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Eating On A Budget Recipes

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France is known for its good food and its high prices, but that's mostly true if you are choosing from the Michelin guide by the number of stars the establishment has. Away from the big cities, you'll find small restaurants with good prices and some excellent local cuisine. Good deals are usually the "plat du jour" (daily special) and the "prix fixè(c)e" that can range from a three to a six course meal. For a complete list ask for the "carte", or the "carte du jour" for what's special today. If you are having a full course meal, a cheese board may come with the meal. Ask for "a little of each, please" "Un peu de chacun, s'il vous plait".



Wine is usually the cheapest drink if you order the "vin du pays" or the "vin du maison". Most bars offer a "croque monsieur", a grilled ham and cheese sandwich. Breakfast is usually fresh warm croissants and cafè(c) au lait, which by the way, most French only drink in the morning, after that it's expresso all the way.

Here are a few key phrases to help you eat well in French: Food=nouriture breakfast=petit-dejeuner lunch=dejeuner dinner=diner bread=pain cheese=fromage soup=soupe Salad=salade meat=viande fish=poisson fruit=fruit vegetables=legumes dessert=dessert Delicious!=Delicieux! I am a vegetarian: Je suis vegetarien

Belgium makes the best steaks in Europe, hands down, with frites (french fries) to match. Buy frites at a local stand and they'll add a dollop of mayonnaise. Some Belgian beer tastes fine to the North American taste bud, some of it not. Belgians like their chocolate and Godiva is considered the finest, certainly the most expensive. There are many less expensive brands for the less discerning palates. If you happen to visit southeastern Belgium, look for a monastery in Orval, not far from Arlon. They make their own beer - home brew style and on a sunny summer day, a cold mug of their beer with a chunk of their cheese and a slab or two of their homemade bread is surely a taste of Nirvana. The words chunk and slab are used advisedly, the monks do not stand on ceremony nor observe the delicacies in food service! Also in this region, some of the country inns will serve wild boar. It's an acquired taste. Belgium speaks French in the south (Walloon region) and Flemish (similar to Dutch in the north).

In The Netherlands, sample the Indonesian food, generally as popular as Indian in Britain. The big favourite is the rijstaffel (rice table), it's a great sharing meal. A big bowl of rice and another big covered bowl of vegetables simmering in a hot broth that's hot as in heat and hot as in chillies, so have a cold glass of good Dutch beer handy! Now comes the fun part; how many side dishes to order. They usually come in multiples of six. Twelve if you're alone, eighteen or twenty-four for two, some restaurants will go all the way to thirty-six of the little side dishes. One dish will have two little chicken legs, another has toasted coconut, another a sauce that tastes like peanut butter, etc. On a rainy night in Leiden, this is a great way to spend two or three hours. If you're alone and in a hurry, order the nasi goreng; it's good, filling and could be compared to a Chinese chow mein dish.

Dutch hotels generally serve big breakfasts, cold of course. Hard boiled eggs, cold cuts, breads, jams and hot coffee.

Here are a few key phrases to help you to eat well in The Netherlands: Food=voedsel breakfast=ontbijt lunch=lunch dinner=diner bread=brood cheese=kaas soup=soep salad=salade meat=vlees chicken=kip fish=vissen fruit=fruit vegetables=groenten dessert=dessert Delicious=Heerlijk! I am a vegetarian=ik een vegetariè'r

In Scandinavia, their restaurants are highly priced and highly taxed. The word here is: Smorgasbord, however they spell it locally, it's always the best buy. They are available everywhere, even on ferries and in train stations. In Denmark look for a place that advertises "smorrebrod", it's an open face sandwich that's often budget priced and you can choose from an array of cold cuts, cheese or spreads. Most cities will have places that offer "dagens ritt" which only come out at noon and is the daily luncheon special.
Eating On A Budget Recipes
You have made it through freshers week at university or college relatively unscathed. So what's the next hurdle in student life? Well trying to feed your self on a budget can be a daunting prospective never mind actually cooking. The main advice is eating is essential! You may think that you can survive on booze and coffee but eventually you'll be ill.

