Posts Tagged ‘food stamps cooking club’

Food Stamps Cooking Club: Does Sandra Have a License?

August 13th, 2010

Sandra bakes bread for a song...

Sandra, who is a regular contributing Food Stamps Cooking Club Member, really resonated with the post that went up about the growing use of public assistance for getting food and making those food dollars stretch.  She sent such delightful offerings that I’m wondering if she should procure a Blogger’s License?

Actually, I take that back.  Some Federal official will see it and think it is a wonderful idea for raising revenue.

Suffice it to say that Sandra has either thought this through very carefully or she has lived through a time which taught her a great many good lessons.  See what she sent us:

“Dear Mother Connie,

There’s no doubt that that money will be put back but we all still have to worry about those rising food costs especially when it comes to things like produce.  There are a lot of things we do to save money on the grocery bill.

1. Bake your own bread.  You can make bread for around 40 cents per loaf.  That’s much cheaper and healthier than store bought.

2. Eat pancakes, oatmeal, eggs, muffins, or French toast instead of boxed cereal.

3. Make your own pancake/waffle syrup.  There’s a great product called Mapleine on the market.  It comes in a blue and white box and is maple flavoring.  While the bottle costs around $3.50 per bottle, it takes only 1/2 tsp to make a pint of syrup.  It takes one cup water, 2 cups sugar, and 1/2 tsp Mapleine.  Much, much cheaper than store bought syrup.

4. Buy chips, treats, and cookies only for special occassions.  You can make your own treats much cheaper and healthier and with less packaging.

5. Don’t drink fruit juice.  While it seems economical, it really isn’t.  A serving of fruit is more satisfying to the appetite.

6. Eat meat only in very small portions.  You really don’t need a lot – just a few ounces per day fills your protein requirements especially if you eat eggs and dairy.

7. Eat more vegetarian meals.  Eggs, pasta, grains, etc can provide variety at a lower cost than can meat.

8. Don’t buy storebought mixes.  You can make your own more cheaply.

9. One of the biggest things we do is to follow the pantry principle.  We try to keep our pantries stocked with basic ingredients all the time so that we don’t run out of things and have to make extra trips to the store.

10. Make your own salad dressings.  This really can be cheaper and healthier and once you have a few basic ingredients, you can make different kinds.

11. Learn to like beans.  Seriously, beans are one of the most nutritious and frugal foods you can eat.  They store well too.

Mother Connie, I have a lot more ideas, but this is a very good start.  I hope this can help others.  :)

–Sandra

We were thrilled with that list.  But Sandra, ever the thoughtful Food Stamps Cooking Club member that she is, sent a follow up message, too:

Oh, a word about produce.  Learn to keep veggies and fruits that keep for a long time such as potatoes, carrots, cabbage, celery, and apples on hand for main use.  Then buy a few veggies or fruits that don’t keep as long.  Use those first and then rely on your staples.

Keep in mind that if you have bananas going bad and you aren’t ready to bake with them, you can freeze them and save for the smoothies or baking later.

If you are willing to go to farmer’s market or produce stands near closing time, you can often get reduced prices.

–Sandra

Sandra, I baked some Foccacia bread this morning.  I eyed the pan of leftovers and pondered what great bread pudding that would make.  Now THAT will save us some moola…and I am known as the Bean Queen around here so you and I are pretty much on the same page! Why, we could be roommates.  Well, you know what I mean.  grin

If people use Angel Food Ministries,  food pantry food or food commodities; if they have an EBT card for WIC or SNAP they will most assuredly appreciate the worth of your thoughtful ideas, offered most generously.  You are a very wise woman, and we appreciate you very much.

We are delighted to hear from any of our Members. All emails can go to foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com  and please leave your comments here.  We love those, too.

Our goal is to help you, because we care about your situation and we care about people-neighbors, people on the net-whoever we might assist.

Pass the word.  The series of cooking tips are fun and we don’t hammer you to death with messages till who laid the chunk.

Connie Baum

The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  Should they be clicked, resulting in sales, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Please do your due diligence when conducting affairs online or offline.  Always do business with those you trust implicitly.

Food Stamps Cooking Club: Tomatoes Galore?

