Saturday Poor Man's Meal | Hard Times - recipes to stretch your budget

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • Let's make Emily Megget's recipe for Poor Man's Saturday Meal.
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    0:00 Introduction
    0:14 Sponsorship
    1:28 Introducing Emily Megget's new cookbook.
    1:48 Inside the cookbook.
    3:35 Cutting up the salt pork.
    4:52 Cutting up sausage.
    5:14 Browning the pork.
    5:27 Chopping onions.
    6:34 Adding onions.
    7:00 Adding sausages.
    7:26 Adding the beans.
    8:36 Serving.
    8:57 Taste test.
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Комментарии • 645

  • @joycewilson3443
    @joycewilson3443 Год назад +451

    Salted pork always reminds me of my great grandmother and I’m 63. She was from Poland and I learned this recipe before she left this world, many years ago. She would take diced salt pork and fry it up until crisp. Add boiled cabbage which was squeezed to remove all the water. Then she would chop and add to the salt pork and a whole load of ground black pepper. I mean if you think you have enough, add more! No salt. That was her filling for perogies. Over 120 year old recipes if not longer. Thank you for the memory ❤

    • @ooinvsaoo
      @ooinvsaoo Год назад +8

      Is boiled cabbage, literal boiled cabbage. Or is it some odd canned thing?

    • @TheMimiSard
      @TheMimiSard Год назад +27

      @@ooinvsaoo I am going to guess it is boil-it-yourself straight from the garden cabbage.

    • @JDziewaltowski
      @JDziewaltowski Год назад +21

      @@ooinvsaoo I grew up with this as well! Boiled cabbage in this is literal boiled cabbage, definitely not a canned concoction!

    • @Kiki-D-Kimono
      @Kiki-D-Kimono Год назад +8

      I remember one of my Italian great aunts making something similar, except she used pepperoni instead of salt pork.

    • @northstarjakobs
      @northstarjakobs Год назад +5

      I imagine that the salted pork would remedy the need for any added salt. And all that pepper is probably a good balance for the relative lack of flavor of the cabbage

  • @brunaguerini0709
    @brunaguerini0709 Год назад +317

    This recipe is what we eat for lunch, dinner and all of our major meals in Brazil. It's called "arroz e feijão", something like "Rice and beans".

    • @syrophenikanx
      @syrophenikanx Год назад +58

      And it’s so weird to see it called “poor man’s meal” lol

    • @nope_nope_nono
      @nope_nope_nono Год назад +28

      Carai nóis é pobre heuehiahi

    • @glamreaper131
      @glamreaper131 Год назад +30

      @@syrophenikanx in the Southern US it is a poor man's meal. You can get quite a bit of beans and rice for only a couple dollars. I remember growing up my grandfather would make "soup beans" which is basically what it sounds like. Beans stewed for a long time with water and a little of whatever pork was on hand. There would be cornbread and fried potatoes with it. He made it for the grandkids because it's his favorite, but made it for my mom and her siblings when they were children because they were dirt poor. It's funny how certain things are considered "poor" in different places. Haha. What are some struggle foods that you grew up with?

    • @Mejiaelis
      @Mejiaelis Год назад +31

      I’m Mexican and arroz con frijoles is a daily thing for us too

    • @michellezevenaar
      @michellezevenaar Год назад +9

      They make the same thing in Suriname, the Netherlands and most of Europe. It's just a classic recipe from hundreds of years ago that became popular in Europe because the ingredients store for winter so well. The ingredients travel well too so its very popular with areas of migration. This is also very similar to making pea soup, dried peas cook faster then dried beans though.

  • @stephgilliam
    @stephgilliam Год назад +206

    Hard Times episodes always make me think of my grandparents. They grew up during the Depression and as I get older I realize how many of their recipes were born from the necessity of cooking inexpensive meals for 7 people.

    • @gigidodson
      @gigidodson Год назад +12

      My grandparents always had a spreadno matter when you showed up. Dish after dish put on the table. It was always homey food they had grown out of their garden. The meat they raised or hunted for. The bread she made 3 times a week. My grandparents only "eating out" indulgence at home was KFC. Lol

    • @nottheonlybenson7241
      @nottheonlybenson7241 Год назад +10

      @@gigidodson People were healthier back then too. Not eating processed foods and a ton of sugar. My grandmother was from the Great Depression, and she had her own garden and raised cows and sheep. She made everything from scratch, and it was the best food I have ever had.

    • @patrickchilds9620
      @patrickchilds9620 Год назад +4

      Likewise the women who had to cook for a family during WWII. They really had to economize because so much food was sent to Europe and other foods could not be landed from overseas. Took me years to realize where so many of the weird recipes came from.

    • @janesays1278
      @janesays1278 Год назад +9

      My grandma was the youngest child and orphaned by 12, but had an older brother and sister and aunt & uncle to help out, but even with all of that, she was the one who took up cooking. She grew up in a small town where you could go up to any house and knock on the door to ask for a cookie. She was an amazing baker, and she would always make one cake, cut it in half, and then frost it with two different flavors of frosting, so when company came over they could have their choice of “two” cakes.

