Why You Can't Make Cheap Meals

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2022
  • I Have DONE IT! A FULL Book on Anime Food in Japan! Back the Kickstarter now!
    www.kickstarter.com/projects/...
    Support me on Patreon for Exclusive rewards! / chefpkpre-order MY NEW COOKBOOK!! www.chefpk.com/store
    For 70% off with HelloFresh plus FREE shipping, use code CHEFPK70 at bit.ly/3fpL9zx
    After watching Devil Is A Part Timer I was inspired to deep dive into how to make cheap meals. A lot of tutorials out there don't talk about the REAL cost of making "Cheap Meals" and that's exactly what I want to show you today.
    - Get More
    Join My Discord: Join My Discord: bit.ly/3VuVf29
    Become a Member: [bit.ly/39EXdHD]
    -Find Me
    Instagram: [ / chefupk ]
    Twitter: [ / chefpk3 ]
    Some Links include Affiliate Links, which means I get a small commission when you use them. It really helps out the channel.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 409

  • @Gremalkin1979
    @Gremalkin1979 Год назад +539

    There are two things you need to know in making meals cheap over a long time. 1: Buying items in bulk is cheaper. This includes dry stuff like rice, pasta, spices (like granulated garlic). The bigger the package the cheaper per kg/pound it usually is. This can be a huge money saver. Same thing with canned and frozen stuff. Things you can use a little at a time. 2: Know what fresh items are the most filling or full of flavour. This one is a bit harder as it takes actual experience, but as a general rule; Vegetables that keep well in the fridge (like cabbage, potato, root vegetables) Rosting cabbage or turnips in a little bit of oil makes a lot of flavour, etc. What are your tips for cheap meals ?

    • @mariusweber4990
      @mariusweber4990 Год назад +21

      Good points! To add to them, one of the main things I picked up over time was to primarily bulk-buy things that are versatile and easy to combine with other ingredients, because a lot of the time (especially if you're a beginner like me) you'll make a great few meals and then end up with a storage full of random leftovers you don't know what to do with. Potatoes, onions, carrots and the like are great for that reason.

    • @shelbyherring92
      @shelbyherring92 Год назад +11

      @@mariusweber4990 I do the same with eggs and cheese:
      1.) Because I know it's something I'll frequently use.
      2.) Mixes with other cheap bulk buys, like rice, pasta, breads, and some veggies for quick stuff like mac n cheese, quesadillas, grilled cheese, omelettes, eggs and rice, ramen etc.

    • @Miss_Kisa94
      @Miss_Kisa94 Год назад +16

      I'd like to add, avoid name brands it's the same stuff as the generic just costs more for no reason. Also buy things on sale and then freeze them. I currently have 3 loaves of bread in my freezer. On the topic of frozen food, frozen vegetables can be cheaper than fresh and you don't have to worry about them going bad quickly.

    • @maindepth8830
      @maindepth8830 Год назад +2

      I like to make pasta with tomato sauce
      Takes no more than 15 minutes, and is dirt cheap £20 for like 10 to 12 days

    • @alliew31
      @alliew31 Год назад +3

      I buy my meat for a month+ when it’s on sale and freeze them. It’s so much cheaper than buying for a week at a time.

  • @brningpyre
    @brningpyre Год назад +72

    I really love that you kept the cost real.
    So many cooking channels on here cheat on the price so hard ("Ha ha, only $1.50 of parmesan, even though the brick costs $15"). Like, they don't even care, it's just for a title thumbnail (cough cough Joshua Weissman cough cough).

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +20

      Just trying to keep it realistic. Its what I had to do managing hotels.

  • @davidstowe7880
    @davidstowe7880 Год назад +258

    Bro, this makes me think, every video like this disregards the initial cost of spices and things like oil, assuming people already have them or justifying them as you said because they last so long.
    I'd love it if you did like a "good, better, best" of essential spices to keep in your cabinet on a budget... with maybe a few opinions for upgrades.

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +82

      100%. Most recipe videos based on this aspect won't usually talk about the little things like that, which is unfortunate. I had to think about that professionally

    • @shelbyherring92
      @shelbyherring92 Год назад +12

      Well, as for essential spices and seasonings? For me it's salt, black pepper, and a toss up between onion or garlic powder.
      But that's me, because I eat a protein rich diet primarily from animal products (meat), and those just are necessities for red meat.

    • @Miss_Kisa94
      @Miss_Kisa94 Год назад +11

      The spices you use really just depends on what you cook most often. For example I love baking so I always have cinnamon, cloves, ginger and things like that. If you enjoy Mexican food you will probably have a lot of dried peppers and chilies. If you like Italian food you'll have a lot of basil and oregano.

    • @jaspervanheycop9722
      @jaspervanheycop9722 Год назад +5

      I'm not PK, but I say you can make pretty much any flavour you want with:
      Salt and pepper
      garlic powder (onion potentially too, though onion is cheap bulk, so just use fresh!)
      cumin
      smoked paprika
      cayenne
      some blend of dried herbs (I use d'Provence, but just Italian is great too)
      some sort of curry powder (a blend is a lot cheaper than buying all the spices, and you'll usually use it as a combo anyway, at least I do).
      That gets you the stuff you need for everything from Indian/Middle Eastern, to Mexican, to Continental European, and will be just about a once a quarter year purchase of only about 20 bucks. And bonus tip: go to an Indian or Middle Eastern supermarket, they sell huge bags of spices and blends, at a fraction of what a single shaker costs at the regular store.

