It is absolutely FREEEEEEEZING here today. I mean it’s really cold, and I’m inside with ducted heating!

Good grief.

Anyway, my hands are icy, so this shall be short.

I wanted a change of texture for dinner tonight. So, I rescued one of my Asian flavoured beef meals from the freezer and popped it into the crockpot frozen.

Doesn't look all that tasty, does it?

Doesn’t look all that tasty, does it?

But this is how it looks now, after 10 hours on low and with the addition of some frozen peas and corn and some cornflour to thicken it up.

And the after" pic.

And the after” pic.

I’ve just put a rather nice, jazzed-up Apple Crumble in the oven – to keep the whole warm, comfort food, vibe going. I’ve added ground ginger, sultanas and choc chips to the filling…because, why not?

I think I neglected to mention yesterday that I’d made another loaf of bread, so I’ll do that now.

Also, I just served the last of the instant hot chocolate mix to The Boy, who has sequestered himself in his warm study, so I’ll be making more of that tomorrow. I could quite easily do it now, but my kitchen is the coldest room in the house on a decent day.

I’m looking forward to moving – you have no idea.

Hot chilli oil.

Hot chilli oil.

I also decanted the Spicy Chilli and Garlic oil I put aside to infuse a few weeks ago. It’s to be a gift for my step-father who will hopefully be visiting some time this week.  He just had a birthday and loves things HOT.

So, I’m logging off now and snuggling up with a cat or two. On the bright side, today marks the Winter Solstice. It’s going to get warmer from now on, or so they tell me.

Until tomorrow.

 

Sorry I didn’t post yesterday. I had an episode of MS fatigue and my get up and go just got up and went.

However, just to fill in the gaps, yesterday I used the rest of the leftover corned beef to make fritters for lunch. I also used up some frozen stir fry vegies I’d heated for the fried rice a night or so before and then realised I didn’t need.

Fritters

Fritters

So, that went well. I didn’t have dinner as I just didn’t have the energy to eat, but The Boy tucked into the leftover Sausage Hotpot. It’s all good.

I did manage to get my meat and lentil sauce cooked for the Cottage Pie tonight. It looks and smells wonderful. If you look closely at the second photo, you’ll spot the tiny lentils I soaked the day before.

Mince and lentil sauce.

Mince and lentil sauce.

See how the lentils blend in so well?

See how the lentils blend in so well?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I cooked the sweet and white potatoes this afternoon and mashed them up – arranging them on top in a chequerboard pattern. There’s now a big pie that I had intended to take to the Solstice do (not well enough to go, sad face) and two individual ones for our dinner this evening.

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Individual cottage pies

A Big cottage pie for eating later.

A Big cottage pie for eating later.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We did a bit of a stocktake earlier and realised that we’ve used about a quarter of the food I purchased last week. That means I’ve effectively fed us both on $25.

TTFN

Dinner tonight

Today I ate far more than I needed to at a food party at my Thursday lunch group.

However, I had the sausages out for dinner so I made the planned casserole. It was quite tasty, but I think it might need a few tweaks.

Sausage and rice hot pot

Sausage and rice hot pot.

Unfortunately, the rice ‘caught’ a little on the bottom of the pan, so I think I shouldn’t be making it in a cast iron Dutch oven in the future. Also, it was a touch ‘gluggy.’ Perhaps if I were to sauté the rice before adding the liquid?

I think it would also be a good idea to add a can of chick peas to any future editions of the dish, just to add a bit of texture.

However, again we have leftovers for future nights. I’ve used almost all the jasmine rice that I bought last week, so that’s been added to the shopping list for next time.

We have a Winter Solstice Pot Luck to attend on Saturday night, and I’ve decided to take a Shepherd’s Pie. The mince has been released from the freezer and I’ve got some of my favourite tiny brown lentils soaking at the moment.

Teeny, tiny lentils! Aren't they sweet?

Teeny, tiny lentils! Aren’t they sweet?

I like to add these to meat sauces to both help them ‘stretch’ a little, and to increase the fibre content of the dish.

Tomorrow, I’ll make up the meat sauce. Then, on Saturday afternoon, I’ll cook the potatoes and assemble the dish.

I will not be cooking dinner tomorrow night. It will be a “shop the fridge” night all round.

ttfn

I need to be elsewhere this evening, so there’s a need for one dinner that can be served at two different times without deteriorating overly.

I’m combining the leftover corned beef from the weekend with the leftover rice from last night, adding a mix of fresh and frozen vegetables and making my Almost Genuine Fried Rice.

Two bowls of fried rice

Almost Genuine Fried Rice

The instructions for this particular meal have been in the draft stage for some time now and, hopefully, I’ll have them up in the next few weeks…hopefully… maybe…

The problem is that – given how simple the dish appears – the instructions are surprisingly complex.  Oh well.

Anyway, the rice that isn’t eaten tonight will help to form lunches in the days to come or possibly even another dinner on a “shop the fridge” night.

