Showing posts with label Meals/Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meals/Food. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Santa Fe Rice and Beans Recipe: Feeds 6 for $3.00!

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Let me introduce you to the cheapest, most delicious dinner in the world. If you need to reduce your grocery bill quickly, this dinner will do the trick. One dish makes enough to serve 2 adults and 4 children for two meals! We usually finish it up for lunch the next day.  If you happen to be on a rice and beans budget, then what better dish than rice and beans? You can add an easy veggie or fruit to this to make a complete dinner. We had leftover apples in the fridge so we served this with apple slices.


Ingredients:

2 cups cooked white rice
1 can black beans (use what you have, this tastes great with kidney beans as well)
1 cup of corn kernels (frozen or canned)
1 1/4 cups of salsa, diced tomatoes or diced tomatoes with chilies (like rotel)
1 cup sour cream 
1 cup of Mexican cheese (we've used cheddar, monterey jack or a taco blend that wegmans sells)

Optional:
Toss in anything around the house you think would work with it.
Examples: chilies, spices, cream cheese, sliced olives, chopped onion, chopped green pepper, whatever floats your boat.



Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
Cook the rice according to package directions, combine all ingredients, reserving half of the cheese to sprinkle on top. Season with salt and pepper. 

Transfer to a greased baking dish (about 2 quart) and spoon ingredients in. 

Top with the reserved cheese. If you forgot to reserve cheese- don't worry, it will still be delicious.

Bake covered with foil for 30 minutes. Then remove foil and bake for another 10 minutes.
If you don't have foil. Don't stress, it'll be fine. Or you can bake it for 30 without the cheese on top, then add the cheese and finish cooking for another 10 minutes.

Costs of goods figured at Aldi.
Cost:

Rice: $ .25
Black beans: $ .55
Corn: $ .49 for 1 can
Salsa: $ .57
Sour cream: $ .60
Cheese: $ .94

Total: $3.40 to feed 2 adults and 4 children for 2 meals.

Cost per meal: $1.70
Cost per person: $ .29

Just for illustrative purposes- if you could eat this for 3 meals a day, every day for a month, then your monthly grocery bill would be $153 or $39 a week!  (But don't do that! We have much better options for just a few dollars more). 



Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Tools of the Trade: Batch Cooking (Electric Griddle for about $17!)

Batch Cooking: Tools of the Trade ( Electric Griddle for $17!)



Jon's family owns this gorgeous beach house in Maine that we've been lucky enough to visit a few times. On the last trip, we found this enormous electric griddle under the counter. We ended up using it every single day! Pancakes, french toast, sausage, scrambled eggs... We could cook a huge breakfast for a crowd in just a few minutes with minimal dishes!

I did a little research and found out how affordable they are. You can get one from Walmart by clicking here for $17.

Using the electric griddle, I can double my favorite pancake recipe (Joy of Cooking Cookbook) and make 40 pancakes in about 8 minutes. We eat a few for breakfast and then freeze the rest in batches of 3. I wrap the stack of 3 in wax paper and then put several wax papered stacks in a gallon freezer bag. When I want to reheat, I microwave for 90 seconds. 

They taste just as good reheated as they did the first day! 


If you have the money budgeted to spare, this is a great investment to save you some time for years to come. Before purchasing, make sure you think about the size of this griddle and make sure you have room in the kitchen to store it without cluttering up your kitchen.

Friday, August 8, 2014

Menu Planning: Step by Step Part 3 (Using Mealboard)


If you haven't already read the first part of this 3 part series, click here to check it out. This is a very basic, step by step instructional for how to be a successful menu planner. Part 1 covers the first steps (using both paper systems and MealBoard), part 2 covers how to set up your paper menu planning system, and part 3 tells you how to set up MealBoard and use it if you would rather have an automated ios program do all the hard work for you. 

