what studying literature feels like
current fan creation landscape is kinda like if you went to a party with a homemade cake and everyone takes a slice and silently thumbs up at you with no attempt to start a conversation except for occasionally some guy sits in the corner with a tape recorder critiquing the cake as though he was a restaurant critic and another guy is handing the cake to an uber driver like "yeah i need you to find a restaurant that makes cake like this so i can have more of it" and the only person that's talked to you in 30 minutes is a very sweet little guy who was like "hey i liked your cake" and then ran away apologizing for bothering you the moment you said thank you.
No offense but I think some of you would be a lot happier writing a fictional atlas or encyclopedia instead of a narrative story
today was my first day of classes, and it went well, my professors seemed cool. unfortunately, I am taking a 8am three-hour math class, and I am already slightly overwhelmed, but while I was in class I had a few post ideas so there is that! i wish I had more to say but I am suffering from food poisoning so I cannot offer much but I promise I will be more succinct in the future! anyway pls interact if you want, tell me how the start of your semester was!
I am a PhD student living on a stipend of under $18,000 per academic year, and I have a grocery budget of $50 per week to feed myself and my dog. I typically buy groceries once a month, where I spend under $200 at Costco, and fill in the gaps with $50 or less at Fred Meyer (a PNW Kroger brand) or Walmart (the bane of my existence). The final prices average to $50 per week.
The first trick is to look for building blocks you can buy in bulk instead of thinking about recipes individually. Spices, canned goods, meat, produce. Costco and Sams Club are good, but take advantage of the bulk prices and lack of member fee at Smart & Final instead if there’s one in your area.
If you're buying spinach and tomatoes for pasta, think about adding other salad ingredients to finish off that spinach package. If you're buying a package of shredded pork for sliders, consider using the leftovers for street tacos.
I also try and utilize all my leftovers. If I only need a small portion of a red onion for a recipe, I'll use the rest to make pickled red onions and try to think of something that will use them in the next couple weeks. A lot of my dog safe produce waste—strawberry tops, cucumber ends, carrot skins—go to my dog as an easy reward. (Reminder that if it’s rotten and you wouldn’t eat it, you probably shouldn’t be feeding it to your dog, either.)
The second trick is to utilize your freezer. Freeze produce close to it's expiration date, find a recipe for it where the texture won't matter. Freeze meat until you're ready to use it to prevent it dying a sad, stinky death in the hidden depths of the meat drawer. Sometimes I'll cook an extra big batch of something with the intent of freezing half of some of the components to be used at a later time (the chicken in the pita pockets is the same as the chicken in the meal prep bowls, but I don't like having them in the same week). I also keep a few backup meals in the freezer just in case I get Big Sick and don't feel like cooking for a while.
The third trick is to reject brand loyalty. Your new lord and savior is "what's on sale" and "store brand". As someone who regularly had access to both the high price and budget options of the foods I like, there are plenty of types of food where there's no discernible difference in quality between price points.
The building blocks I keep in my house are:
Chicken breast.
If you don’t like handling raw meat (or don’t have the equipment to cook it) I highly recommend the Costco rotisserie chicken instead. It’s a large chicken and it’s under $7 for the whole thing (at least where I live in AK) and it’s already cooked! There’s plenty of meat on it and if you’re into DIY stuff you can use the carcass to make your own chicken broth.
Ground beef (I like 85:15)
Broths/stocks (i like to keep beef, chicken, and vegetable on hand)
Eggs
Rotel cans (there is more than one flavor and I find them convenient)
Canned pumpkin purée (I keep this on hand year round to give to my dog in the event of digestion issues, but it has plenty of other uses)
Tomato paste
Black beans (they're cheaper dried and bagged, but canned is fine if you dont have the time or energy for bean prep)
Chickpeas (they're cheaper dried and bagged, but canned is fine if you dont have the time or energy for bean prep)
Lentils (split lentils are more expensive but they cook way faster)
Onions
Carrots (these double as dog treats)
Garlic
Sweet potatoes (also can be dog treats) or russet potatoes when sweet potatoes aren’t in season
Parsley (I have it growing in my kitchen)
Basil (also growing in my kitchen)
Cilantro (additionally growing in my kitchen)
Green onions (growing in my kitchen)
Butter, margarine, olive oil
Flour
Baking soda and baking powder
Brown and white sugar
Noodles (whichever shape is on sale when I'm buying)
Top ramen packets (for the stove)
Sandwich bread
Bread crumbs (I make these using the heels of bread from my sandwich bread or leftover buns when the meat to bun ratio doesn't add up)
Single serving oatmeal packets
Rice (I buy the 10 lb bag from the grocery store which lasts me about a year...)
Oat milk (it's shelf stable to reduce food waste)
Coconut milk (also shelf stable)
Vanilla yogurt (big tub)
Greek yogurt (big tub)
Frozen fruit mix (these double as dog treats)
Most of the building blocks are purchased in bulk when I can. I will get a new package of whatever is running out when necessary. My entire spice cabinet is the store brand spices (almost, there've been a few fancy spice gifts recently). You can get nice herbs and spices from Walmart's Great Value brand. My food is no less delicious for it.
