Help...need CHEAP, EASILY PORTIONED meals....?
FutureMrsWarby
Posts: 96 Member
in Recipes
I just moved into my own apartment that I'm paying for on my own and money is extremely tight due to that and the fact that I'm paying off medical debt.
I have kind of put my weight loss on hold for awhile due to life changes and expenses, but the truth is, now that I'm on my own I can't afford to buy the expensive groceries/treats anymore.
My biggest problem is...how do I make big meals that are going to be clean and healthy, but also EASY TO PORTION out? I want to make sure my measurements will be correct, but it's hard to do that when you make those "weekly batch" type meals.
I really need help, I appreciate all suggestions.
I have kind of put my weight loss on hold for awhile due to life changes and expenses, but the truth is, now that I'm on my own I can't afford to buy the expensive groceries/treats anymore.
My biggest problem is...how do I make big meals that are going to be clean and healthy, but also EASY TO PORTION out? I want to make sure my measurements will be correct, but it's hard to do that when you make those "weekly batch" type meals.
I really need help, I appreciate all suggestions.
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Replies
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HI
maybe the first time u could enter all ingredients individually so u know that meal is approx (so many calories)
it would be easier .
just freeze it and label 400 cals(or whateva it is) so u know how to plan your day accordingly
hope this helps0 -
When I make those big batch type recipes, I calculate the stats for the recipe using the MFP recipe builder and then I either weight the entire batch and weigh each portion, or before I had a food scale I portioned out the entire batch using the size of bowl I would be eating it from. Then I go back and edit the recipe for the correct number of servings for the whole batch.0
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I batch cook a lot. Especially for lunches. I tend to portion everything out into microwaveable containers - 8 for £1 in Poundland - and label each up before freezing. I love BBC Good Food website for suggestions and I post images of all my meals and recipes on my food diary blog - ameliasfooddiary.wordpress.com - which might give you some ideas. Most of the recipes are freezable!
Ax0 -
I second using the recipe builder on MFP. I've just started using it and it's great for figuring out calories in my favourite recipes. (All the nutrition info in cans and packages is on the package or often in the database). I just estimate how many cup-sized servings the recipe makes and then measure out our portions in cups. It makes it easy to keep eating the kinds of food we always ate ( we always ate healthy, just too large of portions). I feel I will have more success just cutting down on fat and upping fibre but keeping most of the same foods in my diet. Too many changes = failure, at least for me. Anyway, try the recipe tool. It will remember the recipe for next time, too.0
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Also, if you are eating the whole batch yourself if you know the calories in the entire things, it doesn't matter if you are a little over or under any given day since it will even out in the end.
Here is a crockpot meal I do a lot that is cheap and makes a huge amount of food.
Ingredients:
1 lb. 95% lean ground beef or turkey
1 large onion, chopped fine
1 tbsp finely minced garlic
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
1 tsp sweet Hungarian Paprika
salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste
1 1/2 heads green cabbage, coarsely chopped
1 can (28 oz.) crushed tomatoes
2-4 cup water
1 cups uncooked brown rice
2 cups pizza blend cheese
Instructions:
Heat a large frying pan on medium heat; add ground beef and cook until it's browned and cooked through, breaking it apart as it cooks. Add onion to soften . Add the minced garlic, dried thyme, and paprika and cook about 2 minutes. Then add the tomatoes and uncooked rice and 2 cup of water
Cut cabbage in half, cut out the core, and remove any wilted outer leaves; chop the cabbage coarsely into 1 inch pieces.
In the crockpot layer half the cabbage, half the meat mixture, remaining cabbage, and remaining meat mixture. (you can just mix it all in also.)
Cook on High for 6 hours adding water if the rice is not getting done. For the last 20 minutes put cheese on top and let melt.0 -
I found this blog post a few months ago and I feel like it could really help you out! It details how to go about big-batch cooking (all kinds of meats and veggies), that you could portion out individually (and calculate cals, macros, etc.) and then mix them up for lunches, dinners, etc.