I’m planning on making a casserole tomorrow night with some sausages that have been in my freezer for a while. So they have been taken out to defrost.

I’ve realised that I was about to run out of onions and carrots (Argh!) therefore I’ve stocked up on those today. Remember the $5 I had left at the end of my shopping, here? Well, I just used $2 of it. So there.

Today I crumbed the Chicken Tenderloins from my last grocery shop. They were on the cusp of their use-by date and needed something done with them.

So, I’ve done my standard mix of Panko and coconut, baked them and frozen three-quarters. The other two tenderloins will be dinner tonight with rice and vegetables.

Panko and Coconut coated chicken tenderloins

Panko and Coconut coated chicken tenderloins

Also, given that I had the oven going, I decided to top up the biscuit barrel.

I make a batch of biscuits (cookies) once every two weeks or so for The Boy – with most of them being stored in an airtight container in the pantry or fridge. I have a little tin that lives on the counter near the kettle and it’s usually stocked with just a few biscuits for portion control.

So, these rather scrumptious-looking and incredibly easy biscuits were whipped up while the last of the chicken was baking and went in immediately following it.

Well, that looks good...

Well, that looks good…

I’ve just sampled one and they are definitely biscuits and not cookies. They’ve got that whole crunch thing happening. I may have a bit of a play in a week or so and try making them with butter instead of oil to see what that will do the texture before I post.  So, stay tuned. In the meantime, I think some insulin may be in order! (There’s a reason the biscuits aren’t for me.)

Dinner tonight.

Dinner tonight.

Today the Corned Beef was actually cooked.

I switched it on when I woke up and left it on low all day long.

Then I put a loaf of bread on to bake while the kettle for my morning tea was coming to the boil, so that’s sorted.

After breakfast, I made some apple cinnamon scrolls for The Boy to take on a visit to a sick friend. His reaction to them was so good (“Damn, Girl!”), I’m thinking I’d better get the recipe up here soon.

Apple Cinnamon Scrolls

Apple Cinnamon Scrolls

I’ve also recently been given some kefir grains and a kombucha SCOBY, so I’ve spent some time getting those going … fingers-crossed. As a result, milk has been added to the shopping list.

I’m quite excited about these little experiments!  They’re something I’ve always wanted to play with, despite not knowing very much about them.

Anyway, the corned beef turned out beautifully – if a little over-tender due to its 24 hour long spiced bath! I served it with some very simply baked potato and pumpkin and some frozen peas. Instead of a sauce, I just spooned some of the beef’s cooking liquid over it.

Dinner tonight.

Dinner tonight.

The remaining 3/4 of the beef is now sealed up in the refrigerator for use in other meals later in the week.

Bon Appetit.

Dinner in a hurry.

Near disaster today. I put the corned beef on to cook in the slow cooker before I left for my working bee this morning.

Unfortunately, I forgot to switch it on.

So, The Boy was all set to order takeaway and fall on the budgetary sword when I got in this evening and it was as I’d left it.

Sed nil desperandum.

Remember that BBQ/rotisserie chicken meat I stowed in the freezer yesterday? Out it came to defrost in the microwave for a few minutes.

The sandwich press/panini was heated up (plugged in properly and actually switched on!), some wraps and cheese were retrieved from the fridge and I broke open that little bottle of capsicum pesto that was my “new” thing in last week’s shopping.

Spread the pesto on the wrap. Sprinkle with cheese, add the chicken and fold.

Add fillings and fold.

Add fillings and fold.

Wholegrain wrap + Capsicum pesto

Wholegrain wrap + Capsicum pesto

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then toast and cut into quarters.

 

30 seconds in the sandwich press later...

30 seconds in the sandwich press later…

Eh voila! Chicken Quesadillas.

Dinner in a hurry.

Dinner in a hurry.

Now, it wasn’t the sit down meal I had been planning – or looking forward to – and it probably wasn’t the most nutritious of dinners, but it did the trick. At the very minimum, it certainly had less sugar and salt than a takeaway pizza would have and I didn’t have to cook after shovelling scoria all afternoon…

Wraps have now been added to my shopping list for next time.

Until tomorrow.

 

Those of you who know me personally, are probably aware that The Boy and I are intending to buy/build a house in the near future.

This means that we are saving every penny where we can and that I am currently feeding us on a budget of $25 each per week.

I keep being told that this simply isn’t possible.

So, The Boy has suggested that I document this part of our journey along the lines of the $30 challenge we completed at the beginning of the life of this blog.

Some of this week's  shop...

Some of this week’s shop…

I’ll start this project in the next few days. I’ll show you what I buy in my fortnightly grocery shop – and the prices I pay – and then give a daily run down of what I’ve prepared with it.

 

 

The rules will be as they were for the $30 challenge. You can find those here.

I hope you’ll all find the account valuable and maybe even helpful.