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 Год назад +4

      My parents were Depression era kids, who were teens during WWII and faced rationing of food. I grew up in the 50s and 60s with many of these budget, but filling meals!

  • @trinahughes1230
    @trinahughes1230 Год назад +90

    Oh man , this makes me miss my Daddy 😭 we ate a lot of meals like this - red beans and rice with smoked sausage and cornbread... or fried cabbage with pork of some kind.. always raw onions on the table for snacking on while eating dinner.... I thought everyone ate raw onions, but apparently not 🤣

    • @Birdbike719
      @Birdbike719 Год назад +7

      Chopped raw onions with a bowl of blackeyed peas! Yum!

    • @kathynurks4379
      @kathynurks4379 Год назад +7

      We always had a plate of chopped fresh onion on a plate to sprinkle over the food if we wanted to. And vinegar, too. I'm 63 now and my whole life I've eaten cooked green leafy veg with raw onion & vinegar sprinkled over it. Like you, I thought everybody did that.

    • @MichaelLawrenceMagic
      @MichaelLawrenceMagic Год назад +5

      In the south most of us do.

  • @werhipster
    @werhipster Год назад +68

    If you change the beans from the brown ones to the black ones, you're gonna be doing Feijoada, a delicacy from Brazil. We serve with rice, kale sliced and fried, orange and farofa (no idea how to translate). It's said that the enslaved did eat a lot of it since beans are very easy to cultivate in the plantations.

    • @fallingathousandfeet
      @fallingathousandfeet Год назад +6

      farofa is toasted yuca/cassava flour right?

    • @arielmanela7641
      @arielmanela7641 Год назад +2

      ​@@fallingathousandfeet yep

    • @asunbeam5479
      @asunbeam5479 Год назад

      i ate feijoada every sunday growing up! Still one of my favorite comfort meals.

  • @Nicki17321
    @Nicki17321 Год назад +113

    I grew up eating this but with red beans. We also ate pork n beans too, but with franks. Both dishes were served with white rice. 😋. I didn't know this was a poor man's meal, lol.

    • @Butterfly4675
      @Butterfly4675 Год назад +7

      It is to Boujee people lol

    • @LightYwins
      @LightYwins Год назад +7

      It’s still bussin bussin

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 Год назад +3

      Me neither. Some version of this dish was in my family's regular rotation. 😊

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 Год назад

      I never heard of poor people rice and beans style meals until long after I was an adult. We actually has little money growing up when I was very young but a big garden. I had meals that were often very produce heavy and salads were a constant in the summers. Soup and stews and stir fry meals were common from canned and frozen items.

  • @amandaf3663
    @amandaf3663 Год назад +10

    My mom was born in the late sixties. She told me had there not been the garden her mom planted they would have starved. She told me how she’d be hungry and sneak into the garden with a salt shaker and eat tomatoes. My momaw had a hard life. Here in the Appalachian mountains people were really poor. To hear all the stories from my mom, momaw and my great aunts and uncles you really would have a hard time believing people were so poor and struggled in more modern times. It makes me feel extremely grateful to have all that I do.

  • @LariRL
    @LariRL Год назад +65

    Hi, Emmy! In Brazil, it would be "Everyday Avarage Man's Meal" 😄
    The combination of rice and beans is in the base of our food. We have feijoada, a bean stew with several diferent parts of pork, but this is something for special days, because takes a lot more work to do. On the daily basis, brazilian people make beans in a similiar way to the video, but we cook the bean from raw, put garlic and bayleaf (in addition to the onions), sausage and/or salted pork. Usually, we eat with rice, some kind of filet (chicken, pork, beaf...what you want or can buy) and some salad (normally lettuce and tomatos salad).

    • @LariRL
      @LariRL Год назад

      @@jhowblackman Como brasileira que não viveu fora, eu não me atrevo a dar detalhes da cultura alimentar de outros países. Releia o que eu escrevi. Em nenhum momento eu disse que era exclusividade do brasileiro, só falei sobre como comemos arroz e feijão aqui. É você quem tá se achando muito inteligente por ter pensado algo óbvio

  • @LowKey_B
    @LowKey_B Год назад +56

    I love these “poor man’s” meals mostly because I’m a poor man. Haha. Thank you Emmy for another great video!

  • @blondienewton4669
    @blondienewton4669 Год назад +8

    When you mentioned the part about the gardens, it reminded me of my favorite childhood story, Stone Soup.. Where a stranger comes to town and is hungry, but no one wants to help him. so he puts a huge pot of water on a fire and adds a stone. He lovingly stirs it and tastes it... He says how it is so good, but would be better if it had onions... then someone comes out and adds onions, and the story keeps going till everyone in the village comes out and keeps adding ingredients and everyone eats and loves what was cooked. Thank you Emmy for the lost memory..

