HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

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  • 08-04-2008 5:48 AM

    HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

     

    By: Brie Cadman (View Profile)

     

    Food prices are climbing, and some might be looking to fast foods and packaged foods for their cheap bites. But low cost doesn’t have to mean low quality. In fact, some of the most inexpensive things you can buy are the best things for you. At the grocery store, getting the most nutrition for the least amount of money means hanging out on the peripheries—near the fruits and veggies, the meat and dairy, and the bulk grains—while avoiding the expensive packaged interior. By doing so, not only will your kitchen be stocked with excellent foods, your wallet won’t be empty.

     

    1. Oats
    High in fiber and complex carbohydrates, oats have also been shown to lower cholesterol. And they sure are cheap—a dollar will buy you more than a week’s worth of hearty breakfasts.  

     

    Serving suggestions: Sprinkle with nuts and fruit in the morning, make oatmeal cookies for dessert.

     

     

    2. Eggs
    You can get about a half dozen of eggs for a dollar, making them one of the cheapest and most versatile sources of protein. They are also a good source of the antioxidants lutein and zeaxanthin, which may ward off age-related eye problems.

     

    Serving suggestions: Huevos rancheros for breakfast, egg salad sandwiches for lunch, and frittatas for dinner.

     

     

    3. Kale
    This dark, leafy green is loaded with vitamin C, carotenoids, and calcium. Like most greens, it is usually a dollar a bunch.

     

    Serving suggestions: Chop up some kale and add to your favorite stir-fry; try German-Style Kale or traditional Irish Colcannon.

     

     

    4. Potatoes
    Because we often see potatoes at their unhealthiest—as fries or chips—we don’t think of them as nutritious, but they definitely are. Eaten with the skin on, potatoes contain almost half a day’s worth of Vitamin C, and are a good source of potassium. If you opt for sweet potatoes or yams, you’ll also get a good wallop of beta carotene. Plus, they’re dirt cheap and have almost endless culinary possibilities.

     

    Serving suggestions: In the a.m., try Easy Breakfast Potatoes; for lunch, make potato salad; for dinner, have them with sour cream and chives.

     

     

    5. Apples
    I’m fond of apples because they’re inexpensive, easy to find, come in portion-controlled packaging, and taste good. They are a good source of pectin—a fiber that may help reduce cholesterol—and they have the antioxidant Vitamin C, which keeps your blood vessels healthy.

     

    Serving suggestions: Plain; as applesauce; or in baked goods like Pumpkin-Apple Breakfast Bread.

     

     

    6. Nuts
    Though nuts have a high fat content, they’re packed with the good-for-you fats—unsaturated and monounsaturated. They’re also good sources of essential fatty acids, Vitamin E, and protein. And because they’re so nutrient-dense, you only need to eat a little to get the nutritional benefits. Although some nuts, like pecans and macadamias, can be costly, peanuts, walnuts, and almonds, especially when bought in the shell, are low in cost.

     

    Serving suggestions: Raw; roasted and salted; sprinkled in salads.

     

     

    7. Bananas
    At a local Trader Joe’s, I found bananas for about 19¢ apiece; a dollar gets you a banana a day for the workweek. High in potassium and fiber (9 grams for one), bananas are a no-brainer when it comes to eating your five a day quotient of fruits and veggies.

     

    Serving suggestions: In smoothies, by themselves, in cereal and yogurt.

     

     

    8. Garbanzo Beans
    With beans, you’re getting your money’s worth and then some. Not only are they a great source of protein and fiber, but ’bonzos are also high in fiber, iron, folate, and manganese, and may help reduce cholesterol levels. And if you don’t like one type, try another—black, lima, lentils … the varieties are endless. Though they require soaking and cooking, the most inexpensive way to purchase these beans is in dried form; a precooked can will still only run you around a buck.

     

    Serving suggestions: In salads, curries, and Orange Hummus.

     

     

    9. Broccoli
    Broccoli contains tons of nice nutrients—calcium, vitamins A and C, potassium, folate, and fiber. As if that isn’t enough, broccoli is also packed with phytonutrients, compounds that may help prevent heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers. Plus, it’s low in calories and cost.

