The Dollar ain't what it used to be. But being the cheap$kate that I am, I can still stretch a buck even today August 8th on National Dollar Day. So read on to see recipes that use Dollar ingredients, and foodstuff that cost about a Dollar. And you know the deal, just click on a highlighted recipe name to see all the tasty details from my extensive collection of cheap and tasty blog postings.
Yay, 99c only Store and Dollar Tree!!
You can't get more basic than a Sandwich and I don't mean a boring Baloney Sandwich, although I do crave one every once in a while.
Let's start with a Philly Hoagie Sandwich. My wife, Linda, was raised just outside of Philadelphia and when we visit her kin I always make a stop for a local Hoagie Sandwich. It's really just an Italian Sandwich filled with deli cuts of meat, usually salami, pepperoni, and provolone cheese, and topped with lettuce, onion, and tomato.
The above sandwich is from Dale's Deli in Levittown, Pennsylvania and this is where I get the best local Hoagies. They use salami and ham for theirs.
You want a bread roll with some crunch on the outside and soft on the inside. Instead of the usual mayo and mustard, a Hoagie has a dressing of oil, vinegar, and dried Italian herbs. Check out my video below to see how I make mine.
The way I keep my sandwiches cheap is to buy "day old" bread from my local supermarket bargain bin. If you toast bread that's been out a little too long, I bet you cannot tell the difference from fresh-toasted bread, at least I can't. I even get croissants on sale that cost less than a dollar apiece when you break the package down.
You can still find tomatoes for less than a dollar a pound, especially cherry tomatoes and Roma tomatoes. Lettuce is cheap when you break it down even if it costs a couple bucks per.
Two easy side dishes are Easy Coleslaw and Potato Salad, again I can keep the ingredients at a buck each including the condiments mustard, pickle relish, and mayo.
My Homemade Potato Salad is the bomb, just check it out below and rock your next patio party with it.
Potatoes are one cheap veggie. I find packages of shredded cabbage and carrot at my 99c only Store.
How about a Dollar Tree oatmeal breakfast? And that includes coffee.
I like fruit with my yogurt, especially when yogurt is still pretty cheap. Bananas, apples, and even mangos can be found on the cheap at my nearby 99c only Store or ethnic market. The container of yogurt may be small but it's enough for a snack or light breakfast when you add fresh fruit.
The same goes for Pancakes. I also like mine with fruit. You can still find pancake mixes in the box for a buck or buck twenty-five at the 99c only Store and Dollar Tree. While the syrup there is not pure maple, you can always splurge for the real thing elsewhere - don't tell, but that's what I do these days.
You can't get much cheaper than an Egg Sandwich. I can still get half a dozen eggs for a buck twenty-five at my local Dollar Tree, that's less than 25 cents per egg.
I like lettuce, tomato, and mayo on mine. I like my egg fried with a slightly runny yolk. You can scramble an egg as well. I use toasted bread. Get fancy and use a pretzel roll. I often start my day with a Fried Egg Sandwich using day-old bread.
I get many breakfast ingredients for around a buck each and here are just some of the deals I've found.
My Old School Country Breakfast is made with some of the above ingredients. Check out my recipe below, which my dad made for me as a kid.
Pasta is still a steal and I have a few recipes up my tattered sleeves. Let's start with a fresh Fresh Veggie Pasta Salad. Just purchase the cheapest veggies on sale like carrot, onion, celery, cabbage, and spinach. You could just use a package of fresh-frozen veggies, too. Steam the chopped veggies for a couple of minutes and mix them into cooked pasta. Serve warm or cold.
I get packages of penne, macaroni, and spaghetti for around a buck. And I have a lot of recipes that take advantage of cheap pasta. Including Pasta Salad with Artichoke Hearts, Veggies in Cream with Pasta, Chicken Stroganoff (with egg noodles,) Creamy Mushrooms & Pasta, etc. Again just type and enter the word "pasta" in the Search window located at the top-right side of this blog.
They sell a lot of dollar frozen meals and I usually have one in my freezer just in case.
I even find enough ingredients for a quick Homemade Pizza. Dollar Tree sometimes sells cooked pizza crusts. So all you have to do is top them with pasta sauce and anything else you like, then heat the pizza in the oven until bubbly.
Incredibly I ran across a full-sized frozen pizza by Oprah for 99.99 cents! I picked up about 4 of them and headed back home to review them. How does it measure up on my Cheap$kate Dining Scale of 1 to 9, 9 being best? Click here to find out.
Canned pasta sauce is still cheap and so are small tins of fish. Hey, that's a meal right there. Just cook the pasta and mix in some tomato sauce then add a can of fish at the last minute to heat through. Some tinned fish has tomato sauce added, so that's even cheaper to make. Click here to see my Sardines in Tomato Sauce & Pasta.
A simple pasta dish is a Bolognese that uses cans or jars of tomato sauce and a small package of ground beef or turkey. Add some garlic and dried Italian herbs and simmer. It's a small serving but hearty enough.
I especially like canned Clams with Pasta. Just heat up the minced clams and liquid with a splash of white wine, if you can afford to, and mix in the cooked pasta. It's so simply delicious.
In my bachelor days, I even used grated cheese from those plastic shakers on my pasta dishes. If my wife did not object I would still be using it, but go ahead and shave it if you got it, a block of parmesan, that is. And most pasta benefits from garlic, which I find fresh, dried, and in jars.
I don't really crave Spaghettios but these Star Wars versions could pull me back in with force!
When I watch sports on TV I will invite my rowdy buddies over for hot dogs. Now, this is a meal for cheap$kates, especially when they bring the beer!
2 comments:
Those prices for those items are no longer what many of them cost. Even at the 99 cent store.
I'm there 2x a week.
A lot of the photos are years old. The chicken is dated from 2017.
I still love the Dollar Store and 99 Cent only, but even there, prices are up.
The majority of products shown are from the last couple of years...I don't know which stores you go to? Okay, you got me on the chicken (I swapped a newer image from 2021 if that's okay with you?) Some items may only be on the shelves for a day or even a few hours only, so Jennifer, you have seen everything? Do admit I show tasty examples of what can be found and my food blog is a worthy service to my visitors on a tight budget - even if very few of my images are "years old." And yes I know Dollar Tree began charging $1.25 starting a few months ago. Lastly, to denunciate the 99 Cent Chef with accusations of fraud is too much and I am compelled to defend the integrity of my quintessential cheap$kate food ramblings.
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