  • @tparm
    @tparm Год назад +2

    Does anyone else want to grab Emmy and just hug her? I don't know if it's how adorable she is or seeing a woman prepare food. I'd add a can of Emmy to this dish.

  • @mrleger45
    @mrleger45 Год назад +73

    When I was growing up, my mom would always serve rice with chili to extend the meal. My sister and I carried on the tradition. When my niece went to college, her friends were making chili, and she said “I’ll bring the rice!“ and all of her friends looked at her in dismay. She had no idea. Lol

    • @lancerevell5979
      @lancerevell5979 Год назад +15

      I do Chili with Rice often. It's comfort food!

    • @theritchie2173
      @theritchie2173 Год назад +20

      Who doesn't serve chili with rice? Or pasta. Or crusty bread. Or baked potato. Ok it's actually pretty versatile. Although as someone going low-carb, I mostly just have it without any of those and it's still awesome (although I pack it full of beans).

    • @to348
      @to348 Год назад +18

      I alway cook rice when I make chili. I thought most people did.

    • @lizajoymorales248
      @lizajoymorales248 Год назад +18

      And then you roll the leftover chili and rice into tortillas with some shredded cheese and heat them in a skillet.

    • @Birdbike719
      @Birdbike719 Год назад +12

      Chili and cornbread. Mmm. Winter food!

  • @zanleekain117
    @zanleekain117 Год назад +15

    I was raised on beans, but cooked from raw, because canned beans where for rich people. The addition of rice was for special weekends or holidays.
    Also, different twist on this was to cook the rice in the bean broth, for a "rice and beans" Belizean style. 😋 🇧🇿 ❤

  • @kalista3658
    @kalista3658 Год назад +31

    Funnily enough, when I had covid earlier this year and had to get groceries delivered to me by my mom, I asked her to bring me rice, beans, and sausage and this is pretty much what I made that entire week and a half...

    • @dianabryan7421
      @dianabryan7421 Год назад +1

      This just warmed my heart and made me tear up! Moms are always there!

    • @blackmarya
      @blackmarya Год назад

      Glad you had an appetite with covid and had such a nice meal! me and my brother had no appetite along with no sense of taste, he ate the same beef and vegetable soup every day and I had scrambled egg burritos. Glad we got over it

  • @absinthemindedartist
    @absinthemindedartist Год назад +25

    I'm from South Carolina and I absolutely love Gullah cooking and culture. Thank you, Emmy!

    • @potate_overlord
      @potate_overlord Год назад +1

      Also from South Carolina and I love this kind of cooking :) also hello neighbor!

    • @PuffinPsychologist
      @PuffinPsychologist 11 месяцев назад +1

      SC here as well. So happy to see a creator bringing our little state some shine. Absolutely love it.

  • @marcoscaballero3495
    @marcoscaballero3495 Год назад +54

    Love the Hard times series. Have you ever heard of "Reviro"? It is a traditional meal in Argentina, more specifically, the province of Misiones. It consists of flour, water and salt. A dough is formed, fried in some oil and then just pulverized while it fries so you end up with something that looks like breadcrumbs. It was a meal invented by the people who worked harvesting yerba mate because there was pretty much nothing else to eat. People from the area still eat it nowadays.

  • @janeysiegrist5061
    @janeysiegrist5061 Год назад +39

    Being raised by depression era grandparents, I can so relate to these hard times meals ..quite a few of them Emmy has done were actual routine meals in in our home. Emmy quite often brings me back to my childhood and those wholesome filling meals we made. (Grandma had us girls cooking at very a young age..l was around 7 when I first pulled the chair up to the stove)

  • @DawnChatman
    @DawnChatman Год назад +23

    This was one of my dad's go-to meals to make us when we were young. We called it "Beanie Weenies", he used cut up hotdogs in the brown beans.

    • @skydaisy424
      @skydaisy424 Год назад +6

      We made the same with thing with hotdogs, onions and pork n beans. Also called beanie weanies! It's nice to see we weren't the only ones who used this name! My husband just laughed at me when I told him what we called it. Now I have to make it for him!

    • @ii954
      @ii954 Год назад +2

      @@skydaisy424 mine did too, it was common for us growing up but surprisingly not many people seem to know about it. Baked beans with hot dogs.

    • @apostately3384
      @apostately3384 Год назад +1

      I grew up with this as well, and I still make it today! It’s a great dish for camping.

    • @karencoyle3011
      @karencoyle3011 Год назад

      Beans & Wienies was a favorite of mine, as a kid. Chopped hot dogs, diced onion and bell pepper, cans of cheap baked beans - so good!

    • @juliac6256
      @juliac6256 11 месяцев назад

      we called it frank n beans!