    • @santtumoilanen3065
      @santtumoilanen3065 Год назад +3

      i just watched babish buy almost 1000 dollars worth of spices xD aint nobody gonna afford that,,,, i usuallly have just some dried herbs and salt and pepper.... maybe some msg and chili

  • @KiritaWindwalker
    @KiritaWindwalker Год назад +32

    One of the biggest things people forget when eating cheap is never waste!
    Bones? Veggies scraps? Stock pot it! Cooked or uncooked bones and fat work, tho in my experience uncooked makes better bone broth.
    Got a handful of veggies/meats you gotta use? Make a stew or goulash night. You can put almost anything in a stew, Shepard pie, or goulash, and its a super easy way to use that half a carrot, wilting bag of kale, one cooked potato, and ground beef that smells okay but you wouldn't give it but another day or two.. toss it in with some extra spaghetti sauce, Sautee, add cooked noodles, top with cheese, and boom. No waste and a pretty balanced dinner. With time, you find spice blends that can work for just about anything too. We splurg on ranch seasoning for example as it goes well with chicken and veggie focused stews.

    • @uranus1570
      @uranus1570 Год назад

      it works only as long as you know your ingredients well. Bones store antibiotics fed to poultry; veggie skins often are toxic. Usually cheap shopping means low quality so higher risks and bigger pile of waste (e.g. cheap chicken can have extremely unhealthy bones, joints and liver). So you gotta know origin of product and local and import laws

    • @Great_Olaf5
      @Great_Olaf5 Год назад

      Yup, chop a bunch of stuff up and throw it in a pot of rice. I've taken to partially sautéing chicken breasts and some chopped onions and carrots, pulling the chicken out, putting in a couple cups of rice, chopping up the chicken while the rice is coming to a boil and then putting it back in when I'm wacky to cover the rice. People love their pressure cookers and insta-pots for rice, but they're just too cumbersome to do something like this, and this is done in under an hour (taking prep time into account).

  • @rebeckymo
    @rebeckymo Год назад +116

    The 'seeing a bigger bag of potatoes for the same price as a the handful you bought earlier' moment is the story of my life, lol. But then again, every time I buy a bag of them vs by the pound, they wind up getting roots before I can eat them all, so...I dunno which is better.

    • @christopher5855
      @christopher5855 Год назад +6

      There are several things you could do to preserve and save those bags of potatoes if you have the time that is. Slice 1/2 inch thick or dice 3/4 inch blanch in boiling water 3-5 min until they start to soften but not fork tender yet. From here you can cool and then freeze on a sheet pan then bag them up into freezer bags or you could dehydrate them. If you go the dehydration route they will last a good long time on the shelf but really only be good for soups, stew and potato casserole. You could can them but that also requires you to follow a tested recipe and have the equipment to pressure can. This works best with waxy potatoes and they come out tasting like a stewed roast potato which isn't bad but again good for soups, stews and roasts. You could cook the potato fully then let and cool and freeze or store in the fridge for a week tops properly i.e. put in the fridge NOT wrapped in aluminum foil. You could also prep fries. Cut into your favorite fry or wedge shape blanch or fry at 350 degrees until just cooked through drain and line a sheet pan and freeze. If you go the blanch method you may need to drizzle some oil on them depending on how you intend to finish them. To use pull from the freezer and fry in oil at 375-400 until golden. If you blanched and did not oil you will probably need to fry them in oil or toss in some oil then either bake or air fry.

    • @makishae9811
      @makishae9811 Год назад +13

      Just slice off the roots tho, it’s not like that stops you from eating the potato o.o

    • @randomanon8408
      @randomanon8408 Год назад +8

      @@makishae9811 if you see root, toss the potato
      the roots aren't the poison, they are the sign
      don't risk death over a 0.30$ potato!

    • @miguelgonsalves6161
      @miguelgonsalves6161 Год назад +4

      Can't you just cut the roots off and eat them after?

    • @Freaky0Nina
      @Freaky0Nina Год назад +9

      People freaking out about roots. Seriously. Just small roots aren't a problem, just a sign that yiu should use them up now rather then later. Cut the roots off, you'll be fine. If the roots got from tiny to big, that's when you can consider tossing them. If you want to be extra safe, carve out the part where the root was. But honestly, who do you know that died off potato poisoning?

  • @n0etic_f0x
    @n0etic_f0x Год назад +71

    The way I make food for under a dollar a serving does in fact require what I would call start-up money. A 50-pound bag of rice from an Asian market may cost a lot but... it is 50 pounds of rice you can use it for about a year before you run out. Dried beans, again 5 - 20 pound bags high start-up lasts for many meals. Then you have decently large bags of onion and potatoes. Add to this whatever you can afford and a meal under a dollar (even a good one) is not that hard to achieve.

    • @n0etic_f0x
      @n0etic_f0x Год назад

      Also never use a mandolin guard, buy a pair of kevlar gloves and use those. They have a lot of uses outside the kitchen but I admit they are in my kitchen as I can cut super fast with a mandolin if I use them.

    • @Angelicwings1
      @Angelicwings1 Год назад +8

      I got a lovely big bag of basmati rice and it has lasted me so long. Absolutely brilliant.
      I eat a heck of a lot of rice I can tell you.