TTFN

Christmas biscotti platter

Christmas is the time of year I start baking hard, thick, crunchy, chunky, seemingly inedible biscuits and giving large amounts of them to my friends.

No. I’m not mad.

Christmas biscotti platter

Christmas biscotti platter

Biscotti is an Italian word that shows the origin of the English word ‘biscuit.’ Basically it means cooked twice, like rusks or zwieback (also meaning cooked twice), which is why the American use of the word continues to confuse me…

Moving on from etymology, these things are wonderful. Really truly.

They started out in the dim, dark pages of history as a way of making food travel-proof. Dry out your bread and it won’t go mouldy. Simple. Think, ships’ biscuits and Horatio Hornblower. Which means you can make them now and happily eat them in a month’s time.

Biscotti came into my life about 8 years ago and, from then on, I just wanted to share the joy.

A thick, sticky dough is mixed, shaped into logs, baked in a moderately hot oven for a bit, allowed to cool, cut into thick slices (about ½ an inch thick), baked in a slightly cooler oven for a second time until thoroughly dried out and then kept in an air-tight container until dunked into a warm beverage – usually coffee, but tea and hot chocolate rock too – and then delighted in tremendously.

first baking...

first baking…

Italian friends tell me that they also work well dipped in a glass of vin santo …

They usually contain nuts, like whole blanched almonds, hazelnuts or pistachios, dried fruit, like cranberries and, sometimes, coconut. They are also quite low in fat as most recipes contain neither butter nor oil. They do contain lots of flour and quite a bit of sugar though, so don’t go thinking of them as anything resembling a health food.

That said, a biscotto is not something you would inhale in the way you might a sweet biscuit or cookie, so you are less likely to start scoffing them down in large quantities. One will usually be sufficient.

There are endless variations. It all depends on your imagination and your knife.

To make biscotti you need a good, serrated knife.

Now, that's a knife...

Now, that’s a knife…

If you don’t have one, then tears will be the inevitable outcome. I speak from experience.

You are baking something so that it will be crunchy; if you then try slicing that it will simply disintegrate into (delicious) crumbs under your blade. That is bad.

A serrated knife is the only thing that will save your biscuits and your sanity.

Slicing biscotti

Slicing biscotti

Get one. That is all.

Once your biscotti are thoroughly baked and cooled, they will keep for Aeons in an airtight container.

Really!

Well, quite a number of weeks anyway.

Which is why they make such great Christmas gifts.

I figure that most of the people I know already have all the ‘stuff’ they could possibly need and don’t really need to find the space for yet another knick knack they don’t really like. Probably they will be overloaded with sweet biscuits/cookies, cakes and chocolates as well.

Managing mass biscotti baking like this on a budget can be quite doable. The flour and sugar is something that I already have in store, but I buy a bit extra. Then, in the months leading up to baking, I add one packet of special ingredients to my shopping each fortnight. A packet of blanched almonds one week, a packet of crystallised ginger the next shopping week and so forth. Then, in the week before I start to bake, I buy 2 dozen eggs and I’m set to go.

Second baking

Second baking

I make a different batch (recipe) of biscotti for each person on my Christmas run. So, if I’m wanting to give them to 5 different people, I make 5 different types of biscotti. Then I divvy them up, wrap in cellophane and deliver on Christmas Eve or roundabouts.

Because they store so well, I can easily make a different batch each day for a week instead of having one huge baking day. They all go into a large Tupperware Cake Taker until it’s time for them to leave the premises.

Big box of bikkies

Big box of bikkies

They are easy to mix and shape, but take a lot of time to bake. If you are suffering through one of the sweltering hot versions of the Australian Christmas Season, then do this late at night with all the doors and windows open.

I’ve recently moved away from my friends and can’t give them biscotti this year, so I shall share some of the recipes with them on here instead. 😥

There will be quite a few biscotti posts to come….

Biscotti recipes on Budget Bounty:
Caraway and Lemon Biscotti
Coconut Almond Biscotti
Orange Ginger Biscotti

 

 

 

 

 

Today in the Budget Bounty kitchen, we revisited the fruit cake recipe in the last post.

I lovingly spooned the batter into two mini bundt pans that I have. Thinking that we could have one on the way to Christmas and pop one into the freezer for some time in the New Year.

mini bundt pans

mini bundt pans

Given the smaller amount of batter in each ‘tin’, I worked on reducing the time accordingly. I decided to bake them at the same temperature for 40 minutes, before taking them out to test and rotate.

After baking...

After baking…

And this seems to have been just right! They’ve worked well with that timing.

For those of you reading who have a much better grasp of icing/frosting/decorating than I do (and a bundt tin or two), imagine something like this decorated to resemble a Christmas Wreath!

And don't they look precious?

And don’t they look precious?

Whaddayathink?

(Mine will just get a dusting of icing sugar, I think.)

This would work just as well with other pan shapes, if you happen to have smaller loaf or round tins in your cupboards.

TTFN.