  • @lancerevell5979
    @lancerevell5979 Год назад +11

    My late Dad cooked Blackeyed Peas and Pork often. He grew up in the Deep South (North Florida) in the Great Depression and WWII years. Being poor farmers and fishermen, his family ate some things we'd find unpalatable today.
    But I love the Blackeyed Peas.

  • @jessylynn8565
    @jessylynn8565 Год назад +8

    See my family’s poor mans food was a fried egg with white rice for breakfast. This one I would’ve never thought of. Love her channel for this exact reason. There’s just something so fascinating with learning about other cultures and meals from around the world.

  • @SelfCareWithAshley
    @SelfCareWithAshley Год назад +16

    For a Saturday "poor mans meal" this looks delicious. Sausage and onions will ALWAYS be my favorite thing to eat no matter how much money I have. When we didn't have much money, my mom would make a big pot of chicken cacciatore!

  • @fcsolis
    @fcsolis Год назад +11

    I make a big batch of this Sundays and it's what I have for lunch at work a few days a week. Nutrient rich, food groups are represented, economical. One of the many ways I save for my child's college education. Thanks!

  • @vi_vas
    @vi_vas Год назад +7

    I'm from Brazil. My mom makes this recipe all the time. But we use pressure pan to cook the beans at home.

  • @na195097
    @na195097 Год назад +3

    I grew up in Appalachia in the ‘80s. I think everyone here ate a variation on that. Ours used fried potatoes, since plain rice wasn't popular around here. And buttered white bread

  • @lindamarie3364
    @lindamarie3364 Год назад +3

    So yes we were poor and we had this often, it was a dad made meal. Kielbasa, rice and sweet baked beans, mix it up on the plate and it was fantastic. But at the time, never called it a poor mans meal, but guess it was :) Thanks for sharing

  • @brendanhoffmann8402
    @brendanhoffmann8402 Год назад +14

    I made Saturday roast dinner for my Mum and her partner yesterday. I made a roast lamb leg! It was so so good! I ended up making soup with the left over meat and giving my Mum a big container of it today when I went over to walk her dog.

  • @binnie3481
    @binnie3481 Год назад +9

    i didn't saw the entire video but poor mens meal? like im Brazilian and that's what we eat EVERYDAY

    • @Sarurah
      @Sarurah Год назад +1

      The chef called it this, not Emmy ❤️

    • @ninguem8947
      @ninguem8947 Год назад +3

      eu tava literalmente cozinhando isso quando a notificação chegoukkkkk a humilhação senhor

    • @loisrabies8713
      @loisrabies8713 Год назад +2

      They just mean it’s cost effective usually comfort food

    • @binnie3481
      @binnie3481 Год назад

      @@Sarurah thanks for explaining that

    • @binnie3481
      @binnie3481 Год назад

      @@ninguem8947 exatamente, fiquei meio " ué mas tão falando mal da nossa comida mesmo????"

  • @thecunninlynguist
    @thecunninlynguist Год назад +34

    When you flipped through the pages and it had all the shrimp recipes, I couldn't help but think of Forrest Gump...it looks like Bubba may have forgotten some. This saturday poor man's meal...I used to eat something that was similar but poorer...just hot dogs, pork and beans and rice....but it filled us up

  • @Dalissay
    @Dalissay Год назад +5

    This is what we eat everyday in Honduras, Central America, but with red beans, love it.

  • @serya-chan808
    @serya-chan808 Год назад +1

    Oh man for some reason this reminds me of a meal we eat on my island in the Caribbean. It was also considered a poor man's meal at the time but now we all eat it like normal because it's just great and delicious and hearty. Instead of the beans we'd have lentils or red beans, and instead of rice we'd have basically cooked "flour balls". You precook the meat/seafood beforehands and you mix it with a can of
    cooked lentils/red beans and flour balls, which are exactly what you imagine (flour + water). Add some water (it's like a stew but the sauce gotta be a bit thick and not watery). Season it the way you like. You let the whole thing cook in a big pot until the flour balls get tender and chewy, and then it's ready to eat. My mom often makes it on Sunday, it's delicious and so filling too🥺
    I'm considering getting that book, all the recipes look so delicious!! Definitely gonna try this one, thanks Emmy!

  • @lcnickerson8218
    @lcnickerson8218 Год назад +4

    I love the title, my grandmother always made bean and rices meals with different types of less expensive meat like sausage. Red beans and rice was my favorite

  • @kyoung2918
    @kyoung2918 Год назад +5

    My family is from Newfoundland Canada and we use salt pork often. It is is great to flavour roasts and we use it to flavour the turnip, cabbage, carrots and potatoes that go along with the roast. It is divine!

  • @karmenzoriano6864
    @karmenzoriano6864 Год назад +1

    I feel very rich,blessed, and loved when I'm eating a poor mans' meal...thank you God!!amen!!😌

  • @SkitSkat674
    @SkitSkat674 Год назад +6

    There's a similar meal to this on a channel called Great Depression Cooking by a very old lady who I believe has passed away now. Her name was Clara. She used hot dogs, potatoes and onions for her poor man's meal. Hot dogs make more sense than sausage or salted pork as it's cheaper.