     

    Serving suggestions: Throw it in salads, stir fries, or served as an accompaniment to meat in this Steamed Ginger Chicken with Asian Greens recipe.

     

     

    10. Watermelon
    Though you may not be able to buy an entire watermelon for a dollar, your per serving cost isn’t more than a few dimes. This summertime fruit is over 90 percent water, making it an easy way to hydrate, and gives a healthy does of Vitamin C, potassium, and lycopene, an antioxidant that may ward off cancer.

     

    Serving suggestions: Freeze chunks for popsicles; eat straight from the rind; squeeze to make watermelon margaritas (may negate the hydrating effect!).

     

     

    11. Wild Rice
    It won’t cost you much more than white rice, but wild rice is much better for you. Low in fat and high in protein and fiber, this gluten-free rice is a great source of complex carbohydrates. It packs a powerful potassium punch and is loaded with B vitamins. Plus, it has a nutty, robust flavor.

     

    Serving suggestions: Mix with nuts and veggies for a cold rice salad; blend with brown rice for a side dish.

     

     

    12. Beets
    Beets are my kind of vegetable—their natural sugars make them sweet to the palate while their rich flavor and color make them nutritious for the body. They’re powerhouses of folate, iron, and antioxidants.

     

    Serving suggestions: Shred into salads, slice with goat cheese. If you buy your beets with the greens on, you can braise them in olive oil like you would other greens.

     

     

    13. Butternut Squash
    This beautiful gourd swings both ways: sometimes savory, sometimes sweet. However you prepare the butternut, it will not only add color and texture, but also five grams of fiber per half cup and chunks and chunks of Vitamin A and C. When in season, butternut squash and related gourds are usually less than a dollar a pound.

     

    Serving suggestions: Try Pear and Squash Bruschetta; cook and dot with butter and salt.

     

     

    14. Whole Grain Pasta
    In the days of Atkins, pasta was wrongly convicted, for there is nothing harmful about a complex carbohydrate source that is high in protein and B vitamins. Plus, it’s one of the cheapest staples you can buy.

     

    Serving suggestions: Mix clams and white wine with linguine; top orzo with tomatoes and garlic; eat cold Farfalle Salad on a picnic.

     

     

    15. Sardines
    As a kid, I used to hate it when my dad would order sardines on our communal pizzas, but since then I’ve acquired a taste for them. Because not everyone has, you can still get a can of sardines for relatively cheap. And the little fish come with big benefits: calcium, iron, magnesium, zinc, and B vitamins. And, because they’re low on the food chain, they don’t accumulate mercury.

     

    Serving suggestions: Mash them with parsley, lemon juice, and olive oil for a spread; eat them plain on crackers; enjoy as a pizza topping (adults only).

     

     

    16. Spinach
    Spinach is perhaps one of the best green leafies out there—it has lots of Vitamin C, iron, and trace minerals. Plus, you can usually find it year round for less than a dollar.

     

    Serving suggestions: Sautéed with eggs, as a salad, or a Spinach Frittata.

     

     

    17. Tofu
    Not just for vegetarians anymore, tofu is an inexpensive protein source that can be used in both savory and sweet recipes. It’s high in B vitamins and iron, but low in fat and sodium, making it a healthful addition to many dishes.  

     

    Serving suggestions: Use silken varieties in Tofu Cheesecake; add to smoothies for a protein boost; cube and marinate for barbecue kebobs 

     

     

    18. Lowfat Milk
    Yes, the price of a gallon of milk is rising, but per serving, it’s still under a dollar; single serving milk products, like yogurt, are usually less than a dollar, too. Plus, you’ll get a lot of benefit for a small investment. Milk is rich in protein, vitamins A and D, potassium, and niacin, and is one of the easiest ways to get bone-strengthening calcium.

     

    Serving suggestions: In smoothies, hot chocolate, or coffee; milk products like low fat cottage cheese and yogurt.