Food for many of you will be something that you have just taken for granted. You come home from school/college/work and there is a dinner waiting for you, you get up in the morning and there is cereal in the cupboard and milk in the fridge. So feeding yourself may come as a bit of a shock when you first arrive at University or College. You may think you can get by with biscuits and take-away but, depending on how flush you are, you will eventually run out of money and have to cook. But, fear not, because the following pages contain some fantastic advice on how to eat on a budget.

Shopping

Students pride themselves on knowing where to buy the cheapest beans, bread and margarine. You may think students eating beans on toast is a bit of a cliché but this is just about the cheapest way to fill yourself up.

Look for “value”, “smart price” or “no frills” ranges they don't taste quite as good as the leading brand but they don't cost anywhere near the same.

Find out when your local supermarket closes! Because just before it closes they will be selling off stock that expires that day on the cheap. Also get to know where the “specials” are in your local and buy these as often as you can.

It pays not to be too fussy when it come to food. Don't go shopping with a set idea of what you want to eat, make a list of the basics you need and then be flexible with the rest buy what is cheap! That way your diet is varied.

Utensils

Jamie Oliver may have a kitchen full of pans, knives, funky crockery, whisks, spatulas, mandolins and blowtorches but students don't & you don't need them!

You can get by with a heavy frying pan, a saucepan, a stirring spoon, a spatula, a chopping board, a sharp knife, a bread knife, 2 big plates, 2 sets of cutlery, 2 large mug (large enough for serious cups of coffee or for a whole can of soup), 2 large wine glasses, 2 pint glasses, a salt grinder and a pepper grinder. This shouldn't cost much, well within your student budget

Basics: Having these things in you cupboard all the time will mean you can always make a meal in a hurry!

Flavourings: Sugar, salt (preferably sea-salt), pepper (as in peppercorns), garlic, chilli powder, coriander, mixed herbs and stock cubes (selection).

Consumables: Rice, pasta (shapes and spaghetti), bread, potatoes, onions, tinned tomatoes, tinned beans, tinned spaghetti, tinned soup, tinned tuna, tinned anchovies and tinned meat.

Fresh stuff: Carrots, cabbages, mushrooms, tomatoes, lettuce and courgettes.

Fridge stuff: Cheese, margarine, Philadelphia, orange juice, beer, wine, vodka

Freezer stuff: Pizza, pies, chicken and frozen veg.

Cooking

Buy a good cookbook! Jamie Oliver's “Happy days” book is full of simple, comforting and quick dishes that are ideal for students, But unless you are Jamie Oliver or Delia Smith, start off with simple dishes and gradually learn what works and what doesn't.

Some flavours naturally go with some meats, chicken and lemon for instance but some combinations really don't work beef and lemon is a good example of a revolting combo!

Pasta is a freshers and students staple and goes with almost anything and is cheap and quick, but you will end up Over dosing on it!

If it doesn't go with pasta then it will go with rice!

Meat is expensive, so use lots of veg, which is also good for you, to bulk out your meals.

Soups can make very good pasta sauces or bases for stews.

Salads are very easy, very quick and very healthy. Also if you're a fresher with culinary or artistic flair they can look like you've been slaving over them for hours.

Roasting meat is a very good way of cooking food. It allows you to put your dinner in the oven and then retire to a comfy chair with a bottle of whatever but be careful not to get too drunk and forget the food is in the oven!

If any meals are included in the price of your accommodation try to get to them. If the food is bad then get it changed if they only serve breakfast till 8 o'clock then get the times changed. You are paying for a service so make sure the service works for you!

Finally, whatever your approach to cooking and eating at University, try new things. There will be people from all different backgrounds, regions and countries and they will be eating all manner of different things. Try them! University and college is a learning experience and not just in the academic sense.

And finally students have come across, as you will, some incredibly bizarre eating habits at University and college. Here are some of the strangest.

A student who ate this everyday and nothing else! 1 bowl of corn-flakes, semi-skimmed milk, a roast chicken, salad, hallumi cheese and diet coke he ate this for 3 years without change!

One girl fresher who ate only apples, biscuits and crisps for an entire first year

The student who lived on cuppa soup and lived.
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