    • @susancannon6379
      @susancannon6379 Год назад +2

      LOVED Clara!! She had some great recipes....and stories!

    • @sephjy1370
      @sephjy1370 Год назад +1

      I remember Emmy featuring Clara at some point!

  • @risboturbide9396
    @risboturbide9396 Год назад +6

    Again, thinking about Clara's poorman's meal. RIP Clara, thank you so much Emmy! Cheers to you 🍻🍻

  • @RooRassy
    @RooRassy Год назад +5

    EMMY! Can you please do a series of Emmy’s Favourite recipes? I’d love to watch you cook your personal faves!

  • @DeltaDemon1
    @DeltaDemon1 Год назад +3

    Yeah. When I was young (in the 70s) we were very poor but ate fairly healthy because we had a very large garden (100' by 200') with a great variety of vegetables. Late winter was annoying as we could not afford good veggies and all our stock from the harvest was gone so it was cheap canned veggies (frozen veggies were way too expensive) and some pickled veggies.

  • @do_cs
    @do_cs Год назад +3

    I'm from Brazil and this is everyday food over here (lol). We normally serve this dish with some type of protein whichever way you like it (grilled, stewed, fried, dredged and fried, you name it) and some type of salad.

    • @JessBonomo
      @JessBonomo Год назад +1

      I came to the comments to say exactly that. Even though not all families can afford to have pork and sausage with their beans everyday, we put it in as often as we can. And other than that, no brazilian would consider this plate of food a full meal lol Maybe it's what we can afford for today, but definitely not a complete meal

  • @erinchamberlain1315
    @erinchamberlain1315 Год назад +4

    Both of my parents came from the South and salt pork was their 'secret' ingredient as well. I have beautiful memories of snapping beans and cutting up potatoes to simmer together with salt pork and tons of black pepper for hours. So simple, so inexpensive, and just delicious. This recipe looks delicious as well. Thanks for sharing with us ❤️

  • @elizabethboyce746
    @elizabethboyce746 Год назад +6

    I grew up going to Edisto Island in the summer... amazing place. It's awesome to see you feature Gullah Geechee culture, Emmy!

  • @TnT_F0X
    @TnT_F0X Год назад +2

    just had this last night... with homemade beans
    I love beans and rice... and I have smoked sausages in the freezer just for this... and dirty rice.
    Cheap food isn't always bland... it's really good if it's done right.
    Spinach and beans, fresh baked bread... pennies per serving and delicious.

  • @PandaBoi813
    @PandaBoi813 Год назад +3

    My mother would make this for me growing up and to this day it’s a meal I make all the time, not only is it cheap it’s also delicious 😊

  • @HaydenHaystackArts
    @HaydenHaystackArts Год назад +7

    I may have shared this before, but our poor man’s meal was zucchini stir fry- we’ve always grown zucchini and onions!

    • @asunbeam5479
      @asunbeam5479 Год назад

      the cheapest food is always what you grow yourself!

  • @scottthomas6202
    @scottthomas6202 Год назад

    These " Hard Times" videos are my favorites. They remind me of my grandparents, and their stories of life during the Depression and World War 2..

  • @christenfields4327
    @christenfields4327 Год назад +4

    Emmy!!! Happy Halloween love!
    And to all the lovelies! 🎃🦴🎃
    Btw, love this series.

  • @jimgilbert9984
    @jimgilbert9984 Год назад +1

    Okra gumbo is redundant. Part of what makes gumbo not jambalaya is okra in the recipe.
    It's like saying baby puppy. Puppy means "baby dog," so saying baby puppy is the same as saying baby baby dog.
    Anyway, I make something very similar. However, instead of pork & beans, I use the Kroger version of Bush's Baked Beans. I usually use hamburger instead of smoked sausage, but I made this last night with the sausage. I also add a small can (drained) of mushroom bits & pieces; I feel the mushrooms add a little something to the dish. I usually serve it plain (no rice), or I serve it with biscuits or toast or toasted English muffins. I also make it in my slow cooker, as I did yesterday.
    I noticed you tossed your onion ends and skins into a bucket-thing. Since you have a garden, you're not going to throw those onion bits away, are you? Do you compost your veggie trimmings/peels? Such "throwaways" are very good soil ammendment for your garden once they've reduced down.

  • @janetshepherd7872
    @janetshepherd7872 Год назад

    What a hearty & delicious looking meal. Would be wonderful on a cold rainy day. I’d love some more recipes from Emily’s recipe book! ❤

  • @zelapetalcliff
    @zelapetalcliff Год назад +5

    I want to make this! Not because I'm poor but because it looks so easy to make 🤤

  • @rachelgriffin2120
    @rachelgriffin2120 Год назад

    This looks yummy! Definitely appreciate economical meal ideas with prices as they are. Will give a try-thanks Emmy

  • @YolandaRevealed
    @YolandaRevealed Год назад

    Definitely brings back a lot of memories. I still eat beans but without meat and it's so filling. Loved this one! Great video. ❤👍🏽

  • @oliviatheresa
    @oliviatheresa Год назад +2

    My mom use to make this when I was little! I need to make it I haven't had this in years. Thanks for sharing!!!