    • @alliew31
      @alliew31 Год назад +6

      Make rice 4 servings of rice on Sunday, refrigerate 3, fry/make Mexican rice for half of the week with a main

    • @antonioyeats2149
      @antonioyeats2149 Год назад +1

      Under a dollar a serving is insane xD congrats

    • @n0etic_f0x
      @n0etic_f0x Год назад +3

      @@antonioyeats2149 it’s very hard to do but I can likely feed 100 people for about 20 USD. It is not going to be the most gourmet meal ever but I can make it taste good.
      I have been in places where having a can of sardines is a luxury and it just makes me better.

  • @Danboo21531
    @Danboo21531 Год назад +39

    I first learned to cook properly few years ago to safe some scholarship money. A good lesson I learned is to learn the local recipe or learn to play around with whatever is available at the local grocer.
    a very good cheat is to learn good stir fry and pan fry techniques, as those are compatible to almost anything 😂

  • @VolticWind
    @VolticWind Год назад +4

    “$5 meals” is one of those lies that everyone loves to tell you when they talk about meal prep. I’m glad you actually acknowledge that it’s not really possible to just spend $5 on ingredients for a single meal.

    • @Vry9
      @Vry9 Год назад +1

      it is in Spain :pasta 1e kg, tomato passata 1,20e for 3, onion 1e, 2 e good fluet . You use only half pasta , one passata and have rest for soup. Soup price : 2e vegetables - if you buy separate is cheaper but i always buying like this, pasta from prev day, chicken brest 4e (but it is a package for 3 days), 3 day: chicken brest , rice , salad , tortilla etc. Im not count spices and oil tho but is just one shopping for month. I find dinners quite chepp to be honest... most food money that i spending are for breakfasts, baking , deserts and food for school - 2 breakfast(my kid like a lot of fruits for school)

  • @DoktorTaiko
    @DoktorTaiko Год назад +58

    I watched the first season of the devil is a part timer about 5 times and it's one of the all time funniest anime. It's really sad, that the second season was such a huge drop in quality

    • @theresivy
      @theresivy Год назад +3

      wait til u find out what they did in the ending of the light novels

    • @AdarableKitten
      @AdarableKitten Год назад +3

      yeah the quality drop is what upset me and my fiancé when we watched the 2nd season. to find out Its due to them moving the production to a different Animation studio. and being an animator myself it felt very lazy and they took alot of shortcuts with the animation. plus season 2 lost the Dark undertones that the 1st season had and became more fluffy and more oriented around the baby. the jokes in the 2nd season also did not hit very well or at all. overall season 1 is by far the best. if they ever make a season 3 I pray they go back to the studio who created season 1.

  • @samhayes-astrion
    @samhayes-astrion Год назад +8

    As someone who works in a grocery store, I'm genuinely impressed at the amount of food you managed to get off $31. That'd fill up a small cart easily.

  • @Timmycoo
    @Timmycoo Год назад +15

    If you buy chicken with skin on and remove it, always save it to make some crispy chicken skin later. SO good! Just press it between two sheet trays and bake and season with whatever seasoning you like.

    • @AdarableKitten
      @AdarableKitten Год назад

      OOh! I love eating chicken skins!

    • @RiamsWorld
      @RiamsWorld Год назад +1

      Sheet trays with parchment paper. I didn't have any once and it can stick pretty bad. Though when I served my Thanksgiving turkey like that, my guests didn't touch the skin which was disappointing.

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo Год назад

      @@RiamsWorld On Christmas my family cooks a prime rib roast and my mom and I prefer medium rare, where a lot of the rest of my family prefers well done. We literally take it out, tent it and let it rest. Carve our portions and they put it back in for another 30 mins to an hour lol. It's heartbreaking.

    • @RiamsWorld
      @RiamsWorld Год назад +1

      @@Timmycoo I hope your portion is the whole spinalis and leave the rest to them 🤣

    • @Timmycoo
      @Timmycoo Год назад

      @@RiamsWorld I give myself extra for the next day leftovers lmao.

  • @kcsupersonic1
    @kcsupersonic1 Год назад +38

    It isn't the doing this on a budget that scares me, but the MEAL PREP! That is the thing I am most afraid of. It is borderline painful when meal prep for 3-5 days usually takes me like 3+ hours worth of time not counting cleaning. I know it saves time later in the week, but it's always hard to commit to doing one task for that long. I do however want to try taking on this challenge (maybe after Thanksgiving considering I'm visiting family next week) to teach myself about being creative on a budget. Hopefully it will be better than simply mixing Cream of Mushroom Soup with Pork Chops or mixing Chicken, Eggs, and Green Onions into my Ramen which are some of my usual cheap meals to make on a budget lol.

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +13

      Best way is to reduce it down to prepping one or two days a week if possible and going from there. Also, things like beans/rice can last 3-4 days in the fridge without issue

    • @TraciPeteyforlife
      @TraciPeteyforlife Год назад

      You can do anything if you commitment to it. Its a matter of doing it.

    • @samikay626
      @samikay626 Год назад +3

      Any type of cutting gadget works wonders. A mandolin, a slapchop, food processor pulses, one of those ramp things- anything to just smack out a bunch of chopped veggies in very short time.

    • @Rodrik18
      @Rodrik18 Год назад +5

      Thing for me is the variety... I don't enjoy eating the same thing everyday. I find cooking/meal prep to be quite enjoyable and relaxing, but I've shied away from prepping too much because of getting fatigued on the taste of the same dish every day.