The reason why menu planning is so important is that you can save an enormous amount of money without actually sacrificing the quality of your life. Let's say you eat out 3x per day for every day on a week. We'll assume an average of $4.00 for breakfast (bagel and cream cheese with a coffee), $7.00 for lunch (sandwich, chips and a drink) and 12.00 for dinner (chipotle or diner). You would spend $322.00 in a week to feed two people, or $483.00 to feed three people. Through menu planning, I can feed everyone great meals that they love for between $100.00 - $120.00/week. For two people, that would be a savings of $10,504.00 per year and for three people, that would be a savings of $18,876 per year. Now likely, you don't eat out for every meal. But if you really track your grocery spending carefully, unless you're menu planning, I bet you'll find that it's easy to spend $200.00 or more per week to feed your family.



This doesn't have to be hard though! It's actually really easy! Click here to complete the important first steps (#1-4), then come back to finish your system on MealBoard!

Step by Step Menu Planning Using MealBoard:

5. Download MealBoard (only available on apple products at this time) for a price of $2.99 (if you don't have that money budgeted, consider doing your meal planning by paper- it takes longer and I think MealBoard is well worth the price but you should never spend money that you don't have, even if it's just $2.99.

6. Start adding simple meals! For simple breakfasts, create your own recipes... Bagels and cream cheese, milk and cereal, yogurt and granola, oatmeal and raisins. If you work, plan simple breakfasts for the morning and save the eggs and pancakes for your days off. When you create a recipe, add the ingredients for that recipe (I.e. milk and cereal would list ingredients as milk and cereal) add a recipe for leftovers with no ingredients listed so that if you plan to eat last nights dinner for lunch the next day you can add that to your calendar without adding anything to your shopping list.

7. Start collecting recipes. Now the fun part starts! Head to the recipes section and then the import button. It will give you several choices for recipe sites (almost all of the popular ones are there and they're always adding new ones. Taste of home, Kraft, Martha Stewart, Spark Recipes, and Allrecipes are my favorites.
Browse for a bit and import any recipes you like the sound of. When you import a recipe, the entire recipe will import. It will add the photo, ingredients, and directions to your menu board. It will ask you to choose a category to file it under and you can clarify an aisle for any ingredient it doesn't recognize (I.e. If it says Philadelphia cream cheese instead of just cream cheese it won't recognize it as a dairy product. 

8. Figure out how you're going to handle lunch. Will you take leftovers in from dinner? Make sandwiches or salads to bring in? Will you buy lunches? Buying lunches out is still menu planning if you're making the conscientious decision to do that. For instance, if you pack a drink, trail mix and an apple and make the decision to buy a $3.00 six inch subway sandwich every work day, you'll be spending about $15.00 out per week in lunches. Likely that's about what you spend now on one lunch. 

9. Create a recipe for whatever you decide for lunch. Don't worry about directions, just enter ingredients. For instance- turkey, muenster and pickles on rye. Then list "lunch snack #1", and "lunch snack #2" as an ingredient. This lets you know to pick up two items at the store that you can use for lunch snacks all week. Word to the wise, if your new at this or on a budget, don't plan 5 different lunches for the week. Plan 2 with three interchangeable snacks (yogurts, granola bars, trail mix etc). You can repeat the lunches and save on ingredients. You can also fill in with leftovers if they fit into your plan. If you drink something other than water, don't forget to add that to your ingredient list. Don't worry about making a side dish and dessert for each meal. We just keep the freezer and pantry stocked with veggies (.49 for cans at Wegmans, and .99 for frozen bags). We usually add a salad to a day, and the ingredients are listed with enough ingredients to make salad for 3 days.

10. Take a look at your schedule and start assigning meals or recipes to different days. Make sure that most of your recipes are quick and easy unless you're a seasoned cook. 

11. Add preparation into your schedule book. Note the day you need to prep the slow cooker, the day you need to make ahead the freezer casserole, and the days you need to thaw meats. I freeze any meat I won't be using by the next day and then follow a thawing schedule. 

