I’m sad that this is worth mentioning. But if you are dealing with hunger amid threats to SNAP benefits, rice and beans are very cheap per meal and can be bought in bulk. Here’s some tricks I’ve learned:

If you get dried beans, make sure you follow the directions to pre-soak them. Canned beans are easier to prepare, just dump in near the end of cooking to heat them up. Dried lentils don’t need to be pre-soaked, but I prefer to cook them separately and drain the water they boil in.

Brown rice, barley, or other whole grains have much more protein than white rice and I find them more filling. Whole grains take longer to cook than white grains.

Frying diced onions in the pot before adding the grains and water is an easy way to kick the flavor up a notch. Use a generous amount of cooking oil (light olive oil is healthiest) for cost effective calories and help making the meal more filling.

Big carrots or celery in bulk are pretty cheap too. I like to dice carrots by partially cutting length wise into quarters, but leave the small end intact to keep the carrot together to make it easier to dice down the side. Add them to the same pot as the grains after the grains start to soften. Beets are also great; skin and cube then boil separately until soft. Change up your veggie to get a mix of vitamins

Get some bulk garlic powder, hot sauce, paprika, cumin, crushed red pepper, black pepper, etc. Season and salt the pot to taste.

You’ll only need 1-2 pots and a cutting knife/board for veggies.

I recommend Harvard’s Nutrition Source for science-based nutrition information and they have some recipes too

Edit: discussing big changes in diet with a primary care doctor or registered dietician is generally a good idea.

Probiotic supplements may help with gas.

As a bonus this sort of meal has a very small environmental footprint.

  • chillpanzee@lemmy.ml
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    7 months ago

    Skip the olive oil. If you’re buying it on a beans and rice budget, its gonna be fake olive oil anyway. Just use corn/canola/veg oil.

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    Bean stew is one of the most delicious things you can cook whether you can afford more or not. Here’s my recipe. Everything but the beans, onions, carrots, paprika, oil and salt is optional and mainly improves the taste profile. Works with almost any kind of bean. Can be done with dried beans too but you gotta handle softening them up first.

    Bean stew/soup v4.1

    • 3x beans cans - 540ml
    • 2x onion heads
    • 2x carrots
    • 2tbsp paprika, 1tbsp smoked paprika
    • cooking oil
    • 1/2 tsp salt (or less) and 1/2tsp of MSG
    • 2x chicken or beef cubes
    • marinara/tomato puree/diced tomatoes/vinegar/some other acid

    • Add beans with some water in a pot. Use OG bean water too.
    • Chop onions and carrots in small pieces.
    • Fry onions and carrots in a pan with oil.
    • Once fry is done, add all the paprika and stir for 10-20s then pour into the pot, let it boil once.
    • Add the beef/chicken cubes.
    • Add spearmint, lots.
    • Add some more oil if needed. Olive is great.
    • Add 3-4tbsp marinara, diced tomatoes or balsamic vinegar.
    • Add 1/2 tsp salt (or less) and 1/2tsp of MSG.
    • Test for salt, it might be good enough.

    Eat it with some bread or by itself. It goes well with any type of hot pepper too.

  • ExtremeUnicorn@feddit.org
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    7 months ago

    Imagine living in a country with 900+ billionaires, with growing tendency, where regular people are discussing about the best ways not to starve.

    Not that it’s much better where I live, but damn, what the hell is wrong with this world?

    • Credibly_Human@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      part of it is that the working class, poor to people who incorrectly think they’re middle class included, basically everyone who is not ownership class (where owning things is the primary means of making them money), utterly fail to organize, and sometimes actively work against their own interests (like the “lets make a third party!” morons, the “I am morally superior for not voting” morons, and or course the actively malicious “I let the billionaires tell me that them fucking me was actually brown people’s fault” morons.

      • Fredthefishlord@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        7 months ago

        I hate the use of working class that excludes front line workers who very much still work for a living. Why call it working class if it’s just a fancy name for lower class instead of fully including all workers?

    • Poojabber@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      The elite have always been vampires living on the blood of us peons… it feels new to us because we are living it now, but history shows its been this way a long time, and it was probably the same in prerecorded history too… we, as humans tend to suck…

  • Sergio@piefed.social
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    7 months ago

    Frozen peas are great for that too. Goes with a lot of different dishes. just throw in a handful, or make a side-dish.

  • olbaidiablo @lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    If you want to stretch out your ground beef use 1/4 lb of medium instead of lean and use TVP to fill in the rest. The TVP will absorb the fat and flavour, is quite a bit cheaper than ground beef and is shelf stable. TVP also has more protein than ground beef.

      • AnimalsDream@slrpnk.net
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        7 months ago

        Textured Vegetable Protein. It’s basically soy that’s been processed in a way that results in a granular product that’s mostly protein, and has a somewhat similar texture to ground meats.