    • @lucylulu1549
      @lucylulu1549 Год назад +1

      @@Rodrik18 if that’s the case, I recommend buying vegetable, meat, etc. that are easily able to make different types of food.
      Ex: potato can be smash potatoes, hash brown, Korean potato pancake

  • @majajani8077
    @majajani8077 Год назад +15

    Finally, someone said it, just because it £1 a portion doesn't mean you don't spend more on the ingredients Dx I'm hella glad this video brought me back to your shenanigans

  • @supernerdgirl42
    @supernerdgirl42 Год назад +4

    I debone and skin chicken thighs myself for a lot of recipes; way cheaper and not overly difficult to do myself. The skin and bones get frozen to go in the stock pot when I get enough plus or minus a chicken carcass.

  • @jaspervanheycop9722
    @jaspervanheycop9722 Год назад +5

    You need some beans in there, cheapest protein there is, and full of filling fibre. Canned if you wanna be "lazy", or even cheaper dried (after all dried beans are so cheap that people literally use them as pie weights!). Then bulk with rice or potatoes, like you did. Beans+carbs is a staple around the world for a reason. Nutritious, cheap, and very delicious.

  • @Angelicwings1
    @Angelicwings1 Год назад +6

    What I struggle with is having the money to buy things in bulk in the first place. It’s kind of like how in Australia you will get money back for seeing a specialist but not all and you need the initial $100 - $300 in the first place.
    If you’re able to do it, it really is a game changer. If you don’t have the money to do it though it’s kind of hard.
    I can tell you dhal has saved my tummy and wallet so much! It’s so cheap and easy and it you get so many meals out of it because it freezes beautifully
    I also recommend, if you can, not shying away from offal. Chicken feet are not difficult to prepare and they make a great addition to stock. They also can make a healthy and delicious and not expensive Filipino or Chinese dish.

  • @AXE2501
    @AXE2501 Год назад +7

    I’ve always tried to shop at discount food place like ALDIs and bulk store when the budget allows. It might sound strange but I will use those really cheap ramen noodle to stretch things, but instead of using that seasoning packet I will make the soup base from scratch and use the packet as a dry rub on chicken later.

    • @Gr3nadgr3gory
      @Gr3nadgr3gory Год назад

      Discount places are always great. Savealot, aldis, Sam's club, Costco. All good places to get cheap food. But you'll never beat meat straight from a Butcher. Gotta be lucky enough to live near one, though.

  • @alexgonzalez9053
    @alexgonzalez9053 Год назад +4

    Using potatoes or rice was a right call. Pasta is another quite cheap and filling way to add carbs. But for proteins both bean/legumes and eggs are quite cheaper than meat, so do use those as much as possible when trying to squeeze your budget. Add some veggies or other ingredients that are in the best season at that moment )since they're both tastier and cheaper then) like shrooms in autumn or whatever is available and you're quite good to go. I can't help but think that even with this recipes being relatively cheap you overspent and didn't end up with as much variety of food as you could.

  • @marcuspinson
    @marcuspinson Год назад +3

    A thing that's worth doing is having a fry pot. We have a pot on the stove that was started with palm kernel oil and avocado oil. Anything that will render out fat gets fried in it (it's probably a third bacon fat at this point). We take some from that any time we saute or cook in a pan. It's a giant tub of calories we are constantly turning over and using.

  • @laurak-e8797
    @laurak-e8797 Год назад +2

    I'm a little wary of farmers markets after watching a report CBC did on them. You're basically buying produce from bigger establishments that also supply to grocery stores but paying WAY more. I can't say this is true for every single farmers market but our budget is doesn't allow for spending a ton on groceries like this.
    Thanks for this video though! Super insightful and helpful for my kitchen. 😊

  • @alliew31
    @alliew31 Год назад +6

    One semester I kept track of my roommate and my spending for groceries since my mom asked how much cheaper it was for us to be on our own instead of in a dorm. Without budgeting and just being cautious about what we spent on (and occasionally indulging in sweets) we spent $811 (average of $45 a week) which comes out to about $8 a day for the 2 of us. We both typically only have a big dinner and more so snack for breakfast and lunch so we spent ~$3 per meal. Just checking for sales and buying in bulk can go a long way for helping save money.
    This was spring of 2021 though so not sure how much we would spend now with inflation

  • @DoktorTaiko
    @DoktorTaiko Год назад +4

    I used to survive in 5€ a week during the start of my university days. The amount of variation you can create with 39cent pasta, 39cent rice and 39cent 500ml pealed potatoes is luckily much larger than one would expect :D

  • @Steampunk_Kak
    @Steampunk_Kak Год назад +1

    god, devil is a part timer is such a bop, and so relatable on the food expenses lol

  • @REISGaming24
    @REISGaming24 Год назад +3

    As a Type II Diabetic, I have to keep around 1800 Calories per day, really watching things like carbs since I'm not as physically active as I used to be. Which means fish and lean proteins. Which hurts badly since the cheapest (pre prep costs) thing I can get is rice. Which . . . is carbs . . . Veggies per pound is far more expensive per serving than meats. Even fish if you know where to get it. Thanks for pointing this video out ChefPK, most people do not realize pre-costs to make a decent meal. A lot of keeping myself from getting hungry and cheating is just drinking water and staying hydrated. So much metabolism is merely staying hydrated. It's really hard to not splurge and making more than just two or three days of food. And yeah, merely portioning for two or three days is easier than trying for a full 7 day week . . .

