05/01/10 15:11
The thing that got me to make meal plans
and shopping lists was a job as a personal
chef. Before that I would wing it, buying
ingredients for a meal or two, then making
whatever else I could from what was in the
pantry. I would stop by the store a few
times a week for essential ingredients I
had forgotten, and this time added up.
So, I got a notebook just for menus and sat
down with my
cookbooks once a
week to pick which recipes I would
use. As I chose my recipes I wrote
down which ingredients I would need,
and how much, sometimes checking back
to see if I already had an item. This
created a flow where one week’s extra
ingredient would fold over into the
next week’s recipes; I soon had the
contents of my fridge and pantry
memorized so I didn’t overbuy any
particular thing. Except coconut milk,
for some reason I would buy a can
every single time I went to the
store...
I began to adapt and skill built upon
skill; I would finding sale items and
remember which recipes I could use them in,
decide on the fly whether or not to change
the plan or save the find for next week. I
suddenly knew what everything cost, and
jumped on sales, stocking up for the
future. What follows are all the little
things I’ve learned along the way about how
to find organic and local food at it’s
freshest, cheapest, and greenest. Shoot me
an e-mail with any tips you want to share
and I’ll add them to the site!