12. Once you're done, switch to the shopping list tab and ask it to sync your list for the week you want. Go through your kitchen and check off anything you already have. Delete all checked items.

13. Go through your list and add estimated prices (round up to the nearest dollar), while you're adding prices, ensure that each ingredient is listed in the right aisle for your store. Once you assign a price and an aisle to an ingredient you won't ever have to do it again. This is a program that gets better the more you use it. The first few weeks, menu planning still took two hours. Now it takes about 10 minutes. It's rare that I have to add prices now. Check out the top of the app- look at the total price for all groceries. Is that number workable for your budget? If not, figure out if you can substitute ingredients for store brands, eliminate unnecessary ingredients, or buy in a club pack to share with next week's menu. If you still can't make that number what you want, eliminate one of your recipes and switch to a cheaper one (it doesn't get cheaper than homemade macaroni and cheese with steamed broccoli or rice and beans... actually, pretty much anything meatless). 

You can then email your menu and shopping list to family members (add it to your blog, whatever...) or print it out for the fridge.

 Before you get to the store, you can go into settings and arrange your aisles so that they are listed in the order that you would hit them in your store. Head to the store and just check things off as you grab them.


14. Tips and Tricks: If you're packing lunch, you need a small cooler and at least 2 ice packs. It's imperative that you remember (or your husband!) to bring in your cooler at the end of the day, put your ice pack back in the freezer and empty your cooler. I would have a minimum of 2 ice packs per person available in case you forget one day. 

For the first week weeks, utilize post it notes to remind you to thaw food, prep food and take your lunch to work. (To this day of I don't leave Jon's lunch hanging on the door knob or leave home post it note reminding him- he won't remember to take it).

Good luck! Come back and tell me how much money you saved!

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Menu Planning: Step by Step Part 2 (By Paper)




If you haven't already read the first part of this 3 part series, click here to check it out. This is a very basic, step by step instructional for how to be a successful menu planner. Part 1 covers the first steps (using both paper systems and MealBoard), part 2 covers how to set up your paper menu planning system, and part 3 tells you how to set up MealBoard and use it if you would rather have an automated ios program do all the hard work for you. 

The reason why menu planning is so important is that you can save an enormous amount of money without actually sacrificing the quality of your life. Let's say you eat out 3x per day for every day on a week. We'll assume an average of $4.00 for breakfast (bagel and cream cheese with a coffee), $7.00 for lunch (sandwich, chips and a drink) and 12.00 for dinner (chipotle or diner). You would spend $322.00 in a week to feed two people, or $483.00 to feed three people. Through menu planning, I can feed everyone great meals that they love for between $100.00 - $120.00/week. For two people, that would be a savings of $10,504.00 per year and for three people, that would be a savings of $18,876 per year. Now likely, you don't eat out for every meal. But if you really track your grocery spending carefully, unless you're menu planning, I bet you'll find that it's easy to spend $200.00 or more per week to feed your family.

This doesn't have to be hard though! It's actually really easy! Click here to complete the important first steps (#1-4), then come back to start your paper meal planning system!


To create your paper planning system:

Set Up A System
Step #5. Find an old binder, fill it with a menu schedule. You can print one here from Passion for Savings Blog. Fill it with blank pages for shopping lists or print these blank shopping lists by clicking here from Cornerstone Confessions. Do you use lots of cook books? Have a page with a recipe index including the recipe name, cook book and page. If you'd rather just print recipes from the internet, print away and then add them to the binder. You can organize them alphabetically or into categories (chicken, beef, pasta etc).


Paper Preparation
6. Get out the menu schedule sheet for next week and add dates. Separate each day into 3 sections: B L D (breakfast lunch dinner). Take a look at your schedule for next week and make small notations of things that will affect your meals (early days at work, event invitations, overtime etc).