  • @MrVivisexy
    @MrVivisexy Год назад +2

    Careful with those camp stoves, you never want to use a pot that's so big it goes over the butane compartment, otherwise it might cause the butane to overheat and explode

  • @rodolfoagorio3646
    @rodolfoagorio3646 Год назад +1

    I've always bought (and cooked) in bulk. It's amazing what you can make for even less than $5 a portion. I'd guess that half my meals are below $3, and half of those are below $2, many under $1.
    Pizza can be made very cheap, and it will freeze perfectly and last for months. You can make and freeze dumplings and have a quick meal at any time.
    I am Uruguayan, so I keep a jar with farinata mix: 4 parts chickpea flour, 1 part wheat flour, and a bit of salt. It's just get some of the mix, add water, and cook it. Extremely cheap, long lasting, and shelf stable. Less than $1 per serving, and guests love it.

  • @Scaphism_
    @Scaphism_ Год назад +1

    Hey, just thought I’d let you know as a cook I learned this recently, if you cut a lemon in half and rub it on your cutting board it’ll temporarily neutralize the side effects of the onion

  • @agamerandstuff
    @agamerandstuff Год назад +5

    I love the video chef and it did give me an idea for more cost related content, a lot of people struggle with accepting assistance from food pantries and other services similar to those I think a video showing what the process is like and that its not shameful to get help when you need it and then you can show how to use the assortment of different things they give you could be really good maybe you could go contact a local food pantry and have them explain how the process works and kind of see what they give people at the shelter then you can buy those ingredients yourself and show how you would use them. Food pantrys have quite literally been the only reason I've had access to food before so seeing people refuse to use them when they genuinely need the help can be heartbreaking and it's not something that gets a lot of content.

  • @MapleRhubarb
    @MapleRhubarb Год назад

    So glad you made this video, and so glad you checked out the Devil is a Part-Timer! One of my absolute favorite anime. Ashiya would be proud!

  • @Rainbowneos22
    @Rainbowneos22 Год назад +5

    Really awesome video! I also buy the food that I need in larger junks and make more of what I cook so that I have some on the next day or so. It saves a lot of money especially when you are living alone.
    And Gandalf is like the cat from my parents. He also loves chicken for some reason and they have to keep him away from the table otherwise he would jump on it and eat all the chicken 😆

  • @silis_pap8473
    @silis_pap8473 Год назад

    Love the idea, would love to see you expand on it!

  • @stankmcdankton6204
    @stankmcdankton6204 Год назад +1

    Beans, rice, potatoes, green cabbage, off-cuts of meat ( feat, livers, heart, gizzards ), or alternatively chicken drumsticks (usually costs less than thighs ), bullion, onions, garlic, carrots, celery, bacon ( for flavor in dishes and to use the leftover grease, do not eat as a stand alone ), tomato paste in a can ( can be watered down significantly to make sauce ), all-purpose flour, sugar, lemons/limes or their juice if cheaper by volume, oil or butter ( price dependent ), white vinegar, dry pasta*, eggs*, white/crimini/baby bella mushrooms* (use sparingly), unsweetened baking cocoa/cocoa powder*, whatever you can get lucky with at the discount food shelf*. These are generally the cheapest ingredients in the average US supermarket. Use this knowledge as you will.
    There are several factors that can alter this significantly : Where you live, where you shop, and how much you can haul in a single run ( Doing things on foot makes them significantly harder, especially with America's piss poor public transit system and deliberate system building with preference for cars ).
    Side note : If you like crispy chicken skin, try chicken feet.
    Additional side note : I don't think this dude has ever been forced to subsist on SNAP / food stamps, or he would know this.

  • @corvusblackfeather456
    @corvusblackfeather456 Год назад

    very educational, im hoping the next time i go out to shop i should keep these in mind.

  • @BecTries
    @BecTries Год назад

    I really enjoy this video and I think you touched on some points that get ignored a lot.

  • @adriandiegelmann2417
    @adriandiegelmann2417 Год назад

    Got to love your videos!
    Lots of love from Germany brother!

  • @Sammysapphira
    @Sammysapphira Год назад +1

    Can you make more videos like this? I'm a chronic delivery user because making (good) stuff is so difficult for a beginner like me and can feel really intimidating when I'm just feeling hungry in the moment.

  • @chaoscontrolASH
    @chaoscontrolASH Год назад

    This was an awesome video, and it gave me more of an idea of how to approach certain food products now. My only downside is the meal prep, just because of the time put into that. The actual cooking I dont mind.
    Also, something i hadn't thought about but you mentioned about not adding spices in the budget. I initially thought "yea, why would you? You most likely have it already" but then realized everybody uses different spices too. It's interesting watching other similar video types where I thought literally everything is included in the budget but that's not always the case.

  • @DB-ku7vu
    @DB-ku7vu Год назад

    This is a great point that I have always taken for granted as someone who grew up cooking, cooking is cheaper than eating out , but the upfront cost can seem quite high.

  • @jeremyahesteban3394
    @jeremyahesteban3394 Год назад +3

    Hey ChefPK love your videos and greatly enjoyed your budget meal video, can you do other budget meal videos. Given the oppurtunity.