August 2nd, 2010

Here we have a snapshot of a Nebraska summer! Please pass the salt!

Are you in love with tomatoes?

One of my fondest childhood memories is watching my dad plant, nurture and harvest juicy, red, ripe tomatoes in his carefully tended vegetable garden.  He was partial to Beefsteak and Big Boys and never even imagined all the varieties available in today’s world.

One year there was a poor crop so Mom and Dad drove their 1938 Chevy 2-door to the local open market on 13th Street in Omaha, Nebraska.  The MARKET had run OUT of tomatoes!  This was getting to be a real crisis!  Later that day a man in a beat up old hoopy of a pickup truck brought bushel baskets to our door, offering them up for a handsome price.  Mom and Dad were thrilled-not so happy about the price, but that price did include delivery-and once again I dreamed of tomato sammies with home made bread and butter.   All our dreams were dashed when it was discovered that old man had put overripe fruit in the bottom of the basket!  What a stinky, smelly MESS!

SIDEBAR:  That was my first encounter with a scammer.  Sad to say, not my last.  END SIDEBAR.

As an older child, we lived in a place where I could take a salt shaker, go out to a massive garden all summer long, pluck tomatoes right off the vine and eat those juicy wonders to my heart and tummy’s-content!

Fresh tomatoes are hard to beat.  They are refreshing and pretty; they are easy to present and a joy to devour.

Foodies discuss at length about peeling vs leaving the peeling in place.  Mom used to peel them before she sliced them by dunking them in hot water til the skins split.  Then she would carefully remove the skins and slice them artfully and arrange them on a plate.   I found out after I grew up she did that because that’s how her best friend, Helen, did them.  Dad told me Helen peeled jillions of tomatoes because her husband, Jack, would not eat the peelings!  Isn’t it funny how things get started?

Well, at our house, we aren’t particular about the peelings.  In fact, we think that’s where the nutrition and enzymes lie so we are happy to have them aboard.  They get washed and sliced or chopped and maybe one day we will dunk them in a bath of brine-a mixture of any old vinegar with some salt and pepper.  I might even sprinkle in a tiny bit of sugar to bring out the sweetness of the fruit.   Maybe they will share that bath with some cucumber and thin slices of onion.

Of course, tomatoes are a staple of a cool, fresh, crisp  green salad.  The color contrast-not to mention the flavor-is delightful!

Sometimes, if there is an abundance of tomatoes, I’ll make a wonderful, fresh summertime soup.  Hot weather does not necessarily  invite hot soup but still, fresh tomato soup is nourishing, satisfying and pretty in your bowl.  It’s  quickly and easily prepared, too.

Canned tomatoes lined up on a shelf make a person feel really wealthy and give a sense of security.  Those canned goodies will work hard all winter to make chili soup, goulash, spaghetti sauce; all kinds of winter casseroles.

For users of Angel Food Ministries or food pantries; even food commodities, tomatoes-fresh or canned-can be a godsend.  For users of SNAP and WIC, tomatoes are the home cook’s good friend.

Here’s hoping the Food Stamps Cooking Club is your good friend, as well.  It exists to provide people who depend on public assistance or people who are simply frugal by nature with some encouragement and a few ideas.

We love YOUR ideas, too.  Shoot us an email at foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com  and make our day!  You are also welcome to leave your comment on this blog.

You may have noticed the link in this blog’s signature which takes you to the ToothSoap website.  Just so you know, using ToothSoap will save your teeth, your hard earned dollars, and save you money in the long run.  They even have an Affiliate Program you may be interested in that could provide your household with another stream of income.  You would do well to check it all out.

Connie Baum

The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  Should they be clicked, resulting in sales, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Please do your due diligence when conducting affairs online or offline.  Always do business with those you trust implicitly.



Food Stamps Cooking Club Salutes Mothers

May 8th, 2010

Kudos and roses are precious little to offer all the mothers who are Food Stamps Cooking Club members...

Our hearts go out to honor every mother today.

We understand that you wear a lot of hats, you are greatly gifted and sometimes feel burdened.  There are a good many demands on your time and attention and you are doing the best job you know how to do.