Breakfast
7. Start assigning breakfasts. Think simple! If your working, keep to simple breakfasts. Try Milk, cereal and bananas; Oatmeal and raisins; or Bagels and cream cheese. Keep a stash of either protein bars, or granola bars in case you over sleep and need something to grab while dashing out the door. We don't assign things like juice. If we want to have juice in a week, we'll just get a jug and drink a little at will.


Lunch
8. Choose your method for lunches. You can either pack, buy or plan to take leftovers. Planning to buy lunches is still menu planning because you have a set budget and your incorporating a set amount into your menu budget for those meals. A great way to handle that is to know you don't have the organization skills yet to pack a lunch in the morning, and to bring a drink, an apple and a bag of trail mix to work and then hit Subway for a $3.00 6 inch sub every day. $15 in a week for planned eating out isn't bad! If you have a big family, you may not have enough leftovers for lunch the next day unless you double the recipes. If you plan to take leftovers, think ahead. For the first week, since you don't know how many leftovers you'll have with each recipe, have a few days where you can enact the above subway plan if needed.


Dinner
9. Plan your dinners. This is my favorite part! I love meals eaten together. Choose a mix of recipes. A simple easy dish, a recipe that you guys already love, a brand new recipe, maybe a complicated recipe for a cooking date night one weekend (or a family cooking night!). Unless you're a pro, don't plan recipes for a main dish, side dish and dessert. We've been doing this for a while and still rely on frozen veggies, canned veggies, salads, and pantry staples for meal accompaniments. Often, I don't even feel the need to plan the veggies. I keep the freezer and pantry stocked with veggies ( about .49 cents per can and .99 cents per bag at wegmans) and buy something delicious and in season at wegmans for their club pack price. This week, I got a giant club pack of grapes that we've been snacking on all week. Pick out your 7 dinners but don't assign them dates yet. Just a heads up, recipes that have many ingredients (not counting spices) tend to cost more.


Preparation and Planning
10. If you're using printed recipes, pull them out of the organized section- you'll keep them up front while you're making them this week and then refile them after. Browse through the cookbooks. Mentally note any ingredients in your head that would go bad quickly and that won't freeze. I want you to only have to do one grocery trip for the week, so if any of your recipes have ingredients that don't last or store well, plan for them on the first or second day of the week. I'm a food safety nut so I freeze any meat that I won't use right away. If you're the same, then plan on freezing meat right away and make notations on your schedule of what to thaw on what day. I.e. You're making chicken potstickers on Tuesday and grilled steak on Wednesday. So mark a notation on Tuesday to thaw steaks in fridge before making pot stickers. Some fridges might need two days in order to thaw (that would be my fridge set to the lowest setting... the food safety nut). If you're planning on a freezer casserole for a busy night, pick a day to make the casserole (like a day off or on a day that you're already cooking with that meat). If you have a slow cooker meal planned, mark a notation the night before to mix ingredients in the crock and leave in the fridge, so all you have to do is insert into crock pot and turn on in the am. Then mark a notation to leave yourself a post it note on the door the night before, because you know you'll forget to start it if you don't have a reminder.

*HINT* If you're an avid coupon user, this would be a good time to pull them out and decide what ingredients you can get cheaply. If you aren't already using coupons regularly, skip that for now until you can easily menu plan. We shop at wegmans with consistent low price lists (they change seasonally to reflect the lowest prices of items popular for that season). I'll occasionally coupon, but I mostly use the CPL list to plan. You'll still save tons of money by eating in every day, even if you don't coupon or use flyers (as long as all of your meals aren't lobster, filet mingnon and beef wellington). 


Create your Shopping List
11. Write categories on a blank piece of paper (meat, dairy, deli, produce, canned, etc) or use the link on step #5 to have a preprinted list. Think about where the ingredients are in your grocery store. List those areas. Start adding the ingredients from your recipes (even if you think you already have that ingredient!) to the correct category. If you come up with a duplicate ingredient, just add it to the first entry like in the photo below. Check through your kitchen and cross off any ingredients you already have.