  • @SeleniumGlow
    @SeleniumGlow Год назад

    Solid video. This one I can relate to IRL cause we do this every week. Shop fresh items every week, dry or long shelf life items every 2 or 3 months.
    Per meal cost is easily less than $2 for vegetarian and $4 for non vegetarian items

  • @Linkslin
    @Linkslin Год назад +4

    Just to inform you you were right at first 3 meals a day $5 each meal is $15 and for 3 days that's $45 not $35.

  • @MossCoveredBonez
    @MossCoveredBonez Год назад +1

    My issue lately has been not having the time to do the prep that cheaper food needs. Not that there's any fix to that, other than reducing my commitments or properly subsizing the right parts of the food industry and putting a profit cap on essential resources like food

  • @CrazyTasteyPi
    @CrazyTasteyPi Год назад

    I actually really appreciate seeing a "budget video" that is taking into account the actual cost of the ingredients, rather than just saying the dish is so much money to make.
    Doubly so that the cost of ingredients being taken into an account is more an approximation then out right saying, "This is how much it'll cost you to get the thing" always feel like the cook in the video either isn't account all the factors that go into make a dish, or is just out right lieing to everyone.

  • @2MeterLP
    @2MeterLP Год назад +1

    Do not throw away that chicken skin! Spice and salt it, fry it up in some oil until crispy, chop it up and sprinkle it on top of your food for some meaty crunch.
    Bones, tendons and other stuff like that may not be good for eating, but its full of flavor and gelatin, so brown it up with some oil and then boil it to get stock thats a great base for sauces.
    Same goes for a lot of what you cut off of vegetables. Just dont boil the bitter parts.

  • @LeojPies
    @LeojPies Год назад

    This is another reason why I love French Onion soup. You can make a really nice soup that lasts days and spend so little money on it. It's just the time it takes to cook down pounds of onions. Good video! Might try making some of these at home.

  • @russellee5216
    @russellee5216 Год назад

    This is such a good video. Don't know if you have one about going about coming up with food ideas from what's available, because that part feels like so much magic. I have such a hard time going from ingredients to food without knowing what I want to make first.

  • @makeda6530
    @makeda6530 Год назад +1

    Yeah, like other people mentioned, the best way to save or have ‘cheap’ is to min max whenever possible. One time spending 10-20 bucks on a giant bag of something (rice, bean, etc.) and you could have it for months, then seasonings and sauces spread as well after the initial hit and meat on sale whenever possible. So yeah, you can have “cheap meals” when you have a strong kitchen base.

  • @8644100
    @8644100 Год назад +1

    You could make a Farofa, a side dish that uses cassava flour, butter onion and bacon, that is fantastic and very easy to make, you serve it on the side of this dishes and you will make they more filing and goes longer

  • @matthewvanrensburg3824
    @matthewvanrensburg3824 Год назад +1

    Thing about bone in and boneless price comparison I see missed often in the price comparison/budget debate is that its about more than simply time. With the bone in product you're paying for bone, skin and additional fat content. How much weight purchased is not actually used when buying bone in is worth exploring depending on the bone density, fat content of the bone in product purchasing.

  • @imogenarts3289
    @imogenarts3289 Год назад

    I enjoy watching your videos. Here’s a tip when you cut onions. When you first slice them in half before you chop them into smaller pieces run them under cold water it’ll reduce the eye sting

  • @sharpconfit
    @sharpconfit Год назад

    Great video. You make cooking look enjoyable :)

  • @ganganwoo3282
    @ganganwoo3282 Год назад +1

    It might be a bit more of a hassle but, if you get bone in chicken, you can debone it yourself and keep the bones and whatever scraps you have from the other ingredients whether it be from what you just got or from previous days (onion skins, carrot peels, etc) for chicken stock

    • @lollertoaster
      @lollertoaster Год назад

      I started buying whole chicken on the advise of a RUclips chef and after 3 weeks I can't go back. If I stopped, I would just be buying all the parts anyway, bones included. Especially bones. I usually have trouble figuring out what to do with all the meat while the stock is already long gone.
      Another tip is that when buying a whole chicken, you will get two sets of bones - first the carcass, then the bones from drumstick, tights and wings. I always collect those in a container, raw or cooked, then bake at 180 for 40 minutes to kill any nasties that could have contaminated them and make a bone broth by boiling (not simmer, this is important) just bones with water for at least two full days, 48 h.

  • @theresivy
    @theresivy Год назад +1

    Im a huge fan of how chef PK never fails to make even food id never normally eat into smthng mouthwatering, Though, i cant say the same abt how the ending of the light novels for Devil is a Part Timer was done dirty

  • @thomashongshagen4912
    @thomashongshagen4912 5 месяцев назад

    As an additional tip; if you buy skin-on chicken and remove the skin, you can add it to any stock you might be making and the high collagen content will help your stock gel when cold, which is good for storage.

  • @kchortu
    @kchortu Год назад

    I also always buy leg quarters 10# a time and break them down, some times i will keep the drumsticks but often I split the spines, then debone the legs, sometimes i take off the skin. BUT I always make stock from the bones and skin i did remove now you can soup or cook beans and rice with that

  • @randomtrainerx.3424
    @randomtrainerx.3424 Год назад

    Great dish to enjoy and see be made.