Many of the mothers who are Food Stamps Cooking Club members are single parents.  Yes, we have single dads, too, but their big day is coming up next month!  Some of the mothers who care for their brood are also working outside the home.

Motherhood is no walk in the park.  It’s hard work. The hours are terrible.  The monetary pay is lousy. The rewards are so far down the road that it is difficult to appreciate that rewards will come.   The demands and pressure of motherhood are incredible…

But so are you mothers incredible. You are the brave, courageous and loving first teachers of the next generation.  We are proud of each of you for your contribution to mankind.  We thank you on behalf of your children.

We wish every mom everywhere a wonderful Mother’s Day and we hope you know that your important role as a mother is appreciated every day of the year.  May God bless every one of you richly and abundantly.

Hugs,

Mother Connie

Food Stamps Cooking Club: Spice Things Up 4 Flavor?

February 19th, 2010

 

A snowy February day makes us all long for spring and gardening season!

WE PREFACE THE MESSAGE ON THIS BLOG TO BRING YOU  CRITICALLY IMPORTANT FOOD INFORMATION:

 

“For everyone who wants to keep up on how they slip aspartame into our foods, drugs, vaccines (yes, vaccines), OTC meds (especially child products), aspartame has a new name of AminoSweet. Since aspartame has gotten such a bad name (as it should), Ajinomoto has renamed this toxic chemical sweetener.   Start double checking your labels.

Thanks and kudos go out to Rachel Kincaid, who gave us the heads up.  Thanks, also to Business Week  and Shaun Weston from FoodBev.com for providing great information to help us consumers protect ourselves.

Now we return to the blog’s main message:

You Food Stamps Cooking Club members are to be commended for your quick response to any post that hits you like a brick.

There was a delightful message from Max and here is what Max offered us:

“Just a couple of my own tips, learned from experience, to help stretch food dollars even more when it comes to dried spices and herbs.  I have found that the baking aisle is an excellent start to shopping for these products, but you can often find them additionally in the ethnic foods areas of many supermarkets, and other less-thought-of resources.

For many varieties of spices and herbs, those little red-capped bottles are kind of non-budget price, but if you go to a different aisle, you may find it more within your budget if you look under a different brand name, and sometimes in different packaging such as a cellophane packet.

I buy spices at the dollar store.  I find some things such as dried dill weed, at Ikea, if you live near one, in a very large paper/foil packet (look in the marketplace among the kitchenwares).  There is a large Asian supermarket near my home, I recently bought a large bottle of ground coriander for $1.69 there.  They also have many other varieties as well, paprika, cumin, ginger, even lemongrass powder.  Hispanic markets are another great source, as are Middle Eastern shops for even more variety.
One last thing: I have read that spices and herbs are past their prime when they no longer have a fragrance, but I find that if you can rub it in your hands and still have fragrance, it is still going to flavor your foods well.

I do think you should have specified whether you were talking about dill seed or dill weed; it’s the dill seeds that are used in pickling.  But it’s the dried or fresh dill weed that “makes” the dishes you mentioned.  I also sprinkle dried dill on the top of creamy tomato soup, and it goes into the pot when I make homemade chicken soup.

Can you tell I use lots of spices and herbs lol?  I hate boring food.  I have gourmet tastes on a food-stamp budget.  Also, I simply do not have the budget to allow me to dine out as often as I’d like, so I try to recreate different tastes at home.”
See?  Now THAT’S the kind of neighbor you wish you had if you do not live next door to Max!  Can you just imagine the wonderful aromas that waft from that kitchen?  Mmmmm…

For people who utilize SNAP or WIC funds; people who depend on food pantries and/or food commodities; for people who use Farmers Market Coupons and Angel Food Ministries; and for those who simply pinch pennies wherever possible to stretch their food budgets this is helpful information.

We are so happy and grateful to have the Maxes and the Sandras and the Rainys who are so faithful to share their kitchens and cooking ideas!  KEEP them coming, kids! Here’s where to direct them: foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com.

Are you something of a health nut?  You might like to visit

Do you need more income in your household?  These sites have ideas to help you with that, if you are inclined:  Rapid Cash Marketing and Work At Home Freelancing.

