Saturday 11 April 2015

Cheap vegetable and chicken stocks

I am not a great fan of shop bought stock. It is convenient but I find the level of sodium contained within is way too high.  Campbell's vegetable stock contains 540mg of sodium per 100mls or per half cup. Massel's vegetable stock which is salt reduced contains 174mg of sodium per 100mls.Too high levels of sodium are linked with heart and kidney disease. When you start to go low sodium it is incredible how thirsty you are next morning after a meal out of takeaways. That is from the sodium.

One litre of Campbell's vegetable stock costs $4.25 AUD. If you were making a soup at home say for a family of four and used one litre, that is the price of the soup before you have added anything else.

Making vegetable stock at home is not hard. It is especially easy if you have a vegetable garden. Whilst I throw many vegetable scraps into the compost container, I keep the good scraps in a container in the fridge until I am ready to make stock. The use of seasonal weeds adds flavour for no extra cost.

Chop and onion up finely, heat some oil in  decent sized saucepan and cook until at least slightly browned. Do not use olive oil for this as it's smoke point is 180 degrees Celsius. If the oil temperature goes over this the oil breaks down and some of the by products are known carcinogens. Rice bran oil for one has a smoke point of 230 degrees Celsius.

Throw in your vegetable scraps e.g pea pods, celery ends, carrot tops, carrot ends, potato or other peels. Chuck in your other greens.
A collection of greens. In this case there is sow thistle, plantain leaves, celery leaves, kale flowers, chickweed, rosemary stem, grapefruit leaf ( any citrus is fine).

Cover with water and bring to the boil. Turn heat down to a low simmer and let is bubble away for about 20 minutes. Do not go on too long as it can get bitter especially if you use a lot of weeds. One counter to this is to add a teaspoon of sugar.

The secret now is to add a handful of dried mushrooms. Here in Australia these are found in the Asian food section of the supermarket, are Shitake mushrooms and cost about $1 for the bag. I would get at least five stocks from one bag.


Give a good stir and let simmer for a further 10 minutes then drain either with careful lid technique with the saucepan leaving the solids behind or throw a sieve.


The resultant amber fluid looks beautiful. Okay, I am sad! I have not seasoned the stock as I will season whatever I am cooking it with later. That way to if you freeze some stock, you know you are getting the basic stock each time.



A thing of beauty!

For the chicken stock, the difference is the addition of chicken bones and bits.It depends on where you get these but you could use a chicken carcass, chicken frame, chicken leg bones, even chicken necks. I routinely use chicken leg bones as we make our own dog food using the meat taken from chicken legs. Chicken legs here in Australia vary between $2.99 and $3.99 per kilo when on special. They are almost always on special but even when they are, we buy extra and freeze them so we are always using cheap chicken legs.

We boil up the chicken and obviously use the resultant liquid for stock. Once the chicken meat has been removed when the legs are cold enough to handle put the bones and odd bits into a roasting tray and roast in the oven for around 20 to 30 minutes at 200 degrees Celsius. i.e a hot oven. You want these bones browned but definitely not burnt. Then add a good layer of water into the pan, roast for another five minutes then carefully pour everything including the bones into a decent sized saucepan.

Cover with water, throw in all the vegetables as you would in the making of vegetable stock and boil slowly for about 30 minutes. Using aforementioned lid technique or a sieve, pour the resultant liquid into a container. Let cool then place in the fridge overnight. In the morning you can scrape the lid of fat from the surface leaving you with a beautiful basic chicken stock with low fat.

It is amazing how useful good stocks are in adding flavour to soups, stews, casseroles, stir fries, even as a replacement for water when cooking vegetables. And you know where it came from, what is in it and it did not cost you much other than time and love.

Dirty Rice and it's Done Dirt Cheap Revisited:Vegan $5 Challenge

In a previous blog, I visited the culinary heaven of Creole cooking and found Dirty Rice was a ripper as an inexpensive meal.

http://frugallivingmadeasy.blogspot.com.au/2015/02/dirty-rice-and-its-done-dirt-cheap-5.html

I wanted to revisit the recipe to provide a meat free alternative. There are several reasons to do this;

  • There is a world that exists beyond meat. The eating habits of Western society are extremely meat centric. To live without meat takes a change in mind set and I wanted a new culinary challenge to face.
  • Supermarkets, in fact shops generally, are many miles from where I live. Coping with doing without sometimes is a necessity. Being able to cope is a liberating and positive feeling.
  • Cheap meat of any quality is generally hard to find. To remove meat from the menu even for a night or two each week is a good prospect for the frugal minded.
  • I write another blog prompted by a health scare. To cut a long story short, to see if going without meat for a period of time makes any difference to my blood profile is a direct experiment and one I can write about!    http://shaunashcroftangioblues.blogspot.com.au/


Vegan Dirty Rice.

Makes enough to serve six and prices are in Australian dollars and are current as of April, 2015.

The browning of the rice comes from the mushrooms and stock.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups white rice, 450gms at $3.95/kg  equates to $2.00
  • 150 grams (6) mushrooms @6.99/kg      equates to $1.00. Mushrooms were on special. Frugality means taking advantage of specials! At the normal buy price of $9.99/kg, price would have been $1.40
  • 1 stalk of celery                                                      $0.10
  • 1 onion                             $0.99/kg                         $0.20
  • ½ a green capsicum         $3.98/kg                          $0.75
  • 4 cloves of garlic              $6.99/kg                        $0.30
  • ¼ tsp cayenne pepper
  • Large teaspoon of thyme.
  • Squirt of tomato sauce or chutney or tomato paste or tomato itself.
  • Tsp black pepper
  • 4 cups homemade vegetable stock. The next blog will cover making this vegetable stock and chicken stock the frugal way!

Total basic cost $4.50 or thereabouts.


How to make dirty rice:

  • Prepare your ingredients first. It takes all the stress and strain out of preparing this dish and any stir fry for that matter.
  • Either put the mushrooms and celery into a food processor and make a coarse mix or chop very finely using your manual dexterity.
  • Chop the onion finely.
  • Chop the  capsicum reasonably small but large enough that you know what it is when you come across it in the dish later!
  • Chop the garlic.
You are ready to go.

  • In a good sized pan heat some oil. Add the onion and cook until the onion is translucent. Takes about two minutes.
  • Brown mushroom and celery mix. Don’t burn it.   This takes about three minutes.
  • Add the capsicum and garlic and any seasoning and cook stirring for another three minutes or so then add the rice. Stir to coat the rice well with the contents then add the stock.
  • Bring to the boil then very slowly simmer for twenty minutes with the lid on. Stir to ensure heat is not making it stick to the bottom of the pan( turn pan down if this happens) but stir as little as possible and infrequently as possible. i.e leave it alone!Turn off the heat, lift the lid and fluff it all up with a fork.
  • Put the lid back on and leave for ten minutes