  • @ericcoombs
    @ericcoombs Год назад

    Emmy your channel is so much fun to watch. Thank you 🥰

  • @cozyeden
    @cozyeden Год назад +2

    Yay! This is my favorite Emmy series

  • @leslierobinson440
    @leslierobinson440 6 месяцев назад

    I love and so appreciate your approach to welcoming new tasting of different styles of cooking. No yucking of someone else yum.

  • @Hey_heaven
    @Hey_heaven Год назад

    This looks so comforting especially when the weather is getting colder! Yumm!

  • @MultiConnor01
    @MultiConnor01 Год назад

    New editing and effects for this video were amazing! Subtle but definitely elevated your content. The small details make the best videos! 😊

  • @pollymcdonald7368
    @pollymcdonald7368 Год назад

    We have made this twice now and LOVE it!! Thank you Miss Emily for this delicious, easy, affordable meal-and thank you Ms. Emmy for sharing it with us.

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 Год назад +1

    Two good resources are Marsh Hen Mill out of South Carolina that has heritage heirloom beans, rice and grits and Camilla Brand Beans out of Louisiana that have a multitude of old heritage beans like Lady Cream Peas.

  • @grasies
    @grasies Год назад +6

    That's what we eat daily in Brazil, love it! 💗💗💗

    • @ryokonwashu
      @ryokonwashu Год назад +2

      Não tem nada melhor, só colocaria um ovinho frito em cima 😋

    • @grasies
      @grasies Год назад

      @@ryokonwashu delicia!! 💗💗

  • @valer1e_.
    @valer1e_. Год назад +3

    loving this series :)

  • @sarahhancock6863
    @sarahhancock6863 Год назад

    I really like the new editing! I love your content Emmy!! ❤️❤️

  • @kathynurks4379
    @kathynurks4379 Год назад +2

    I'm in Australia & my husband makes a very similar dish except he adds a bit of sweet chili sauce.

  • @aja4854
    @aja4854 Год назад

    When ever I want to know how something tastes, I google it with your name or come to you tube and look. Your descriptions are so very well articulated that I almost feel as though I have tasted the item my self. I just watched the balut video and Im not to afraid to try it now, I'm actually looking forward to it! Love your videos!!

  • @christinegraham2579
    @christinegraham2579 Год назад +2

    My dad grew up during the Great Depression in South Dakota. And his Poor Man’s Meal was Macaroni & Tomatoes. Just cook the pasta & when it’s done add in a jar of home-canned tomatoes from his mother’s garden. He’d have some Colby cheese with that. And that was dinner!

    • @swankyangelo
      @swankyangelo Год назад +1

      Wow! I’m so happy for my culture! Rice and beans is often cheaper and I don’t get tired of it 🎃

    • @Birdbike719
      @Birdbike719 Год назад +1

      I LOVE macaroni and tomatoes. My mom made it often. Once I started making for myself I "upgraded" to stewed tomatoes and Always add a hunk of butter. One of my favorite comfort foods. Miss you mom.

    • @christinegraham2579
      @christinegraham2579 Год назад

      @@Birdbike719 my grandma used her home canned tomatoes, but I can’t seem to garden. So I use a can of diced & make sure I put Parmesan or Romana cheese on the table. My kids love it!

  • @Megan26Adler
    @Megan26Adler Год назад +1

    This looks sooo yummy. Definitely trying it!

  • @sweetR3venge218
    @sweetR3venge218 Год назад +2

    Kielbasa sausage has been a savior in my house for years.im excited to see you make more of these recipes.

    • @lisatheboywonder6744
      @lisatheboywonder6744 Год назад

      I have made quite a few budget meals with polish sausage because of rising food cost. Its surprisingly versatile. I have made sausage and potato bake, kielbasa and potato soup, sausage gumbo, spicy kielbasa pasta, easy sausage cassoulet. It has been fun trying to see what I can come up with on a tight budget lol

  • @mermeridian2041
    @mermeridian2041 Год назад +2

    (There are two different types of 'salt pork' - aka 'fat back', 'streak'ed meat' - one literally has salt crystals on it and the other kind, the type you used, does not. The type you used does NOT have to be rinsed off but the kind that has literal salt crystals on it and is mostly fat with only a little bit of meat, most definitely does. I bet you a quarter THAT is the kind the lady means when she says 'salt pork'. It is extremely flavorful and "gives the pan" a ton of rendered salty grease. After you fry the fat out of it - that fat is fantastic for greens, beans, frying 'flap jacks', greasing the pan for corn bread after pouring a little INTO the cornbread mix...THE LIST GOES ON... - you can eat the "pork rinds". The browned fried fat part is delicious but the actual rind part is really hard and tough but great to gnaw on, lol.)

