A lot of my eating habits, as with most people, come from my parents. I am very lucky that my parents had a balanced and healthy attitude to food, and so the habits I've inherited are largely healthy (or at least the 'in-moderation' kind). I remember knowing about carbs before I heard about fad diets and before we covered it in school. Carbohydrates were a vital part of your meal, but it was also vital you didn't eat too much. Mum's a type 1 diabetic. Carbs were always carefully measured in our house whether it was pasta, bread, potatoes, rice... I understood what carbs were and how much of the meal they should make up. I always found it weird when friends would have pizza and chips. Didn't they know that was carbs and carbs?
The other thing I thought was perfectly normal was the way that we cooked most things from scratch. Granted a lot of it was a variation on tinned tomatoes + onion + garlic and herbs + whatever is in the fridge, but I was used to meals being made at home and processed foods being rare alternatives when Mum and Dad needed something quick.
And finally we ate a great variety of foods. By the time I'd reached secondary school, I had tried so many different things and so many different styles of cuisine. There were a few things I didn't like, sure, but I would always try. I was not a fussy eater, and I think I largely have my parents adventurous eating style to thank for that. I also didn't think that every meal had to include meat. We ate a lot of vegetarian meals, not only are they normally cheaper, but also yummy!
These days my diet is shaped quite a lot by how expensive things are, but there are a few cheap staples that I've inherited from my parents - Mum's spaghetti bolognaise that bumps out the meat with extra onion and veg. A chinese stir fry base consisting of ginger, spring onions, soy sauce and a little oyster sauce... and finally, the good old tinned tomatoes plus... which is what tonight's dinner is.
Sausages and tomato sauce, served with couscous.
(2 portions, £1.17 per person)ingredients:
3 sausages (tonight's are honey and thyme from my local butchers = £1.58), cut into chunkstin tomatoes (33p)
1/2 onion (6p) diced
1 carrot (4p) sliced
2 or 3 runner beans (mine from the garden) cut into 2 cm pieces
1 clove garlic, crushed/diced (2p)
(dried) basil and thyme (10p for basil, thyme from garden)
oil to cook (5p?)
couscous (13p for 100g)
stock cube (13p for one veggie cube)
boiling water 160ml
chop veg and sausages.
add to pan and fry in oil until sausage chunks cooked and veg softening.
add herbs and tomatoes and reduce heat to simmer.
boil kettle.
pour couscous into bowl.
mix stock cube well with 160ml boiling water and pour into couscous. Stir well and leave, covered, for at least 5 mins until couscous has absorbed water. Stir/fluff up with fork.
Over £1 per person because of the sausages, but in my opinion worth splashing out on decent meat when you do eat it. This, works well with pasta too, I just fancied couscous for some variety as I tend to eat a lot of pasta. =)
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