Our intention is to be helpful.  We are far more effective in that endeavor because of YOU, dear Club Members!  THANK YOU.

The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  When these links are clicked, resulting in sales, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Please do your due diligence when conducting affairs online.  Do business only with those you trust implicitly.

Food Stamps Cooking Club: Garlic Tips?

February 18th, 2010

If EVERYONE at the table eats garlic, kissing the cook will be a good thing!

I found a little item in a health food brochure that came my way and it got me thinking about garlic. This herb is so much more than a wonderful addition to bread or meat and vegetable offerings.  It truly is a health food.  Plus, it is inexpensive to buy or to grow.  It’s a terrific bargain and it is scrup-deedly-umptious!

There has been a wealth of research done about garlic over many years’ time.  It has been shown to significantly help fight free radicals, it can reduce cholesterol as well as improve heart problems and it helps with blood issues.  Not to mention its antibacterial properties, which help keep our immune systems strong and illness at bay.

Whether you choose to eat it with your foods and/or use it in a supplemental form, garlic will please your palate and keep you feeling fit as a fiddle!

A dear client once told me that her favorite way to use garlic was with roast chicken.  She used 30 buds of garlic in the cavity and around the bird as she slow roasted the chicken!  30 sounds like a lot to me but I tried it and it was delish.

When you roast garlic it gets sweeter, so that garlicky flavor married into the flavor of the poultry and was very, very good.  Of course, salt and pepper went with that.  Simple.  Simple.  Simple.  And not a costly meal at all.  Naturally, you could add any collection of veggies to that and do your entire meal in the oven.

Yum.  Makes me want to check the freezer to see if there is an old dead bird there, or parts of one just to roast with garlic!

Using garlic-infused oils are a nice way to make a garlic bread.  If you don’t have such a thing in your pantry, it’s easy to make.  Just pour some good salad oil-my fave is Olive Oil-into a pitcher, drop in some garlic buds and leave it, covered.  In a day or two, you will have garlic flavored oil that can be brushed onto slices of bread that can then be toasted in the oven.  Oh, how good that would be with a pasta dish!

If you saute` garlic, make sure the heat is moderate because garlic that has been cooked too hot and too quickly tends to burn and that is not the flavor you want to add to your dishes!

Do any of our Club Members grow garlic in their gardens?  We’d love to hear from you.  Just send an email to foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com.

As Club Members, you all have earned gold stars for sharing.  We note that more and more people are coming here and asking for the series of Cooking Tips we send, as well as the occasional email messages.  Our intention is not to bombard you but to help you.

We hope our cooking tips for today have hit your hot button and inspired you to create some great comfort food.  We make every effort to assist those who use Angel Food Ministries, food commodities, food pantry foods, and SNAP or WIC.  We also hope we are catering to those who simply stick to frugality and watch their food budgets closely.

Hearing from our Club Members is such a joy!  Please add your comments to this page, won’t you?  Or shoot us an email at the above address.  Thanks, kids.

If you like what you see here you may also appreciate The Healthy and Wealthy You or Mother Connie Sez. We are always jonesin’ for comments there, too.  See how we are?  grin

For those of you who may be interested in creating some much needed online income from a work at home business, you might be interested to see what’s available here or here.

Connie Baum

The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  Should those links be clicked and sales result, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Please do your due diligence when conducting affairs online or offline.  Only do business with those you trust implicitly.



Food Stamps Cooking Club: Comfort Food?

February 12th, 2010

Does weather that looks like this make you pine for comfort food?

Some of us feel as if we are bears, hibernating for the winter.   Maybe some of us have curled up, all cozy in our homes…others?  Not so much.  After all, hopefully, we have jobs and kids to get to school and sidewalks to clear.  Life goes on, in all kinds of weather.

Cold weather whets our appetites for soups, baked goods so the oven can warm the house; those comfort foods will warm our hearts; even hot chocolate might take the place of dessert on a cold winter’s evening.

Does your crock pot or  slow cooker get more of a workout during winter months?  One of the most favored breakfasts we can conjure up with our crock pot is the old oatmeal treat.  I toss in a few raisins, a few apple slices-I add the  skins, too-and about 4 times more water-with a dash of salt-than oatmeal just before I go to bed.  For extra yumminess, I will add a sprinkle of cinnamon.  When morning comes breakfast is ready and it smells so inviting that sleepyheads don’t dawdle!