  • @Offred
    @Offred Год назад

    I would LOVE to see a “from scratch” version of this recipe, using dried beans. This is awesome, I can’t wait to make it.
    And I also LOVE that you grew your own onion, Emmy!! Eating food you grew (for free!) is the best feeling!

  • @rachelhero3413
    @rachelhero3413 Год назад

    I can’t wait to try and make this! This weekend should be cool.

  • @jornalistarenatarosa4205
    @jornalistarenatarosa4205 Год назад +1

    It's like a Brazillian everyday meal. Rice and beans together is a great combination in nutritional terms. With vegetables and a source of protein is perfect!

  • @sapphoculloden5215
    @sapphoculloden5215 Год назад +3

    We don't generally have pork and beans in tins on sale in Australia, but I bet this could work really well with homemade baked beans.

    • @lyricberlin
      @lyricberlin Год назад

      she is using baked beans and not pork and beans

    • @sapphoculloden5215
      @sapphoculloden5215 Год назад

      @@lyricberlin - I can't read the tin label, so you could be right but it's not what she said.
      However, her baked beans and Australian ones are ... different! Ours are generally a vibrant red/orange colour. I love them, but I wouldn't dream of cooking with them. In a bowl with lots of cheese and some toast on the side, and they're brilliant. In a dish like this, I think they'd be horrible.

  • @LadyNeesa
    @LadyNeesa Год назад +2

    Wow Emmy!😲 That is one of my favorite comfort foods as a child. My mom would make that and add some hot pepper to give it some kick. Till this day, I would make it and it’s quick to make. Thanks for sharing this.😊

  • @Eternal_Skys
    @Eternal_Skys Год назад

    This looks so yummy! I grew up watching Emmy even though I'm 23 right now haha and I still continue to watch and learn and grow. My mother is starting to love Emmy and I love the random bits she has at the end of the videos. 🤓 I hope you make a video on Cilbir or Turkish Eggs. Super simple, affordable, scrumptious, and goes way back to the 15th century I heard. It's amazing!! :)

  • @cece4855
    @cece4855 Год назад +45

    Emmy have you ever heard of clotted cream? It's a thing in the UK. You can't find it in the US... I've tried.. I've seen people make it at home but I'm worried I'd go through all that effort and not like it... Id love to see you make it and give your opinion on it. ❤️❤️

    • @awkwardsity
      @awkwardsity Год назад +4

      Honestly it just tastes like unsalted butter mostly, maybe a bit sweeter, so like if you like butter you’ll probably like clotted cream. The texture is more like whipped cream than butter, and it occasionally has a bit of chunkiness to it but overall I’d say it’s worth the effort to make it at least once

    • @milissae
      @milissae Год назад +1

      I have found it at a store called the Fresh Market a chain located in Virginia.

    • @mwcoleburn
      @mwcoleburn Год назад +2

      Its amazing and really easy to make

    • @gigidodson
      @gigidodson Год назад +3

      It like incredibly great butter with a cream cheese texture. Ive found tiny pots in world market if you have one near you.

    • @e0128593
      @e0128593 Год назад +4

      Whole Foods and Wegmans also sell it the brand is Devon Cream Company

  • @debbiebsbooty
    @debbiebsbooty Год назад +3

    This is a crazy ask, how about a top 10 poor man meals? I've seen top 50 poor man meals n it's kinda awesome. I love old school cooking with more natural ingredients. I'm not afraid of lard but I am afraid of margarine

  • @Birdbike719
    @Birdbike719 Год назад

    Looks really yummy! I think this would also make a great campfire meal when camping, too.

  • @margeebechyne8642
    @margeebechyne8642 Год назад +1

    That looked delicious! Even without "hard times" I'm going to make this one! Thank you, Emmy.

    • @LymanPhillips
      @LymanPhillips Год назад

      I make something similar, but I grate a carrot in it, and dice a green pepper and add whatever other veggies I may have on hand. I also try to use less sugary beans if possible. If you have any soup stock, it's even better than water to deglaze the pan.

    • @margeebechyne8642
      @margeebechyne8642 Год назад

      @@LymanPhillips Your version sound really good, too! Thank you!