  • @Nachtelfin0des0Todes
    @Nachtelfin0des0Todes Год назад +1

    $5 per meal is so expensive! I try to keep mine at about 3€ Max per meal. Most of the time it was more like 1-2€ per meal (rice, veggies, eggs).

  • @donaldblevins5028
    @donaldblevins5028 Год назад +8

    Can we make aspic from the these chicken bones?
    I want to modify the 2nd dish to make an alternate version of the "transforming furikake rice bowl " from food wars
    Your thoughts on this CHEFPK?

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +3

      You definitely could

  • @cexatvpsre2402
    @cexatvpsre2402 Год назад +1

    just buy huge bags of frozen veggies, stock cubes, heat up water stock cube and veggies in then blend half the to thick up the soup tadaa.. if you want cheap proteing in it beans or eggs

  • @TheAneova
    @TheAneova Год назад +1

    Love how the Spaghetti Squash turns to a Butternut Squash when you get it home :P

  • @mach2makoto
    @mach2makoto Год назад

    Seeing you talk about the chicken reminded me about the Trash Taste Chicken debate. I’d love to see a react to that.

  • @346Yoman
    @346Yoman Год назад +2

    Where'd that bacon come from 👀

  • @MastaMan88
    @MastaMan88 Год назад

    Always buy with bones for bone broth! Skins in the pot too! Toss them in the freezer till you have enough.

  • @Kal_RP
    @Kal_RP Год назад

    for cheap food stew's, curry's, pasta. mince meat, chicken, white fish (like cod or whiting), i try to buy when the "best by date" is either that day or the next, grocery store's here then price it at least 35% of, meat stays good in freezer.

  • @DanskerneFraDanmark
    @DanskerneFraDanmark Год назад

    if you get seeds save them you can use them to grow food later on

  • @FlameOfShadows03
    @FlameOfShadows03 Год назад

    Bruh, I've been living the chef pk challenge for most of my life. XD

  • @saiyantwan
    @saiyantwan Год назад +1

    next time you are trying to figure out what to do with potatoes just remember the wise words of Samwise "Potatoes, potatoes! Boil ‘em, mash ‘em, put ‘em in a stew"

  • @LilT2o00
    @LilT2o00 Год назад

    Chicken quarters are top rank for budget (bone in skin on thigh/legs). Aldi sells a 10lb bag for $7.99, 79.9 cents a lb

  • @wwoods66
    @wwoods66 Год назад

    2:55 Max-packs of chicken thighs for the win! (It's even the same brand!) I usually de-bone, and sometimes de-skin, to make them more eater-friendly. With a boning knife and practice, it doesn't take long. The bones and skin go for the next batch of chicken stock and schmaltz, so they aren't wasted.

  • @akioaihara
    @akioaihara Год назад

    Finally a video that does not just break it down into "cost per serving" when in reality, you end up with a bill thats 10 times as high and a lot of stuff left over

  • @christopher5855
    @christopher5855 Год назад

    I usually buy bone in skin on chicken. The reason is that I save all the skin and bones in freezer bags and when I have enough I make chicken stock. The stock is cooled in sink with ice water and then in the fridge over night and the fat separated. The stock then gets portioned and frozen or reheated and canned if I want something shelf stable. The fat is then used for either cooking or making flour tortillas. Obviously animal fats are not as healthy as your mono and poly plant based fats but in the small amount that is in a couple tortillas or some roasted potatoes isn't too bad.

  • @Scud422
    @Scud422 Год назад +4

    I wish you had said how many meals you actually got out of all of that food. It definitely looked like more than 9 meals worth. $5 per meal is crazy high when you're putting that much effort into them.
    I have been cooking for myself for over a decade, and I average $2 per meal without even trying to be cheap about it, and the meals I make only require about half as much time to prep and cook.

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +3

      I ended up having about 8 meals out of what I made, but it was for two people (my wife and I). I definitely could have gone a much easier route, but I wanted to show a "fancy" version. I mostly eat egg whites, rice, bagels and some greens during my week lol

    • @Scud422
      @Scud422 Год назад +3

      @@CHEFPKR So, 16 meals total? If so, that would be great. Then you would have ended up spending a little over $2 per meal per person.

  • @Riechterblade
    @Riechterblade Год назад

    The farmers markets around where I live jack up the prices on everything, almost everyone will just go to the supermarket and get 3 to 5 times as much of the same thing and still pay less

  • @justinwhite2725
    @justinwhite2725 Год назад +1

    2:35 my first thought was 'why are you spending $1 per potato!?'
    Yeah, this.

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад

      They were SO GOOD THOUGH!

    • @justinwhite2725
      @justinwhite2725 Год назад

      @@CHEFPKR lol. I went through a period where I had next to no money. Bulk potatos and eggs were the most cost effective things I could get (forget ramen, that's trash)

  • @Attrius
    @Attrius Год назад

    Since moving out east, the only thing I miss from from the west coast is Winco. Everything was priced so well. T-T

  • @TheoKristiansen-n9d
    @TheoKristiansen-n9d 12 дней назад

    Man THIS SHI LOOKIN GOOOODDD

  • @DavidSantos-ix1hu
    @DavidSantos-ix1hu Год назад

    I make big pots of chicken soup ration out about a breast or two of chicken breast a day I add noodles potatoes spinitch and carrots, sometimes I also add a boiled egg I ate this every day in college while lifting with one whole onion and 1 to 2 cloves of garlic.