     

     

    19. Pumpkin Seeds
    When it’s time to carve your pumpkin this October, don’t shovel those seeds into the trash—they’re a goldmine of magnesium, protein, and trace minerals. Plus, they come free with the purchase of a pumpkin.

     

    Serving suggestions: Salt, roast, and eat plain; toss in salads.

     

     

    20. Coffee
    The old cup-o-joe has been thrown on the stands for many a corporeal crime—heart disease, cancer, osteoporosis—but exonerated on all counts. In fact, coffee, which is derived from a bean, contains beneficial antioxidants that protect against free radicals and may actually help thwart heart disease and cancer. While it’s not going to fill you up like the other items on this list, it might make you a lot perkier. When made at home, coffee runs less than 50¢ cents a cup.

    Serving suggestions: Just drink it.

     

    Although that bag of 99¢ Cheetos may look like a bargain, knowing that you’re not getting much in the way of nutrition or sustenance makes it seem less like a deal and more like a dupe. Choosing one of these twenty items, or the countless number of similarly nutritious ones, might just stretch that dollar from a snack into a meal.

    Jolene

    "Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." Unknown



    "You don't drown by falling in the water; you drown by staying there." Edwin Cole
  • 08-04-2008 6:04 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good morning everyone!   I overslept (well for me anyway!) and I've got to get Jake started and will be back to chat     :)

    Jolene

    "Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." Unknown



    "You don't drown by falling in the water; you drown by staying there." Edwin Cole
  • 08-04-2008 6:21 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

     Morning!

     

    great article Jolene - good timing too. I think we eat all but 3 or 4 of the items listed (I can't stand beets!!!!). It's nice to see this list & know we can eat healthy for less. Seems like anything healthy is much more expensive than the convenience foods.But we've had that discussion before LOL!!!

    Dusta - congratulations on reaching your goal weight (((((hugs)))))))

     

    *sigh* it's my first official day back. I"m working mornings this week & next week I"ll be here full days. Things were a bit chaotic (sp?) this morning, trying to get a new routine down. I forgot my keys inside the house & felt bad for waking dh up :-\ Then I spilled coffee on my shirt. A white shirt of course LOL!!! And I almost hit a deer. I"m thinking the morning can't have anything left to throw at me ROFL!!

     

    I tried a few new recipes last week, we liked two out of three so I"ll post them for anyone interested.  I've been in the mood to try new things & we've had a great selection of fresh produce from the farmer's market. And our neighbor brought us a bunch of stuff from their garden.  I made two batches of salsa yesterday with the peppers & tomatoes she brought over :-)

     

    (((hugs)))) to everyone.

    dawn

     

    She's the reason I do what I do









  • 08-04-2008 6:32 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Chicken in Escabeche

    rick bayless

     

    1 White Onion, sliced & rings separated

    3 tbsp.Olive Oil

    1 Carrot, peeled & sliced thin (or shredded)

    1 can Pickled Jalapenos (see note below)

    2-3 tbsp. Fresh Chopped Cilantro

    Salt & pepper

    2 c. Cooked & Shredded Chicken

    Whole Wheat Tortillas

    sour cream, optional

     

    ~note: the pickeled jalapenos are in a can in the mexican section of the grocery store. They are made with some onion & carrots, in a pickling juice of vinegar & spices. These are NOT the same pickled jalapenos you find in a jar in the pickle/relish aisle. 

     

    In a large nonstick skillet, heat oil over medium heat. Add onion and cook 8-10 minutes or until it starts to brown.  

    Meanwhile, use a spoon and scoop out the seeds of the jalapenos & slice. Add the jalapenos to the skillet. (also add any carrots & onions in the can to the skillet). Stir in the carrots, chicken and about 1/4 cup of the pickling liquid. Season with cilantro, salt & pepper. Cook for 4-5 minutes or until heated through. Remove from heat & cool slightly. Serve on tortillas with sour cream on the side.