Breakfast:
Oatmeal. I get mine in the bulk 52 pack from costco and eat two packets at once. I would get the big canister instead, but I’m not very good at flavoring them when they come that way and it generally just makes me sad instead
Currently (sept 2024) working on big canister DIY oatmeal and overnight oats. Will report back when I manage something that isn't terrible :)
Store brand bagel with store brand cream cheese (Philadelphia is eggspensive)
Eggo waffles+peanut butter. I get the bulk 72(?) pack from costco, because they're leagues better than store brand toaster waffles and also significantly cheaper than buying freezer waffles of any kind in any smaller package. Make a little sandwich+enjoy.
Outside Breakfast: This is what I eat if I'm going to do Outside Work, like field sampling or ice climbing or hiking to the top of Mt. Healy
I Live In A Place Where Fruit Doesn't Grow Smoothie: utilizes yogurt, plant milk, frozen fruit mix. If I end up with extra I put it on a lick mat for my dog.
Breakfast tacos: utilizes egg, and leftover produce and leftover tortillas from taquito, quesadilla, or pulled pork taco recipes.
Home fries and egg: utilizes potato, onion, egg
Leftovers Egg Sandwich: utilizes egg, leftover meat (like lunchmeat or other thin sliced meat) and leftover produce or sauce, and leftover bread
Lunch:
Greek chicken meal prep boxes: utilizes chicken, greek yogurt, rice, onion, garlic
Chickpea and lentil roasted red pepper soup+grilled cheese: utilizes chickpeas and lentils, sandwich bread (vegetarian/vegan)
Black bean quesadilla: utilizes black beans, onion, cilantro (vegetarian)
Black bean taquitos: utilizes black beans, onion, garlic, cilantro, rice (vegan, requires a blender/food processor)
Chicken sandwich + roasted red pepper soup
Sausage pasta: utilizes noodles, onion, garlic
Pita pockets: utilizes chicken, yogurt, cilantro
Smashed chickpea avocado sandwich: utilizes chickpeas, cilantro, rotel (vegan!)
Dinner:
Chick(en)pea Curry: utilizes chicken, chickpeas, rotel, onions, garlic, cilantro, rice (omitting chicken makes it vegan)
Mac and cheese: utilizes noodles, breadcrumbs (vegetarian)
Mom's goulash: utilizes onion, garlic, ground beef, noodles,
White chicken chili: utilizes chicken broth, chicken, onion, garlic
Fire sick soup: utilizes chicken, carrots, garlic, onion, chicken broth (SPICY)
Magic sick soup: utilizes chicken, carrots, onion, garlic, veggie broth
Darn Good Chili: utilizes ground beef, tomato paste, black beans, onion
Sheet pan chicken fajitas: utilizes chicken, onion, garlic
Coconut ginger carrot soup+garlic bread: utilizes carrot (vegan)
Chicken tortilla soup: utilizes leftover chicken from sheet pan fajitas, onion, garlic, chicken broth
Moms meatloaf: utilizes ground beef, rotel, breadcrumbs, egg
Carnitas tacos: utilizes rice, black beans, onions, cilantro. I commit the crime of buying the preshredded pork from Costco, because I hate shredding meat by hand and don’t have a mixer to do it for me. I like to pair this with a mango peach habanero salsa. (SPICY)
Pumpkin pasta sauce: utilizes noodles, onion, garlic,
Snacks:
Vanilla yogurt + granola: both of these are store brand. Walmart makes surprisingly decent (and decently priced, at that) granola
Veggies + hummus: I eat most of my veggies raw like this. Costco sells bulk hummus but I don’t love how much extra packaging their produce comes with. If time, energy or prep space are a problem for you, you can buy precut veggies but let it be known that those no longer qualify as a budget item.
Tortilla chip + salsa/guacamole: costco sells all of these items in bulk at very cheap. One 3 pack of guac and a tub of salsa gets me through one whole bag of tortilla chips.
Ramen + egg: this is what I eat when it's too late for lunch but too early for dinner and I'm starving
Granola + chocolate chip: I guess this is just a deconstructed granola bar but it’s a 3:1 granola:chocolate ratio
Other stuff:
DIY spices
Fancy herb butter
Sweet potato dog treats
Non-Budget items
Coconut brownies (spruced up Ghirardelli box brownies, recipe stolen from a professor at my university)
Dads Goulash
Lomo Saltado
I don't currently feel like doing the math for these, but I do actually only spend roughly $50 a week on groceries. (Currently the underlined ones are the ones I have a full linked recipe posted for, which I work on in my spare time).
Additional notes: I don’t really do the whole calorie counting thing, but I do try to eat at least one serving of a food from each major food group a day as a way to naturally enforce variety and balance out my diet.
Reblog to give the person you reblogged this from motivation to work on their WIPs.
rip bunny corcoran you would have loved hearing carnival at a frat party
“you‘re so quiet” baby i’m not even here. i’m fantasizing about a book i read weeks ago. move on.
You don’t need to say “She was sad.” Show me the untouched coffee gone cold. The half-written text that never gets sent. The way she laughs at a joke and then immediately looks away. People don’t announce their emotions, they live them, they try to hide them, they pretend they’re fine when they’re not. Make your readers feel it between the words.
recently learned about the concept of a commonplace book and I am obsessed with it. a notebook where I keep all of the information I've gathered that I want to remember? when my shitty little brain can't remember what I read 5 minutes ago? perfect. yes. good.
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