This is kind of what we do at my house: make a ton of chicken or fish, and a ton of veggies for the week. Then I portion them out each morning (just using measuring cups, my food scale isn't working at the moment). It's worked well for us so far, hope this helps!
http://www.bigredkitchen.com/2011/07/how-to-make-mason-jar-meals-part-1/0 -
make your own pizzas, they aren't "big batch" but they only take a few moments to whip together and then about 7 minutes in the oven at 450.
Arnold flatbread sandwich pockets (use them flat) - 200 calories
1/4 cup pizza sauce - 35 calories
1/2 c shredded cheese (this is heavy for the size of the bread) - 180 calories
17 turkey pepperonis - 70 calories
485 calorie qucik lunch
All the ingredients cost me $12.00 and makes 4 pizzas.0 -
I agree with the posts about building the recipe under your food tab and saving it. Once you make the recipe, figure out how many servings the dish makes for you, depending on the size portion you want and edit the recipe accordingly. You could then either separate it into individual containers for eating later. Bear in mind that soups and chili will freeze well and you can thaw them later so that you don't have to eat the same thing for days on end. I don't recommend freezing any kind of cooked pasta, though.
As far as cheap goes, you may spend a little more up front buying the groceries, but the cost per serving will still be cheaper than a non-filling Lean Cuisine type of meal. I like doing things like baked spaghetti or baked ziti using whole wheat pasta and a meat sauce with cheese melted on top. A 9x13" pan will give you at least 8 good servings. A batch of soup or chili will easily yield 8-10 servings. Pasta is relatively cheap and you can substitute ground turkey for the ground beef in the meat sauce to save some money.
Another great thing is to buy the big bags of frozen chicken breast and throw the whole bag (about 2 pounds) into a crock pot with a couple of chicken bouillon cubes, a few sprinkles of poultry seasoning and about 1/4 cup of water. Cook it on low until the chicken is fork tender and shred it for use in all kinds of stuff - bbq chicken, chicken salad, soups, casseroles. Measure out portions and put them into freezer storage bags and save them until you need them. It's a great time saver and great for your budget.0 -
When we're (my husband and I) on a really low budget week, we make rice balls (made out of brown sushi rice, with a little rice vinegar for flavor). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onigiri We make ours without fillings to save calories and sodium, while getting us fiber and to help fill up. Just use a half cup for each rice ball. We invested in a good $25 rice maker and its worth its weight in gold.
I sometimes make mini salads. I'd take the bag of spring mix and add veggies to the top. Seal it up and you have individual salads for the next couple days. Any veggies left in the fridge at the end of the week that are a little dried out can go into the chowder recipe below. Since you're simmering them, if they're a little dry they get rehydrated in the soup and taste amazing.
Another thing that I would make is a double batch of garden chowder and buy some plastic seal-able containers and put the same amount in each one. The recipe that we make has 220 calories for 2 cups of chowder.
All you need to make it is:
~a bit of butter/oil
~onion (optional)
~water
~chicken bouillon cubes (sodium free preferred)
~5 cups of veggies, split any way you want (about 2/3 bags of frozen veggies).
~a couple cups of milk
~a bit of flour for thickening.
The veggies can be frozen, fresh or canned. Fresh is best of course, but frozen has a lot less sodium than the canned stuff and is really cheap. You can use any veggies that you have on hand; as long as there's 5 cups total. A double batch of chowder lasts 2 people for 5-6 days.