     

    *****

    Morrocan Chicken with Veggies

    Quick Fix Meals by Robin Miller

     

    3 Boneless Skinless Chicken Breasts, cut into strips

    1 tbsp.Olive Oil

    1 tsp. Cumin

    1 tsp. Corriander

    1/4 tsp. Cinnamon

    1 meduim Zucchini, sliced thin

    14 oz. can Diced Tomatoes, with juice

    Hot Rice or Pasta

     

    In a nonstick skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat. Add chicken and cook for 4-5 minutes. Sprinkle with cumin, corriander & cinnamon. Add zucchini and tomatoes. Season with salt & pepper. Cook for 4-5 minutes or until heated through & chicken is done. Serve over rice or pasta.

     

    *I used fresh tomatoes. I diced up 3 medium & it was plenty. 

    She's the reason I do what I do









  • 08-04-2008 6:36 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

     That was a great article, although a few of the serving suggestions weren't necessarily the healthiest, like egg salad (which I love, BTW!)  Mayo adds so much fat to anything.  I use light mayo when I make egg salad but even that has... hmmmm... let me see... 45 calories (4g fat, 0.5 g of it saturated) per tablespoon!  Eek.  But it's funny b/c guess what I had on the stove as I read this article?  Yup!  Eggs... in the middle of hard-boiling for egg salad.

    G has been doing pretty well the past few days, although yesterday she got all scared about being left alone while we were at Vacation Bible School (she had been with us at church & lunch for most of the day and then we went home for a couple hours before VBS).  So she insisted on coming, even though I tried to gently explain that she would not see other 86-YO mobility-impaired people there, because they KNOW they would not be comfortable sitting for 5 hours on a hard bench.  I told her most 86YO's would rather stay home, in their comfortable house, where they can easily get to the bathroom, get something to eat, watch TV, etc.  See, I know my G.  She totally freaks out whenever there are lots of kids present.  It's all, "OMG!  OMG!  Jeannie!  Nobody is watching X!  Did you see that!  OMG!  Jesus Mary & Joseph!  OMG!  Somebody needs to be watching that child!  Don't they have brains?!" etc.

    So when she insisted on coming, I told her I also didn't think it was a good idea for that reason; that she gets all upset.  She said she wouldn't do it.  And I must say, she was well-behaved and didn't make a scene at all.  However, she could hardly move at the end of the night because (like I said) she was sitting on a hard pew for 5 hours.  As we struggled to get her to the car, I told her (again, gently - I hope no one thinks I was being mean) that we are NOT doing this for the next 4 nights.  It's not good for her and it's hard on me.  I told her this is what needs to stop when Mom returns from Europe.  I told her I would get someone to sit with her for the next 4 nights, because, yes, I am concerned about her staying alone.  If she fell, she would not be able to get up.  She would not be able to get to the phone to call for help.

    I think the going rate for adult day sitters around here is about $10/hour.  Does that sound right to you, Muril?  I think that's what my MIL used to pay someone to sit with her father... although he needed a lot of care (help in the bathroom, etc.)  I have lined up a 16YO girl for 2 of the nights and I figure I'll wind up paying her $50/night to stay with G for 5 hours at a time.

    "In this life, we cannot do great things... we can only do small things with great love."
    --- Mother Teresa
  • 08-04-2008 6:48 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good Morning!

     

    I am having my coffee and need to have B'fast, get ready and head on out to Miss Nancy's. I slept in a little(didn't mean to) and got up at 6:30 so had to do pilates/yoga while waking up, but I did it. :)

     

    Jolene, great article. I eat most of those foods, well, except for tofu and hardly ever have beets or pumpkin seeds but like them.

     

    Dawn, yum, those look great. Thanks for sharing! Eeek on the bad morning! Oh well, you are on the upside and things are going your way now!

     

    Jeannie, I know what you mean, all the add ins to the salads is the high calorie culprits. :) I like egg salad too, haven't had it in a while though. The rates around here vary from $12 to $15 per hour. I am more of a Girl Friday than a sitter and Miss Nancy pays me really well. She says I am her personal secretary.lol I pay bills, grocery shop, and the whole nine yards.

     

    Have a lovely day Healthy Ones!