If you are a working family and want to come home to a ready made meal it doesn’t take much in the way of planning to pop some meat and veggies into the slow cooker, along with some broth.  What a welcoming way to come home when you are dog tired and ready for some good old fashioned comfort food!  If you use enough ingredients, you have the makings of a great soup for the next meal!

Some people find it helpful to use this method:  As you are unpacking your groceries you can take some time to wash and cut some veggies and fruit to be kept in air-tight storage containers or bags.  This makes for sensible snacks and helps with meal prep, too.

Having a batch of rice cooked and at the ready in the fridge will help speed up meal making.  So will having hard cooked eggs on hand.  Kids will snack on healthy things like these if it’s easy and quick.

My kids used to love finding cupcake papers with a few chocolate chips and raisins or nuts and raisins waiting for them after school.  Sometimes there would be tarts filled with warm pudding.  What do you do for YOUR kids that our club members would enjoy knowing about?  Maybe you’ll post a comment and share some of your ideas with us.  We’d love that just as much as comfort food.

We love email messages, too:  foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com

Thanks, guys.  Be sure to leave your name and email in the box in the upper right hand corner of this blog.  That way you will receive the series of cooking tips and the few broadcasts we send your way.  We love keeping in touch.

As you know, the Food Stamps Cooking Club is devoted to the care and feeding of those who use Angel Food Ministries, SNAP or WIC.  We cater to people who depend on food pantries and food commodities and Farmers Markets Coupons.  We also give a nod to those who are doing all in their power to keep to their food budgets.

Connie Baum

The FTC wants you to know that there are links in this post.  Should those links be clicked, resulting in a sale, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Always do your due diligence when conducting affairs online.  Do business only with those you trust implicitly.


Food Stamps Cooking Club: Number of Members is Climbing

February 6th, 2010

USA: Food Stamps Users Numbers are Climbing!

More peeps on food assistance?  More users of SNAP, WIC, and food commodities as well as food pantry foods?

THAT’S NOT NEWS!  THAT’S REALITY!

Our question is:  Who ya gonna CALL?  HINT: Food Stamps Cooking Club! Angel Food Ministries!

People are hurting.  Parents are worried and hungry.  Children deserve to know there will be food on their family’s table!

That’s where THIS little band of merry makers comes in.  The Food Stamps Cooking Club is, as our faithful followers are keenly aware, is a soft place to fall.  It is a place where frugal foodies and people who need to know how to become more frugal in order for their food dollars to do the most good can hang out and share.

We are not alone in our effort to help people live within their means, regardless of what those means are!  There is a cute little newsletter that’s been coming our way called “Living On a Dime” and a recent issue included an entire menu designed to celebrate Valentine’s Day with flair.  Here’s what Tawra Kellam had to share with her readers:

“CHEESY RICE AND TOMATOES

3 cups cooked rice
3 Tbsp. oil
1 medium onion, chopped
3 stalks celery, chopped
1 green pepper, chopped
2 cups cooked or stewed tomatoes
2 cups cheese, shredded
1 tsp. salt
dash of pepper

Cook rice if uncooked. Sauté in a pan with oil, onion, celery and green pepper. Add tomatoes, rice, cheese, salt and pepper. Cover and simmer until cheese is melted. Serves 8.”

This budget friendly and healthy foods recipe came from Living On a Dime. We appreciate all Tawra does for so many.

We deeply appreciate all the mail you send our way, too: foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com   All our Club Members have so many good, thrifty, creative ideas and are so generous to share.

Comments fuel our fire, too.  You can leave yours at the end of this post, if you please.

“Joining” the club is as easy as dropping your name and email addy in the box on the upper right hand corner of this page.  There are no meetings or dues, so there’s no pressure!  grin  We do send along messages-a series to begin with-followed by infrequent broadcasts.  We were happy to connect with members who may have missed seeing fresh posts when we encountered techy issues.  Doncha hate when that happens?