Pricing and Budget
12. If you have a pretty decent idea as to what things cost, estimate the costs of each item by putting a small number to the side of it. If you aren't sure, estimate up. Add up the costs of your groceries and decide if that's a manageable number for your budget. If it's not, take a look through the list and decide where you can save. Is there an ingredient that can be cut? Can you cut out mushrooms or similar ingredients from a recipe? Is there a substitute that can be made (purchasing store brands for cheaper or buying in a bulk pack to use the ingredient next week as well)?  Is one of your recipes particularly expensive? Can you substitute that recipe out? Can you go meatless one day? After you're all done and you have a final price, add that amount in large numbers to your grocery list. That's your goal amount. We're almost always under our goal amount and if we aren't, something will be getting cut. Our grocery budget for two adults and one child, plus 3 additional children during the days (breakfast, lunch and snack) is between $100-150, depending on what our monthly budget goals are. We average $120.00/week.


Grocery Shopping
13. Head out and buy those ingredients! Store things so they will last until they are needed. Post your menu and schedule on the fridge so you can refer to it every day and ensure things will run smoothly. 


Tips and Tricks
14. If you're packing lunch, you need a small cooler and at least 2 ice packs. It's imperative that you (or your husband!) remember to bring in your cooler at the end of the day, put your ice pack back in the freezer and empty your cooler. I would have a minimum of 2 ice packs per person available in case you forget one day. 



Good luck! Think of me when you're chilling in Disney World spending the money that you saved!

Monday, August 4, 2014

Menu Planning: Step by Step Part 1







Do you love the idea of saving a boatload of money through menu planning, but every time you try, it seems to cost you more money? You've come to the right place! No complicated coupon cutting, you don't even need to shop the ads! This is a very basic, step by step instructional on how to start menu planning. This post will be broken into three sections. Part 1 will be the first planning steps. Part 2 will continue with the next steps for those who would like to create their own paper menu planning system. Part 3 will continue for those who would like to use MealBoard, an amazing iPhone app that does all the work for you. You can find out more about MealBoard here, and we'll cover it extensively in Part 3. 



Your grocery budget has the most potential to reduce your budget and is also the hardest to reduce because it takes an enormous amount of preparation. If you do it wrong, you'll spend $120/week for 21 meals and then spend another $400 in a week eating out every day because you didn't plan appropriately. It doesn't have to be hard though! Follow these steps to do it the right way and make a significant cut in your budget.

You'll notice that many of these steps have nothing at all to do with groceries. That's because meal planning effects your daily life and it's necessary to have organization in other areas of your life before meal planning becomes a possibility. What if you don't have that organization? Don't worry! I can help!





Assess your life. Seriously, this is the most important step. Some lifestyles are impossible to menu plan for, or at least traditionally. If you work 12 hours a day, hang out with friends every day after work and just make it home in time to crash for the night and start again the next day then menu planning may not be for you. Maybe your weekends are different though? Maybe you can plan to eat at home or pack a lunch just on the weekends. Or maybe you're like us, with a pretty regimented schedule and time in both the morning and afternoon. If you're not like us, don't give up! We menu planned when I worked evening shift, Jon worked day shift, we never had the same day off and were seriously overwhelmed. 

Figure out what the toughest part of your day is. What's the obstacle standing in your way to eating at home every day. Do you just not feel like cooking when you get home from work? Consider using the slow cooker and freezer meals that you can plan ahead for.

Figure out how many days you can reasonably eat at home. A number that fits both your budget and your schedule. Figure out where you're coming from. Have you been eating out 7 days a week? Do you know how to cook? Do you have raw meat phobia (don't laugh... I hate raw meat and it took a long time for me to be a full time eat at homer because of that!). If you're coming from a mostly eat out lifestyle, start small. Plan to eat at home 3x/week (mostly on your days off). If you don't know how to cook, start with mostly convenience cooking (my popular post on 15 minute meals would be a great thing for you to check out by clicking here). 