     


    Hugs,


    ~ Muril ~




    "The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt with the heart. " - Helen Keller
  • 08-04-2008 7:04 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good morning! I survived camping..sort of! LOL! Saturday the water was so rough we couldn't even ride in the boat and we would come down and hit the waves so hard that yesterday I could hardly walk my back was so sore. It feels a little better today, especially since I got to sleep in my bed last night and not on the ground in a tent!

     

    Friday night my sister invited her boyfriend's family over for supper, telling them what an awesome cook I am. I was so freaking nervous!!! His dad is the president of a very BIG, very well known insurance company (not the one I work for) and I'd never met them before and they get there and kept talking about how excited they were for the food...I made popcorn shrimp with honey chipotle dipping sauce, bacon wrapped jalapenos and grilled BBQ chicken pizza. They all said they loved it. I'm glad I had enough food, I was expecting to cook for 7 people and ended up cooking for 12!

     

    Mom made a really good munchy dip...it was cream cheese, sour cream and a packet of taco seasoning mixed together. She spread it out on a pizza pan and topped it with lettuce and shredded cheese. It'd be really good with some black beans and jalapenos on top or tomatoes for the weirdos that like those! LOL!!

     

    Dawn I hope your day gets better!!! Deep breaths...and you'll be home snuggling that baby before you know it!

     

    Have a good day with Miss Nancy Muril!

     

    Jeanne I don't think you sound mean at all and you have way more patience than I would!!

     

    Hi Jolene!!

    Waving to everyone!
    Jen

    ~*~ They're singin' GO CUBS GO! GO CUBS GO!! Hey Chicago whatda say, the CUBS are gonna win today~*~
  • 08-04-2008 7:30 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Ok, I'm back!   Breakfast done, dishwasher loaded and laundry sorted.   Have a few out of the house errands to run today, not sure if we'll pack up tonight or in the morning.    Just ready to GO!   I need the change of scenery, bad.


    For the food list, I eat 13 out of the 20.  I had beets in my hand Saturday, fresh from the ground at the farm, but put them back, knowing I wouldn't have time to cook them before we go.   I have lots of corn and green beans though   :)     My no's on the list would be: Kale, Garbanzo beans, wild rice, beets, whole grain pasta, sardines and tofu are HELL nos!     Of those, I'm open to trying the first 5, but the last 2, no thanks!    


    I'm very guilty of saying that veggies are "so expensive"  but spending 1.49 on a 20oz cherry coke.    It's something I've had to work on and eating locally and knowing I'm helping support someone's family makes it a lot easier.   This weekend I spent under $16 and I got 13 ears of corn, 2lbs of green beans, local wildflower honey (which was $5 of the total), and local hot pepper jelly ($4).    Well worth it in my book!    Then we found those blackberries, and a comparable amount at the grocery would have cost me at least $10.    Looking foward to checking back there when we get home, and hoping the wild blueberries are still available, they were selling those for $8 a quart at the farm!

     

    {{Dawn}}   I can't even imagine.   I'm sorry for your chaotic morning, wishing you an easy rest of the day.     I love the pic of Sam, she's getting so big!     The recipes look good, thank you.  

     

    Jeanne, it must be so hard on your mom to have to deal with that full time.   I can't say enough what a nice thing you are doing, letting her get away and get a break from it.   I'd say that sounds high to me for sitting, but then, you are trusting your family member to someone and it would depend how much care she actually needs or if it's just company.      Will GM be open to that when she goes back with your mom?   Maybe one day a few hours a week so Mom can get a break? 

     

    Hi Muril!    :)   I hope you have a great day with Miss Nancy, and good for you for sleeping in a little but STILL working out!     Agreed on the salad add ins too.    I'm pretty good about only added a few croutons, and I don't like cheese on salads.   Sometimes I do like a sprinkle of real bacon bits, but I keep it to 1 points worth.   What would kill me if DH and DH weren't allergic would be NUTS!    I could eat handfuls of jumbo cashews and die happy    :)   Not as much fun when you have to eat them and then immediately have to scrub your hands and scour your teeth clean.