  • @YT4Me57
    @YT4Me57 Год назад +1

    My mom would make that dish all through my childhood and into my teen years. She didn't pair it with rice though because her family came from Virginia (potato country). Typically, she didn't add too much water and served it as a stand alone meal. It was delicious and filling. I had no idea back then that she was also watching the budget! Thanks for the memories. 😊

  • @victoriagavia6435
    @victoriagavia6435 Год назад

    Ilooooove love love that you paged through a book... One of the things that calms me in life

  • @gxrlwonder
    @gxrlwonder Год назад

    your videos are so soothing to me. i used to struggle badly with severe anxiety and would throw your vids on and feel the worry slowly leave my chest and stomach. after being put on meds my anxiety got much better, but recently i’ve been struggling with it all again so i revisited your channel and was able to fall asleep within two videos! i don’t know what it is, but there’s something about your voice and your demeanor that bring me so much peace. 🤍

  • @cicilynnofficial
    @cicilynnofficial Год назад +2

    I literally made this last week! I've had this so much growing up, I was craving it only I use hotdog, and bush's country style beans which already contain salted pork, and I sweeten the beans a bit more with brown sugar and maple syrup. I never knew it was "hard times" eating it though. To me it was just "Tuesday" lol

  • @dougb70
    @dougb70 Год назад

    featuring cookbooks is fun. Cherry picking a favorite recipe and curating a few is a good way to have some excellent content.

  • @andycavz85
    @andycavz85 Год назад +1

    Awesome, hard time meals will cycle round and once again hold up for lots of people in our current economic meh! Great vid Emmy! 💙

  • @MrMegaManFan
    @MrMegaManFan Год назад +1

    You make hard times food seem like GOOD TIMES food. If I served this at a party everyone would leave happy and full!

  • @Scribbleshow
    @Scribbleshow Год назад

    Oh my gosh, this looks phenomenal. I wanna make it as soon as possible!

  • @sandrasandra7776
    @sandrasandra7776 Год назад +1

    My parents went through the depression and my father declared bankruptcy when I was about one year old. Because my mother had to eat so much rice when she was going through the depression (she was about 10 yrs. old) we never had rice in our house while I was growing up. We ate plenty of beans and frank type meals and lots of potatoes. We never had cheese in the house and never ate fast food or went out to eat. We never had soda in the house unless we were sick and then it was ginger ale. My parents had a garden and my mother would can tomatoes, pickles and also can tomato juice, jam and preserves. My mother raised chickens and had an egg route. We always had chicken every which way she could think of and chicken soup and plenty of eggs. I brought my children up in the 60s and 70s and they never had candy or soda in the house unless it was a holiday and then we had candy. I didn't realize we were poor as it was just a way of eating that I grew up with.

  • @cronajj
    @cronajj Год назад +3

    This is very nostalgic for me as a Puerto Rican, because it reminds me a little of arroz y habichuelas (rice and beans) from my childhood.

  • @ebonyfields4406
    @ebonyfields4406 Год назад +2

    I’m so happy I’m Gullah geechie seeing my heritage brings me so much joy tank ya!!!!

  • @mordeys
    @mordeys Год назад

    Thank you for showing us more of these.

  • @laurametheny1008
    @laurametheny1008 Год назад

    Yum! We usually have Bush's baked beans with hamburger or ground turkey. Adding a bit extra brown sugar and ketchup and onions on the side. Vidalias raw. I got a recipe years ago from my Campbell's soup cookbook I think. It was egg noodles and ground sausage. Adding onions and sour cream and tomato paste plus Abit of tomato soup. So good. Got to make it for my Mama before she passed last year. She loved it! The egg noodles package had a kind of strange take on tuna casserole too. They used sour cream and some kind of soup, I think mushroom. But they added pitted green olives! It's really yummy too. Thanks Emmy!🙏🍛

  • @banzaiburger9589
    @banzaiburger9589 Год назад

    I love that you are featuring these less than lofty meals. Not many of us can manage instagramable meals.

  • @tiberio_gabriel
    @tiberio_gabriel Год назад +3

    basically what most brazilians eat in a daily basis

  • @heatherboyer6374
    @heatherboyer6374 Год назад

    Hi Emmy. Love the new graphics. I look forward to your videos all week!

  • @sunnivab302
    @sunnivab302 Год назад

    Dear Emmy, I love your channel❤️ It's very inspiring! This meal is very similar to a meal that is often cooked in my country of origin (Suriname); Brown beans with rice. We only added chicken, pimento grains, a little bit of sugar (to taste) and garlic

  • @SherryAnnOfTheWest
    @SherryAnnOfTheWest Год назад +1

    This is really one of my husband's favorite meals ... with cajun spices. Red and black beans with sausage on rice.

  • @ashleyaltman6502
    @ashleyaltman6502 Год назад

    I live in SC and Edisto is on my bucket list to visit. We enjoy visiting Charleston and mount pleasant, folly beach. So much beautiful history around Charleston and great food.

  • @Ahmanese
    @Ahmanese Год назад +1

    I make this once a week at times, cuz It's soo good, thnx Grandma for teaching a lot poor man's recipes, I have loads of.

  • @abchappell01
    @abchappell01 Год назад

    That looks so good. I just bought that same book for my kindle app. The recipes are not too difficult to prepare :)

  • @meesa_j3383
    @meesa_j3383 Год назад +1

    I would love to see more videos of recipes from that book 🤗

  • @ponduforus
    @ponduforus Год назад

    This looks yummy! A great Lunchtime! 🍛