                                                                                 


Keep a schedule. Either written or on your phone. As soon as you have an engagement (an invitation to a BBQ, scheduled overtime, even a crazy deadline that you'll be stressed out for), write it immediately in your schedule. You're doing this so that when you menu plan, you'll be able to peek at the week ahead and know what days you need meals for. For example, the day you have a BBQ, you'll just plan to make a side dish to bring. On the scheduled over time day, you'll either pack a dinner to bring with you, or you'll decide to set aside $10 to eat out that day. On the stressed out crazy deadline day, you'll either have a freezer casserole ready to go if you plan to do the extra work at home, or you'll plan to pack a dinner that day (even something that you don't have to make like a can of cheddar broccoli soup, oyster crackers, an apple, and trail mix). If you have a family, keep everyone's engagements together. You can sync schedules with your family using something like google calendars or COZI, a free family calendar.




Have a family meeting and make the decision (or don't) to commit to this for two weeks. This doesn't mean that you turn down last minute invites because you don't want your thawed ground beef to go to waste. This means that when you break down and suggest to your husband that you just call in for a pizza rather than making dinner, he reminds you of your goals and doesn't rush to dial dominos. The reason this is important, is that you don't want to waste $100.00 on groceries if you know you won't commit to eating at home. This is why you start small if you haven't been eating at home at all. Make this an easy to reach goal.

                                                             

Decide how you will track your menus and shopping list- by paper or electronically? If you choose paper, this will take longer and be considerably more work, but if you enjoy it (like a hobby), that may be the motivation for you to continue. If you want to do it electronically, and you have an iPhone, take a relaxing breath. You're covered. You have MealBoard, which is the most useful app that I've ever seen (and the only reason I refuse to give up my iPhone!) We'll go over the steps for both paper and Mealboard in the next two posts.




Coming up... Creating a Paper Menu Planning System 
Want to make sure you don't miss the next post in this series? Subscribe by email in the box to your right and I'll reach out to you when it's posted. 

Friday, August 1, 2014

Cheap Weekly Menu and Shopping List ending August 1st 2014 (Cheap, Easy Meals for $7/person per day)

THIS  WEEK’S CHEAP  MEAL  PLAN
Our easy menu plan and shopping list for about $7/person per day



If you like posts like this, just put your email address in the "subscribe by email" box to the right and I'll email you our weekly menu and shopping list every friday morning. 


JUL 26 - SATURDAY
breakfast
Sausage Egg And Cheese On A Biscuit
lunch
Spicy Chicken Rolls Salads
dinner
dinner
JUL 27 - SUNDAY
breakfast
lunch
Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
dinner
dinner
Aunt Pattys Salad
JUL 28 - MONDAY
breakfast
Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
lunch
Leftovers From Last Night
dinner
JUL 29 - TUESDAY
breakfast
Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
lunch
Leftovers From Last Night
dinner
JUL 30 - WEDNESDAY
breakfast
Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
lunch
Leftovers From Last Night
dinner
JUL 31 - THURSDAY
breakfast
Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
lunch
Leftovers From Last Night
dinner
AUG 01 - FRIDAY
lunch
Leftovers From Last Night
breakfast
Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
dinner
Chili, Cornbread, Pears





Fair warning... I'm just entering into my second trimester of pregnancy and am having a tough time eating. Bagels and cream cheese seem to be the only thing I can keep down in the am so they're here to stay for a few weeks. I also have aversions to chicken, oatmeal, black beans, and meatballs which makes life a little difficult some days. Let's just say we'll have some interesting meals for the next few weeks.

Click on the meal name for a recipe. We use MealBoard which stores all your recipes, generates your shopping list, organizes by aisle in the grocery store and gives you a total price for your list. I round my prices up, so it's usually a little lower. You can find out more about MealBoard here.


We're heading to a BBQ on Saturday night, so we only need a side dish and dessert.


We have a freezer and pantry stocked with veggies, and we always get extra lettuce since we both love salad. We also have a club pack of vanilla yogurt from Wegmans that we can add to breakfasts or snacks. (I adore pineapple in yogurt!)