     

    Jen, sounds like you had a wonderful time with lots of yummy food!    :)   And now you need a vacation from your vacation, right?      LOL

     

     

    Jolene

    "Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." Unknown



    "You don't drown by falling in the water; you drown by staying there." Edwin Cole
  • 08-04-2008 8:24 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good morning. I slept until almost 5 this morning, which is late for me. Rode the bike for an hour, was nice this morning.

     

    I like everything on the list except the sardines. Mel kept after me to try them, because he likes them, but did NOT. He eats them with onions, garlic, olive oil and vinegar, makes a sandwich out of this. Talk about soggy white bread. Gag.

     

    On the MSN home page it listed oatmeal and I think it said the kind you add boiling water too, is not the best for us. It was an interesting article too. Like your post a lot Jolene.

     

    Dawn sorry your day started so bad, has to improve though. Your recipes look like my kind of food, hot peppers I love. Samantha looks cute and sweet. Love babies.

     

    Hi everyone to come later. Going to Dillards this morning to look for a swim suit. Am so looking forward to that! Wish I didn't have to get out in public to go swimming.

  • 08-04-2008 8:40 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Let's see... I eat most of those... but I don't eat

    kale (never tried it; I'd probably like it, though), beets (just kind of "eh" about that one), butternut squash (although I do like it and I also eat other kinds of squash), sardines (blech), pumpkin seeds (blech).

    I eat tofu on occasion, usually when I'm at a Chinese restaurant... every time I've ever made it myself, it's tasteless.  I follow the recipes, but it always comes out tasteless.  So I gave up on it.

     

    Jen, sounds like a fun camping trip!  But eek on the rough water.  Your food sounds delicious.  Can I come camping with you sometime?  Sounds like you do it right!!

     

    Muril, have a nice time at Ms. Nancy's.  She sounds like a really nice lady and of course, you are such a sweet person, too!    We have got to get together again in Roanoke sometime. 

     

    Dawn, YIKES on the start of your day!  I hope it gets better!  I can't believe your little girl is 6 weeks old already!  Where does the time go?

     

    In more HB Land, G was not happy at first when I told her I arranged for someone to come check on her tonight.  She got kind of mad and kept saying, "No!" but I wouldn't back down on it.  I will not have her manipulating my mom or me like this anymore.  If she is truly afraid to stay alone (and I think we need to be concerned about that regardless of her anxiety, simply b/c of her mobility issues), then we need to have a plan so that she is taken care of at all times... and it's NOT FAIR to ask my mom to stay with her 24/7.  My mom deserves to have some kind of a life... to be able to go to the gym for a morning, etc. without G being like, "Take me!  Take me!"

    Don't get me wrong, Mom and I do not mind taking care of her, but we need to have our own lives, too.  I am determined to help my mom's life be better when they return from Europe.

    "In this life, we cannot do great things... we can only do small things with great love."
    --- Mother Teresa
  • 08-04-2008 8:42 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Morning Dusta!   You, me and Muril, the sleepy triplets this morning  :)    It was nice to wake up and have it be in the 7 oclock range rather than the just barely 5 range though  :)   


    My grandparents used to live above us when I was a kid.   My Gram make me a pancake breakfast, I'd putter in her sewing room, help her with laundry, whatever.     If I was starting to get on her nerves towards lunch, she'd open up a can of sardines, and I would go running downstairs, couldn't stand the smell    LOL      I still miss her so much.     :(

     

    Blech on bathing suit shopping!   Maybe you can find a nice pair of shorts and a tank top with a shelf bra to swim in if you can't find a suit.   I went looking for another pair of capris yesterday, found nothing but long pants   :(   Going to be a long hot trip in jeans, I don't do shorts.

    Jolene

    "Tact is the art of making a point without making an enemy." Unknown



    "You don't drown by falling in the water; you drown by staying there." Edwin Cole
  • 08-04-2008 8:44 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good morning.

    Finally getting a chance to come "visit" some.  We left last Sunday for Branson,  were gone till Wednesday afternoon.  Had a great time.  Before that I've had both grandbabies the whole week, plus Thursday and Friday after we got back.  Delaney had been sick and gave it to me.  She just turned 4 months.   Jennifer starts back to school on the 20th.  She needed jeans and shoes for school which she found on our trip.  Wednesday she has to get her braces put on.  They will start getting her ready for the jaw surgery she will have next summer. 