  • @shelbyherring92
    @shelbyherring92 Год назад

    Don't feel bad, Chef...
    My mom makes that mistake of distinction between butternut and spaghettti squash often
    Also, keeping your bacon or beef fat is a great idea. For me, I keep it around just in case I wanna fry potatoes or eggs, or even to add a more natural flavor to my instant ramen.
    Also also, bacon wrapped chicken thighs or breasts with either mozzarella or cheddar - good time if I say so myself. Don't have to add salt, the bacon does it for you - and oh, it's so good.

  • @scggames2731
    @scggames2731 Год назад +2

    45 was correct why did you correct what was already correct
    Edit: unless you meant 3days and 2nights

  • @Z3RO_ANGER
    @Z3RO_ANGER Год назад

    I love this

  • @anitastafford6617
    @anitastafford6617 Год назад

    I make my own fermented pepper sauces and hot sauces in bulk every month. Beans, rice, lemons, garlic cilantro and a variety of peppers. I also harvest from my garden. Buy spices in bulk from an Ethnic market. Indian spice markets are great because they don't deal in substandard spices. Buy salt and pepper in bulk it last for months.

  • @DragonRiderShiru
    @DragonRiderShiru Год назад

    Every time you said butter nut squash my brain screamed

  • @antoniodicorato725
    @antoniodicorato725 Год назад +3

    My biggest problem with preparing excess food is that I randomly get hungry just ny knowing its there and eating more lol

    • @lollertoaster
      @lollertoaster Год назад +1

      I was always a reason why cakes and pizzas lasted only one day in my house. Every time I walked by a kitchen, a piece would disappear.

  • @HunterofWaifus
    @HunterofWaifus Год назад

    Man this is great. problem is i only have the energy to cook a good meal like once or twice a week.

  • @9Godslayer
    @9Godslayer Год назад

    I am so jealous of the Spaghetti Squash that you picked up because my plant only produced 2 that were just a little bigger than my fist.

  • @Raver_S_Thompson
    @Raver_S_Thompson Год назад

    Spaghetti squash is by far my favorite squash. Some oil, butter and brown sugar makes a sweet squash.

  • @bradyphillipisjwara1917
    @bradyphillipisjwara1917 Год назад

    For the garlic in the oven, what is the temperature?

  • @LittleSkullyScrub
    @LittleSkullyScrub Год назад

    I’m not a big fan of squash but it has been growing on me. Maybe I’ll try something similar in the future

  • @thebigbrownmexican
    @thebigbrownmexican Год назад +1

    That reminded me when I survived with only 100 dollars a month for food during a semester in college to pay my debt, good times.

  • @badwolfskye9572
    @badwolfskye9572 Год назад

    Winco is a great place to buy things in bulk, good idea!

  • @skylerarroniz7513
    @skylerarroniz7513 Год назад

    Bro for the tomotio chicken boli the chicken then add the tomotio. Kinda like how you make mexican molle

  • @coolunusual
    @coolunusual Год назад +2

    Wait is the $35 the implied mistake? That's kinda funny given it was right as said in the video but the text is added in post lol

  • @AdarableKitten
    @AdarableKitten Год назад

    the way you plated them makes me think of genshin impact dishes!!. I wonder what kinda food would you say is your specialty?

  • @Grodarados
    @Grodarados Год назад

    31$ is normally worth for a month if you are blank as* broke every-day is just instant nudel soupe or if u want something else rama cream fresh in a pan garlic in bring it to boile and put the dry instant nudels in the pan and the use the sesionings from the inant nudel's around 2-3€ for 1 meal a day

  • @nickpolis1561
    @nickpolis1561 Год назад +1

    My man gonna dead ass look into the camera while saying he's stretching his cash but then go buy a coffee lol

    • @CHEFPKR
      @CHEFPKR  Год назад +1

      Coffee is life.

  • @gl0o0op80
    @gl0o0op80 Год назад

    unrelated bu can you make the meal that denji was having at the introduction party thing from chainsaw man?

  • @hikoplays
    @hikoplays Год назад

    i think i know that farmers market. if its the one im thinking about traffic is a pain in the butt over there so i avoid it cause i seriously cant stand it. also alot of accidents are in that area.

  • @Communinja
    @Communinja Год назад

    Less healthy option/stretch the budget: fry off the trimmed chicken skin. Use the chicken grease to offset some of the added oil cost (same with the extra bacon grease), and add the crispy skin to something for texture?

  • @astutechaos
    @astutechaos Год назад

    Chef for the Onions if you put Lemon juice on the cutting board it will help with the crying

  • @melodywitch8627
    @melodywitch8627 Год назад +1

    sadly they dont have bone in chicken thighs in the grocery stores in my city. I'd have to go to the farmers market or butchers wich is a 40 min dive away from my house and usually they cost more there any way wich sucks cus i love bone in i think it taste so much better.

    • @Angelicwings1
      @Angelicwings1 Год назад

      Cheaper to get a whole chicken and break it down. Trust me. If you do it right you can get a ton of meals and stock as well!

    • @melodywitch8627
      @melodywitch8627 Год назад

      @@Angelicwings1 i do this when i can get them. out local stores pretty much only sell breasts and bone-out skin off thighs or whole roast chicken already cooked. near Christmas and easter you will find while raw chickens i tend to bulk buy them for this reason and just freeze them XD