Here's the shopping list after we removed the items we have in stock (staples and cheddar cheese that I caught a sale on last week).

Shopping list:
Estimated Cost of This Weeks Groceries: $109.00

Produce
celery, carrots onion diced , 1 cup for Macaroni Salad (Prediced containers at Wegmans)
green bell pepper, 1 for Macaroni Salad
loosely packed torn romaine lettuce, 10 cups for Quick Taco Salad
medium onions, 1/2 cup for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
onion, 1 for Quick Taco Salad
vadila onion, 1 for Aunt Pattys Salad
wegmans prepared salad- ginger? or pasta?, for Spicy Chicken Rolls Salads

Bread and Bakery
bagels soft, 15 for Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices

Meat
bulk Italian pork sausage, 1 lb for Sausage Baked Penne
hot dogs, 5 for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
lean ground beef, 4 lb for multiple recipes

Prepared Meals
spicy chicken rolls (avacado for me), 3 for Spicy Chicken Rolls Salads

Baking Goods
white sugar, 1 cup for Best Brownies

Dairy
eggs, 14 for multiple recipes
fresh mozzarella cheese, 8 oz for Sausage Baked Penne
KRAFT 2 % Milk Shredded Mozzarella Cheese, 1-1/2 cups for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
KRAFT Grated Parmesan Cheese, 1/3 cup for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
milk- whole, 2 cups for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
part-skim ricotta cheese, 1 cup for Sausage Baked Penne
sour cream- light, 6 tablespoons for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
VELVEETA CHEESY SKILLETS Dinner Kit Creamy Beef Stroganoff, 1 pkg for VELVEETA Creamy Beef Stroganoff Skillet

Canned/Jar Goods
baked beans, 1 can for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
diced tomatoes, 1 can for Weeknight Ravioli Bake
tomatoes diced canned, 2 for Quick Taco Salad

Oils & Dressings
mayonnaise, 1 cup for Macaroni Salad

Pasta/Rice/Beans
whole wheat penne pasta, 3 cups for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2

Sauces & Spices
KRAFT Classic Ranch Dressing, 1/4 cup for Quick Taco Salad
spaghetti sauce, 2 jar for multiple recipes
tomato pasta sauce, 4 cups for Sausage Baked Penne

Snacks
tortilla chips, 2 cups for Quick Taco Salad

Frozen Foods
frozen cheese ravioli, 2 pkg for Weeknight Ravioli Bake


This is the full shopping list that the app generates based on meal ingredients: (before I clean it up to remove duplicates and pantry staples)

