These guys and their morning snuggle time.
Month: May 2015
May 7, 2015
May 6, 2015
May 5, 2015
Adventures In Budget Paleo Cooking – Week of April 27 – May 3
This Week’s Menu
Monday
Breakfast: Green smoothie
Lunch: Chicken/cabbage/rhubarb/grape salad
Dinner: Semi-successful thyme & lemon chicken with rhubarb and sweet potato
Tuesday
Breakfast: Green smoothie
Lunch: Chicken/cabbage/rhubarb/grape salad
Dinner: Bunless burger with not-the-best hot chili sautéed broccoli rabe
Wednesday
Breakfast: Green smoothies
Lunch: Chicken/cabbage/rhubarb/grape salad
Dinner: Pork chops with chili blistered brussels sprouts
Thursday
Breakfast: Green smoothies
Lunch: Chicken/rhubarb/grape/pecan salad
Dinner: A ludicrously small amount of peas with broiled London broil
Friday
Breakfast: Green smoothies
Lunch: Chicken/rhubarb/pecan salad
Dinner: Out
Saturday
Breakfast: Out
Lunch: Out
Dinner: Pre-race fuel – my DH made his pre-race meal of rice & hamburger – mine was heavy on the burger/light on rice; his was heavy on rice/light on meat.
This Week’s Grocery List
Cage-free brown eggs, dozen ($3.79 @ Fresh Direct)
Sliced antibiotic-free rosemary grilled chicken breast, 6oz. x2 ($8.00 @ Fresh Direct)
Pat LaFrieda dry aged beef burgers, 6oz. x4 ($13.49 @ Fresh Direct)
English peas, 0.51lb. ($1.52 @ Fresh Direct)
Jumbo yellow onion ($0.60 @ Fresh Direct)
Rhubarb, 1.44lb. ($2.87 @ Fresh Direct)
Lemons x4 ($3.00 @ Fresh Direct)
Thyme ($1.99 @ Fresh Direct)
Grass fed ground beef ($9.99 @ Brooklyn Fare)
Smoothie Supplies
4 Apples ($3.99 @ Fresh Direct)
2 Avocados ($4.00 @ Fresh Direct)
Satur Farms cut mixed kale, 50z. ($3.49 @ Fresh Direct)
Totals
$53.01 Fresh Direct
$9.99 Brooklyn Fare
Budget Breakout
This week, I spent $63.00; $37.00 under budget. Yay, leftover meat from last week! Having leftovers from last week’s shopping really saved my budget this week. Enough so, I bought ridiculously expensive chicken for lunch without worrying about it. Hopefully I can parlay the $5 in budgetary overage I still have (last week’s groceries were $31.69 over budget) into a little extra meat next week to start building my emergency stockpile back up.
Leftovers From This Week
At the end of the week, I have 1 aging head of broccoli rabe, half a bulb of fennel, and two burgers left over. I need to incorporate these items into my menu for next week.
—
Think eating healthfully is too expensive for you? Think again. According to the USDA, to ensure a nutritious diet as of December 2014, a family of two aged 19-59 years should spend between $388.90 and $776.10 on food per month, or $89.80 – $179.30 per week. Source
For my family of two adults, I spend roughly $400 a month on groceries or $100 a week – and we eat well. Not caviar and lobster well, but I do manage to serve a predominately paleo diet with little to no processed foods, and I get to throw in a few luxuries here and there (like expensive snacks for the hubbs and the occasional ridiculously expensive bag of coffee). We even manage to buy “good” meat (grass fed beef and free-range chicken) most of the time – and I make this budget work even on the weeks we pay for convenience by getting delivery groceries. I make: 10 breakfasts, 5 lunches, and 10 dinners a week – plus enough snacks to satisfy and fuel two active adults.
I’m hoping that this series will help shed a little light on the day-to-day things a “paleo” person really eats — and how that way of eating can work on a budget. I want to nudge anyone sitting on the fence right over the edge by showing that it *can* be done and that you don’t just eat meat, meat, meat and more meat.
May 4, 2015
May 3, 2015
May 2, 2015
Blistered Grape and Bacon Salad
This week, I planned poorly for lunch and had pretty much nothing for Monday. So, I played the home version of Chopped and ended up coming up with something pretty darn tasty.
Gluten-free, paleo
Blistered Grape and Bacon Salad
2 ounces double smoked bacon (my favorite is Schaler & Weber)
Fresh fennel
6 green seedless grapes
Savoy or other green cabbage
Cut your bacon into batons.
In a large pan over medium heat, brown your bacon. While that is working, shred the cabbage, slice the fennel wafer thin, and halve the grapes.
When the bacon is about halfway done, add the grapes and fennel and sauté until the fennel is slumpy and the grapes start to blister.
Add the cabbage and sauté, stirring frequently, until softened. Hit with a big pinch salt and a few cracks black pepper while cooking.
Drizzle with a little aged balsamic and serve.
Serves 1 for lunch









