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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() "Brooklyn1" <Gravesend1> wrote in message ... > On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 12:13:39 -0800, "Julie Bove" > > wrote: > >> >>"sf" > wrote in message . .. >>> On Sun, 19 Dec 2010 15:38:51 -0800, "Julie Bove" >>> > wrote: >>> >>>> Probably the easiest to cook for is 4 or 6. Things tend to come in >>>> those >>>> amounts. Not all things of course. But a lot of things. I think 8 >>>> would >>>> be the next easiest because you can buy things in bulk. >>> >>> I buy most things in bulk. Perishables, like boneless chicken pieces, >>> are packaged in 2 person portions and frozen for later. I just don't >>> buy into the "cooking for two is harder" theory. Either you calculate >>> an average of what you estimate each person will eat and buy what you >>> need or you throw a whole bunch of food in your cart and cook it. One >>> method produces a lot of leftovers, the other doesn't - and your >>> attitude toward leftovers will influence your shopping personality. >>> >>> -- >> >>Then what about things like salad? Unless you are lucky enough to have a >>store that sells things like greens in bulk (and you can just buy the >>amount >>you need), you will have a lot of leftovers if you want a salad that >>contains a lot of things. I have yet to see a store that sells one green >>onion. Or six cherry tomatoes. This is why we often buy salad from the >>salad bar. Costs a lot more but much less waste. >> >>I even buy from the salad bar when I am making a pasta salad or meatloaf. >>Otherwise I have either a ton of food or a ton of leftover vegetables. > > Any garden salads I prepare at home are of the "chef salad" genre, the > salad is pretty much the entire meal, may also accompany a bowl of > soup and crackers/bread. I may place a bit of lettuce and a couple > slices of tomato on a ham sandwich but I'm not going through prepping > ten kinds of veggies, a little of this/a little of that, just to make > a saucerful of salad that I can scoff down with four forkfuls... yoose > want a salad as a widdle side dish dine out, at home my salad is my > meal. Just about every week I prepare a 24 cup bowl chock full of > garden salad, at serving I often add pasta, cheese, canned beans, > tuna, cold cuts, chicken, sardines, etc... something different each > day until it's all gone. The produce will stay just-made fresh at > least four days when tossed with the juice of a fresh lemon or lime, > or even a splash of vinegar. I don't remember ever having to toss any > due to spoilage. Yummy: http://i56.tinypic.com/rldfn9.jpg I used to eat big salads all the time, but sadly I can't digest them any more. Daughter and husband are not too keen on salads. They will eat them once in a while but any more often is pushing it. |
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