on food for one meal when we have a fridge full of food. Have you been there, too? Not a very good choice when we?re trying hard to save money, right?

One way I?ve found to stop this endless cycle is to pick one day on the weekend and have a cooking party. I make a menu for the week and then one day over the weekend, start cooking. You could even gather a few friends together and make it a real party?you end up making enough to feed your family and their families too.

For your weekend cooking party, decide on the menu early. This ensures that everything needed is present and accounted for. Start with the meats. They will take the longest to cook so get that going and try to have a variety so you?re not bored with the same meats all week long.

Side dishes could be prepared, too. It seems like such a small thing to cook the main part of the meal and save the rest for later. What usually happens is no one feels like cooking anything. Avoid that by cooking everything at the same time.

Cooking that much food for later requires containers to hold it all. There are two ways this can be done. One way is to use containers that are large enough for each side dish and the main meat courses. Each day, take a meat and two sides out of the fridge and heat it up for dinner.

The second way gives the family a little more of a choice each day of what they want to eat. When the food cools (everything needs to cool before placing it in containers), have each person scoop what they want to eat into a serving container. Have one meat and two sides per container. Label each with what is inside. During the week, everyone can pick from a variety of dinner combinations.

You can also make casseroles and freeze the entire pan. I do that most often.

All of the above works, you just need to decide which is better for your family. Cooking on the weekend saves time and money because you?ll be less tempted to go out when you?re tired from working all day.

If your food makes more meals than you could eat in a week, freeze several of them for another time. Simply thaw each meal the day you plan to serve it. You will have to make an investment in dinner size containers, but it pays off the more you use them. Once you see how much stress you relieve and healthier your family is eating it will be well worth the initial cost.

Read more great articles from Dawn at slopswap.com.

Source: http://www.momseveryday.com/home/money/headlines/slopswap-cooking-party-177654371.html

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