Send me a message, and I'll send you the recipe. You can add a sprinkle of fat free mozzarella (about 50 calories), or a couple slices of low fat low sodium turkey bacon (25 calories each slice). Extra bacon can be used for BLT's using extra stuff left over from making salads earlier in the week. This way, you're using all of your ingredients and nothing goes to waste.0 -
I do batch cooking a lot too. I have found that many recipes that I like from online recipe sites like allrecipes, myrecipes, & foodnetwork have nutritional values posted on the recipe with serving size. A big bonus is that tons of these recipes have already been entered into MFP, so I don't always have to manually enter the data myself. Saves a lot of time and makes it easier for me to keep tracking nutritional values.0
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Get your meats and fresh veggies that freeze well when they are on a good sale and set aside a few hours to put together a few meals for the next week. Plan your main dish and side items based on what is on sale. Cut up all of your meats and veggies and basically set set up a production line. Portion out everything for each quick meal so you can determine the calorie/macros. Season the meat and/or veggies with whatever dry seasoning or marinade you like. Place everything you want for each meal in a freezer bag. If you are using veggies you do not want cooked "with" the meat, put it separately into a smaller freezer bag and put each individual bag into a larger freezer bag to keep it all together. You can do this with crockpot meals or to cook in the skillet or on the grill. When you are ready to cook one of your quick meals, just pop it into the fridge one or two days before so it is thawed and ready for you to use. Doing it this way, YOU have controlled and measured every calorie that went into you meal AND you are using fresh, clean foods, AND frankly it just tastes good!! Good luck!!0
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Homemade vegetable soup goes a long ways and you can put whatever you want in it...I use either ground turkey or lean burger instead of the expensive meat chunks..It goes all thru the soup...I cook my meat separately with onion and seasoning so that I can drain the fat off ...but you can drop it in the hot soup by little pieces...I also like to cook the small packs of pre-seasoned port tenderloins..They only take 20 mins. per pound and they are easy to slice and package in small portions..0
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Thanks for posting this recipe, I do the batch and portion for one as much as I can
and this sounds delicious!!0 -
Batch cooking is the best for making large meals fairly cheap. I also make a big bowl of tuna sald, throw a couple of hard boiled eggs in, chopped celery, bit of sweet pickles and a little mayo - eat on a wrap or a arnold thin
Put a couple of chicken breasts in a crockpot with a jar of salsa or a pouch of taco seasoning and a bit of water and let cook until done and shred it up - can top salads with it - make tacos with it, tortillas, quesadillas etc using the whole grain shells
I bought a round steak on sale - put it in the crock for several hours - sauteed a green pepper and an onion and put it in with the meat and chopped up a couple of roma tomatoes - made a batch of brown rice and bowled it up into my serving size and got about 9 meals out of it
could do a chicken teryaki in crockpot - that would give you several meals - there are tons of blogs and pins on freezer cooking or crockpot meals that would easily give you 5-8 meals out of one batch depending on your serving size.
I just plug all the ingredients into the recipe builder and will measure out to see how many bowls I get - if the macros are off I will adjust the serving size to get it where it needs to be (for the first time anyways - after that you will know how many servings you can get)
Angie0 -
My go to is pancakes! They're easy to make in large batches and freeze and take seconds to warm up. I just made a batch of Banana Chocolate Chip Pancakes which worked out at 172 cals for 2. (But I know it can be done in less)
Ingredients are cheap so something to consider. Search the forums for the recipe.
Its sounds like you're getting a lot of the same answer: batch cooking. If you want to eat well you need to control the ingredients, espepecially if you want to save some cents, homemade is always cheaper than store bought.
Good luck!0 -
Hey there where is the MF recipe builder at?0
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Hey there where is the MF recipe builder at?
Food->Recipes-> add new recipe (it's hiding on the far right side of the screen)0 -
I totally agree with what other people are saying. This is what I do.
1. Find a basic recipe that can served over rice or with a potato to "stretch" it out longer.
2. I use the recipe option on mfp. Once I have all my containers portioned out for the week, I then can enter how many servings into the recipe area to get accuracy.
I use pinterest to find recipes. A lot of the time I can make it more basic or lower calorie. Some of my cheap favorites are
Pineapple chicken(frozen chicken, can pineapple, soy) over rice.
Homemade sloppy joes (ground beef or turkey, mustard, ketchup, and bbq sauce) over potatoes.
Chili(ground beef or turkey, beans, can diced tomato, chili packet) over potatoes, rice, or with crackers.
Homemade pizza(make a big sled and wrap pieces up for lunches).
Salsa chicken(frozen chicken, salsa) eat with tortillas or over rice. Even over a salad or with nachos would be yummy.
You can do this, it is just about planning and getting the most out your money. Hope this helps!0
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