        Personally I prefer Soy Curls because those are made from whole beans and still have their fiber, but tvp can be a great choice for people with especially high protein needs like strength trainers.

      • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        it entirely depends where you live, here in sweden freshly harvested potatoes are almost literally free in the summer (i think they were sold for 1 SEK per kg last year) whereas the cheapest rice costs as much as normal pasta.

        I read on the news recently that some eastern european country had such an absurd potato harvest just now that the potatoes were literally worthless, to the point that farmers were basically weeping at the prospect of finding someone to take the potatoes from them.

  • JohnnyEnzyme@piefed.social
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    7 months ago

    Brown rice, barley, or other whole grains have much more protein than white rice

    White rice is pretty much pre-diabetic junk food that’s been stripped of most of its fibre and nutrients. I’d recommend always replacing with something like the above, or my favorite, steel-cut oats.

    If you get dried beans, make sure you follow the directions to pre-soak them.

    When cooking from dried, some baking soda in the heating process can greatly speed things up. The use of a potato masher here and there can also speed up the softening of the beans, and makes it easier to tell how far along they are.

    Get some bulk garlic powder, paprika, cumin, crushed red pepper, black pepper, etc. Season and salt the pot to taste.

    Don’t forget MSG, which boosts up the savory / umami taste. It’s cheap, you don’t need a lot, and there is no such thing as an MSG allergy. (altho very occasionally people can have sensitivity)

    • YoSoySnekBoi@kbin.earth
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      7 months ago

      If you prefer white rice to brown but actually want some nutrients I highly recommend trying out basmati rice - it’s relatively easy and inexpensive to get in bulk and I almost never eat any other type of rice anymore

    • Ohmmy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      Unlike my dumbass family back then I’m not afraid of spicing my rice and beans like people with melanin

      • Soup@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I can’t imagine spices were exactly cheap. When you’re at the point of making water pie I’m gunna guess that spices are an easy enough thing to let go of.

        • Ohmmy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          7 months ago

          I’m not talking spices from around the globe or some shit. I’m talking jalapenos, serranos, chipotles…

          Ya know, cheap staple crops from my region of the world that grow like weeds and add flavor for cheap.

          • Soup@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Ok, with as little intended rudeness as possible: Spicing is a weird word, and usualy for clarity anything to do with heat would be “spicing” or “making spicy”.

            And yea those are definitely not too expensive at all. I really enjoy using spiciness as a way to add a a lot of depth basically for free. Everything is better with some red pepper flakes.

            • Ohmmy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              7 months ago

              Frankly I disagree, chili powder and paprika are spices commonly sold as spices and are just dried then crushed chilies. It’s just a preservation method and in Asia chilies are preserved in chili oils so not technically a spice but is used for flavor like a spice.

              Really the only problem here is that the language we are using is so fucking bad at describing flavor and cooking.

              • Soup@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                I mean, a little yes but if you’re specifically talking hot peppers, and you said that you were, then the bulk of what they bring to the table is heat. Flavour for sure a little, but I wouldn’t consider them spices.

                I can agree that the language is a little vague. Like at what point does ginger become a spice and not a normal ingredient? Only when it’s dried and powdered?

                • Ohmmy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  7 months ago

                  I’m sorry but if you think chilies only add a little flavor there’s no point continuing this. Have a good one.

  • termaxima@slrpnk.net
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    7 months ago

    As a vegan, this has been my main meal because I’m pretty lazy (usually wrapped in a tortilla with guacamole, but I also eat it plain)

    The gas issues are only a problem for a few days / weeks until your gut biome adjusts !

      • Rooster326@programming.dev
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        7 months ago

        It’s the bean water that comes in the cans.

        If you don’t use it - you don’t have the gas.

        No idea what they put in it.

        • AnimalsDream@slrpnk.net
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          7 months ago

          That is part of it, but not the complete story. I talked about the same things in a comment elsewhere here, but in a nutshell it’s the combination of fiber and the oligosaccharides in beans. The latter is what leeches out into the bean juice, which is why rinsing beans can go a long way toward reducing gas.

          But for the fiber there is no getting around the need to just eat it everyday to get the microbiome adjusted to it. Where people go wrong is eating a ton of high fiber foods all at once and getting miserable with a ton of gas. It’s better to add those foods more gradually to get used to them.

  • AnimalsDream@slrpnk.net
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    7 months ago

    Also a very underrated flavoring that’s unjustly stigmatized because of racism is MSG. You can get really big bags of them for super cheap, and it’s an easy way to make any meal taste savory.

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    To reduce gas with beans:

    • soak with baking soda (1tsp per cup of beans)
    • before cooking boil some water and in a bowl cover the beans with the boiled water, after 5 minutes drain and wash them and throw them in to whatever you are cooking
    • ferment the beans, best results but more work

    Also remember that as your body gets used to it, the gas is reduced.