     

    Jolene,  hope you have a wonderful trip.

     

    Ginny, sending lots of good thoughts.  My folks got divorced when I was 15.  Try not to say anything bad about their dad to them. 

     

    Kris,  I love Christopher & Banks,  do you know you can now shop online at their site and they have some great clearance sales on there also.  I ordered 2 shirts earlier this spring, 

     

    Dawn,  good luck on your 1st day back at work.  Did you take lots of pics with you for your desk. 

     

    We put up corn Saturday, so the freezer is full again.  We have one freezer we use basically for corn.  Another one for meat and one in the laundry room for whatever. 

     

    Better go and get the laundry and dishes going.  Guess they won't do it by themselves.

    Debbie

  • 08-04-2008 8:54 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Good morning!!  I like this list, Jolene!  However, there are several things on here that I just don't/won't eat.  Kale, Garbanzo Beans (what are they?), Tofu, Coffee.  Spinach, only raw.  Cooked it's gross.  Sardines were a very special "Dad treat" when we were little kids.  Sardines and Saltines (or lebanon bologna sandwiches) was usually our Sunday afternoon-drive picnic food.  Until there got to be more of us (10 kids total) and then it got to be cheaper to do hamburgers or hotdogs in a castiron skillet over a 10lb can w/ a propane torch (yes, redneck, but my dad's a farmer and redneck).  I still like sardines occasionally, but only the mustard kind.

     

    I survived last week!  Whew, it was almost a nightmare, but it all turned out good in the end.  One of the small cakes broke into 3 pieces during transport, and it was touch-n-go for a while if that specific part of the cake was going to hold together.  Then I ran out of frosting... I was very careful to make sure I had enough of everything... I think I totally skipped counting the frosting needed for one of the cakes.  I was basically locked in the cafeteria where I was decorating the cake, so my sister bought and brought me stuff to make more frosting.  (I was 2 hrs away from my home, and my sister lived not too far from the reception place where I was.)  I just tried to copy and paste a picture, but I can't.  Is there a special trick to doing this?

     

    Well, I need to go get my walk in for the morning here soon.  I have most of my menu planned for this week, using tomatoes to go with several meals since they are in and fresh right now.

     

    Jeannie: I'd say $10/hr is fine.  I charged $12/hr a couple years ago to help with an elderly lady that lived right around the corner - that included checking her blood sugar, fixing her breakfast, helping her get dressed, emptying her potty chair, etc. 5 morning's a week, and then going over and fixing her lunch and making sure she ate it.  So, to just be there, I'd say $10/hr is fine.  And a 16 yr. old isn't going to care too much about the rate... they will be happy with the $$ :)

     

    Waving to everybody else :)

     

    ~Miriam

    Check out my blog, www.mycountrycupboard.blogspot.com to see how I do it!
  • 08-04-2008 8:59 AM In reply to

    Re: HL Topic of the Week 8/4 to 8/10 The 20 Healthiest Foods for Under $1

    Jeanne ~ hope you can find someone to sit with your Grandmother. You have very valid concerns (((hugs))).  I"m with you on the egg salad, love the stuff!!  I started using less mayo & adding some mustard, seems to give it the moisture but fewer calories.

     

    Hi Muril ~  enjoy yoru day with Miss Nancy :-) 

     

    jen ~ glad your dinner party went well :-)  Nothing like a little pressure LOL!!!  

     

    Jolene ~ are you going camping this week? hope you have a good time!!

     

    Dusta - the dreaded swimsuit shopping LOL!!! I need a new one & am dreading the shopping part tremendously.

     

    btw - there will be more baby pictures. Promise LOL!!! (have you heard that before?!!?) DH's job today is to resize the pics for emailing. Heck, I haven't even gotten the birth announcements done yet....  it's bad when a procrastinator has a baby ~ nothing gets done ROFL!!!!! 

     

    She's the reason I do what I do









  • 08-04-2008 9:07 AM In reply to