Please feel free to share us with those in your sphere of influence.  You may also like to know that we have other spots on the Web which deal with issues of health and making money at home.  If you like what you are reading here, you may like to drop by these blogs, too:  The Healthy and Wealthy You and Mother Connie Sez. If you are interested to add income to your household you might find these spots helpful: Rapid Cash Review and Work at Home Freelancing.

Connie Baum

Food Stamps Cooking Club and the SuperBowl?

February 3rd, 2010

SuperBowl Sunday Approaches! WHO DAT?

Most every household has Super Bowl Sunday on their radar.  All us foodies are thinking about what we’ll eat.  The media is full of ideas.  The thing is, if you are using SNAP or WIC or any of the other food assistance program, you may have more limited choices than those who are living off their ginormous Trust Funds.  Still, we crave our comfort foods…Oh, what to DO?

I have some ideas about potatoes, which we’d love to share below.  Before we do that, however, let’s mention that Super Bowl Sunday is no reason to go all out for high calorie, low nutrition foods.    You can do very well with pickles and olives; people will be happy to eat raw veggies and fruit pieces as well as popcorn before the main event of a soup or pasta entree!  Please don’t feel obligated to put out expensive chips and dips or have pizzas delivered when all that may mean you eat more oatmeal or cheap weenies to keep a handle on the rest of your month’s budget.  I’m just sayin’…

HOW ABOUT A SOUPER BOWL POTATO BAR?

  1. Chili over baked potatoes can be divine!  With toppings of chili, cheese, sour cream these are filling, nourishing and comforting!  Even bean soups or lentils over baked taters is delish!  Have you ever tasted cauliflower soup over potatoes?  OH, be still my heart!
  2. Twice baked potatoes, stuffed with cheese can be a crowd pleaser without busting the budget!
  3. Potato skins make great appetizers; save the stuffing for baked potato soup!  Add in a few chunks of wieners or ham for added protein.  YUM.
  4. Baked potatoes topped off with cottage cheese, chives, onions, sweet peppers; even corn make pretty plates of hearty eating.
  5. A pot of potato soup with sandwich fixings nearby can facilitate the fans filling their own plates.  No need for anyone to miss any football action playing Host.

Being users of assistance programs,  such as food commodities, food pantries, Farmers Markets, or even Angel Food Ministries foods need not dampen our enthusiasm for a rockin’ good Super Bowl Party.

What will YOU be eating while you root for your team?

Connie Baum

The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  Should they be clicked, resulting in sales, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Please do your due diligence when conducting your affairs online or offline.  Do business only with those you trust implicitly.





Food Stamps Cooking Club: Sandra Cooks With Beans

February 1st, 2010

Beans provide great protein, fiber, vitamins and minerals and team up well with many other foods to create variety and visual interest!

 

In case you didn’t already know it, the Food Stamps Cooking Club has THE BEST members in the Universe!  I know this because they are so generous to share.  To wit:
Sandra sent us three recipes about beans, just as she promised she would, and here is the first.  We promise to follow up with two more very soon:


SANDRA’S BEAN DISH

**Refried Beans

Place 2 pounds of beans or 6 cups of dried beans in a large bowl.  Cover with cold water and stir.  Let them sit overnight or for several hours. Drain the beans and rinse with cold water.

Put beans in large crock pot and cover with water.  Cook on high for 5 hours or low for 8-10.  Drain beans, reserving some of the bean “juice.”

Place desired amount of beans with some “juice” in a food processor and blend until very smooth, adding more water or “juice” as necessary.

Place a skillet on the stove burner.  Add cooking spray or oil.  Pour beans into pan and cook until desired consistency is achieved.  You can season with salt, chopped onion, onion powder/salt, garlic, garlic powder/salt, chili powder, cumin, green chilies, whatever you like.

Serve refried beans any way you wish: tacos, taco salad, with Mexican rice, next to fried eggs, or in Refried bean casserole.

**Refried bean chili or Refried bean dip

You can add a can or two of diced tomatoes, a can of green chilies, and a half a block of cream cheese that has been cubed.  Depending on what consistency you want, you can make this into a dip or a chili.  It is far too rich to be served by itself.  So you really need something to eat with it like baked potatoes, Fritos, salad, something to dilute the richness a bit.  :)

You can use them to make bean burritos.  Add some rice and you have a complete protein.