Produce
carrots baby, 2 for Macaroni Salad
celery seed, 2 tablespoons for Macaroni Salad
celery, carrots onion diced , 1 cup for Macaroni Salad
club pack romaine, for Aunt Pattys Salad
fresh mushrooms, 1 cup for VELVEETA Creamy Beef Stroganoff Skillet
garlic, 2 cloves for Sausage Baked Penne
green bell pepper, 1 for Macaroni Salad
loosely packed torn romaine lettuce, 10 cups for Quick Taco Salad
medium onions, 1/2 cup for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
onion, 1 for Quick Taco Salad
vidalia onion, 1 for Aunt Pattys Salad
wegmans prepared salad- ginger? or pasta?, for Spicy Chicken Rolls Salads
Bread and Bakery
bagels soft, 15 for Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
Meat
bulk Italian pork sausage, 1 lb for Sausage Baked Penne
extra-lean ground beef, 1 lb for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
ground beef, 1 pound for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
hot dogs, 5 for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
lean ground beef, 2 lb for multiple recipes
Prepared Meals
spicy chicken rolls (avacado for me), 3 for Spicy Chicken Rolls Salads
Baking Goods
all-purpose flour, 2 1/2 cup for multiple recipes
baking powder, 4 1/4 teaspoon for multiple recipes
biscuit mix, for Sausage Egg And Cheese On A Biscuit
confectionary sugar, for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
confectioners' sugar, 1 cup for Best Brownies
jiffy cornbread muffin mix, 1 box for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
powdered sugar, 1.5 cups for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
unsweetened cocoa powder, 1/3 cup for Best Brownies
unsweetened cocoa powder, 3 tablespoons for Best Brownies
white sugar, 1 cup for Best Brownies
Dairy
butter, 1/2 cup for Best Brownies
butter, 3 tablespoons for Best Brownies
Cheddar cheese, 2 oz for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
cream cheese, 4 oz for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
cream cheese, 15 tablespoons for Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
eggs, 14 for multiple recipes
fresh mozzarella cheese, 8 oz for Sausage Baked Penne
KRAFT 2 % Milk Shredded Mozzarella Cheese, 1-1/2 cups for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
KRAFT Grated Parmesan Cheese, 1/3 cup for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
KRAFT Shredded Cheddar Cheese, 1 cup for Quick Taco Salad
KRAFT Shredded Italian* Five Cheese with a TOUCH OF PHILADELPHIA, 1 pkg for Weeknight Ravioli Bake
large eggs, 2 for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
milk, 1-1/4 cups for VELVEETA Creamy Beef Stroganoff Skillet
milk- whole, 2 cups for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
part-skim ricotta cheese, 1 cup for Sausage Baked Penne
sour cream- light, 1/2 cup for Macaroni Salad
unsalted butter, 16 tablespoons (1 Stick) for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
VELVEETA CHEESY SKILLETS Dinner Kit Creamy Beef Stroganoff, 1 pkg for VELVEETA Creamy Beef Stroganoff Skillet
Peanut Butter Jelly Aisle
honey, 1 tablespoon for Best Brownies
Canned/Jar Goods
applesauce, 3 cups for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
baked beans, 1 can for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
can of pears, 1 can for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
corn, 1 can for Baked Beans Hot Dog Corn Applesauce
diced tomatoes, 1 can for Weeknight Ravioli Bake
kidney beans, 1 can for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
pineapple slices, 5 can for Bagel And Cream Cheese With Pineapple Slices
pinto beans, 1 can for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
stewed tomatoes, 28 oz can for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
tomatoes diced canned, 2 for Quick Taco Salad
Oils & Dressings
balsamic vinegar, 1/8 cup for Aunt Pattys Salad
canola oil, 1/4 cup for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
canola oil, 2 tablespoons for Cinnamon Roll pancakes
Extra-virgin olive oil, for Aunt Pattys Salad
ground mustard, 1/4 teaspoon for Macaroni Salad
mayonnaise, 1 cup for Macaroni Salad
sweet pickle, 1/4 cup for Macaroni Salad
sweet pickle juice, 2 tablespoons for Macaroni Salad
Pasta/Rice/Beans
macaroni, 1 (16 ounce) package for Macaroni Salad
penne pasta, 1 box for Sausage Baked Penne
whole wheat penne pasta, 3 cups for Easy Italian Pasta Casserole 2
Sauces; Spices
chili powder, 1 tablespoon for Chili, Cornbread, Pears
crushed red pepper flakes, 1/4 teaspoon for Sausage Baked Penne
dried basil leaves, 1/2 teaspoon for Sausage Baked Penne
freshly ground pepper, 1/4 teaspoon for Sausage Baked Penne
KRAFT Classic Ranch Dressing, 1/4 cup for Quick Taco Salad
Small fresh basil leaves, for Sausage Baked Penne
spaghetti sauce, 2 jar for multiple recipes
TACO BELL® Taco Seasoning Mix, 1 pkg for Quick Taco Salad
tomato pasta sauce, 4 cups for Sausage Baked Penne
Snacks
tortilla chips, 2 cups for Quick Taco Salad
Frozen Foods
frozen cheese ravioli, 2 pkg for Weeknight Ravioli Bake