WAIT!  THERE’S MORE!
**REFRIED BEAN CASSEROLE

Tortilla chips or corn tortillas
4 cups refried beans
2 cups salsa or enchilada sauce
½ cup grated cheese (we like Colby/jack)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Line the bottom of pan with the chips or tortillas.  Spread beans over chips/tortillas, then salsa or enchilada sauce.  Sprinkle with cheese.  (You can also stir it up together and dump it in which is what I do.  J)

I love, love, LOVE beans.  They are cheap.  They are healthy.  They are easy to store – requiring no electricity for storage.  And they are very versatile.  By the way you can use just about any kind of bean to make refried beans.  I like pintos and black beans best.  But this would also work with white beans and kidney beans.

-Sandra

Sandra, we love, love LOVE YOU!  It was so great when our mail is fun!  THANK YOU Again!

For people who use SNAP, WIC, Angel Food Ministries foods, or things that came from food commodities or a food pantry, these are pragmatic ideas.  If you are making every effort to s-t-r-e-t-c-h your food money, this is the place for good information.  We’re glad you’re here.  We hope you leave a comment for us and we hope to hear from you at foodstampscookingclub@gmail.com

If you enjoy this blog the chances are good you will like what you find on Mother Connie Sez and The Healthy and Wealthy You. There is a place for comments there, too, she said to hint broadly and shamelessly…grin.

Connie Baum
The FTC wants you to know there are links in this post.  Should they be clicked, resulting in sales, your humble blogger would be fairly compensated.  Do your due diligence when conducting affairs online or offline.  Only do business with those you trust implicitly.

January 27th, 2010

 

WIC offers good news for mommies and babies!

 

You may be aware of the recently implemented program for Women Infants and Children-WIC-last fall.  They have amended their food package to include fresh fruits and vegetables.

This is tremendously good news for families!  Fresh fruits and vegetables are the fuels needed to propel growing little bodies into becoming healthy, productive, happy people!

There is an educational program to go with this in order to help people wring every advantage from the new program.  Mother Connie, with the Food Stamps Cooking Club and all the dear members who are so generous with their time and ideas, hope we are contributing to the educational process in our own small way.

If you receive WIC benefits, you are likely to know about these changes.  If you would like more information about all the good things they are doing, just inquire at your local level and some very nice people will answer all your questions.

Someone who sits in my circle is a real FAN of WIC.  She raves about how wonderful it has been to have enough milk for her little one.  Now since vegetables and fruits are available to this little family there is a sense of security in place that satisfies Mommy in ways food cannot.

Maybe your family does not need or does not use WIC.  You may be a SNAP user; you may visit food pantries or receive food commodities.  Perhaps you grow your own food or are a Senior Citizen using Farmers Markets or living on a tightly fixed income.  You might even be a penny pinching foodie.  In any case, the Food Stamps Cooking Club is the place to be for ideas about good eats!

If you are a fan of Angel Food Ministries, you know how their menus can stretch a food budget like rubber, too!  We’d love to hear from happy Angel Food users. 

Here’s something we found, courtesy of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension in Lancaster County, Nebraska:

VEGETABLE RICE SKILLET

One 15 oz can kidney, black or garbanzo beans, drained & rinsed

One  14.5 oz can stewed tomatoes

2  cups mixed veggies, frozen

One cup water

3/4  cup brown rice

1/2  teaspoon dried thyme or dried dill weed

One  10  3/4  oz can tomato soup

Hot sauce – optional

Cheese – optional

1. In a large skillet, stir together beans, tomatoes, veggies, water, rice and thyme or dill.

2. Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat, cover and simmer 20 – 25 minutes or til rice is tender.  Stir occasionally.  Add more water if mixture seems to be too dry.

3. Stir in tomato soup.  Bring to a boil.  Let simmer 2 or 3 minutes or more.

4. Serve with hot sauce and cheese, if you choose.

This makes me want to race to my pantry shelves to see if I have the fixings so I can make this recipe on this very day!  YUMMY!

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