Tuesday, November 23, 2010

The Great Autumnal Simmer Down - Pt.2

The food selection was critical and we thought about it carefully. We wanted to stick with the season and revolve around what was relevant to Autumn: lots of root veggies, roasted chicken and slow-cooked pork. Something about a warm meal of potatoes, root veggies and chicken makes me feel great. Reminds me of my childhood Sundays at my grandparents house.

So, we decided to knock out big spend items first to see what you we were dealing with cost wise. Cliff is a veteran professional chef, so he knows most of this off the top of his head: what ingredients work well together and what we should be paying for it. We spent two or three hours working and reworking the list and menu, triangulating what we wanted to accomplish and how we could make substitutions and better buys.

Also, we avoided the Wisconsin freezer staple: the casserole. I know that some will think us insane for overlooking this family feeding dish, but please hear me out. For one thing, casseroles are not my personal favorite. If I wanted every ingredient in every bite I would buy bigger forks!

Casseroles are typically infill items: you throw them together at the beginning of the day and then bake later. Same deal with soups and crock pot meals. They are better as needed and made with what's hanging out in the fridge. The exception was our chili base. Maybe we will change this up next time, we'll see.

So, back to the shopping list.

MEAT
First off, plenty of proteins: 42# of whole chickens and 40# of boneless thighs. This would be made into several dishes. 20# of pork picnic cut (similar to shoulder) for slow cooking in (gulp) rendered fat. This would yield yummy, crispy carnitas and chicarones for mexican deliciousness. Also some pork roasts that would be vac sealed for our boil in bag meals.

We also threw in some ground beef for chili base and burger patties and a 20# tri-tip cut for little roasts and beef tips. That and a 20# corned beef brisket for slow cooking and slicing.

Lesson learned: the pork picnic cut is cheaper than shoulder/butt and yield perfectly acceptable roasts and carnitas. The tri-tip is a decent substitute for the more expensive hanger steak that we were considering. Avoid really great cuts like steaks or tenderloins since we were freezing them anyway. We bought all of these at Restaurant Depot.

VEGGIES
On the veg side we gathered 30# of potatoes, 15# parsnips, 20# white onions, 10# zucchini, 10# summer squash, 15# butternut squash, 10# turnips, 20# carrots, 15# beets. It's a lot (trust us we know) but we put veg into each meal bag and had plenty of veg only bags as well, for when we are not feeling as carnivorous. We bought all of these goods in 10# portions or better at Woodman's, Sam's Club and Restaurant Depot.

We were planning on grilling some veg, roasting some veg and leaving some in the cellar for immediate use. Except for the on hand items this was a lot of peeling and dicing. We saved some time by purchasing lovely italian tomatoes cooked and peeled in the can. Same deal for roasted peppers, tomatillos and pineapple. The canned stuff is really good and saves a ton of time.

Despite the canned items this still meant a lot of prep for one day, but we rose early and got to it.

The Kitchen
Our kitchen is small and has a standard amount of counter space. One oven and range top with four burners. Right off, it was apparent we would need more room so we set up the outdoor kitchen. Ours consists of a collapsible rain cover, a picnic table for prep and a section of counter top on sawhorses.

Keep in mind we live in the city so its a sight to see when everything is set up, but there you have it. Luckily, we used the rain fly: we could not have had a more November day in terms of overcast and light on and off drizzle.

The counter top was set up on sawhorses and laden with a large cutting board and two Nesco electric roasters. We also set up a pair of charcoal grills. A large cooler of meat and three or four plastic tubs of veg and other ingredients were set within easy reach and we were done with outside setup.

Let's get cookin' in the next post

Monday, November 22, 2010

The Great Autumnal Simmer Down

As winter approaches in Wisconsin we all start to hunker down a little: wrapping up tight in anticipation of gray autumn days, blustery wind and dropping temperatures. With all of the late work nights, deadlines and holiday commitments, it's easy to succumb to the "we'll just grab something" at Champion Chicken or Emperor of China on late dinner nights.

The other night, on a beer fueled lark, my buddy Cliff and I decided to take on a new cooking challenge. We were considering an all day cookout that would put a substantial stock of food in our chest freezer. Enough to provide 3-4 meals a week for our respective families through the end of winter. He is feeding an adult and child and I have 2 adults and 2 children.

This plan was a hedge against the cost and quality problem of "unavoidable takeout". No preaching, though. We love to eat out or grab carryout, but its much more fun when you want to do it rather than feeling as though your hand is forced by laziness or lack of preparation. The problem is feeding my family costs a minimum of 30-40 bucks at either place, every time. Also, while its fine to indulge occasionally, the food cannot compare to what we can make ourselves.

So, our plan was simple. Make a wide menu based on three proteins, include loads of veg, and figure out a way to do it all in a kitchen that would be at home on a submarine.

In part two we get to the food.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Drawing Again....




Neil is drawing, which basically means I am drawing...just trading ideas.

Just a couple that I rubbed out in Photoshop using my dust gathering tablet. Just flippin' through a Hellboy trade and taking inspiration. A couple looks at Rasputin and then with one with the Mad Monk and 'ol Red. Mostly erased these from a black background.





Pulling the Plug on Cable TV - pt.1

After talking about it for months we are closing in on ending our cable subscription. For many years we were Time Warner Cable subscribers and took advantage of bundling our cable, phone and internet service. Last year we switched to AT&T UVerse (U200) service in an effort to save money and get more options for our cable box. We did save money and were generally very happy with the new options. AT&T has been great and we have had no real complaints (a minority view these days, maybe). In any event, the services were not the problem.

The problem was the price and priority we were placing on television. We like to think that we don't spend inordinate time watching TV. We limit ourselves to about 90-120 minutes and our kids to about 60-90 minutes per day. We watch about 15 channels with any regularity. The kids watch about 10. The convenience of switching on the box, even with a time-shifting DVR, is inescapable. I think the main reason for keeping it all to this point was the kids and the ease with which they could be entertained.

Entertainment costs a ton. Our current monthly bill is $160. I don't think that I need to justify my horror.

Breaking It Down

It's all bundled so it gets a little complicated, here is a more straightforward version of my normally incomprehensible billing statement.

$67/cable
$33/phone
$25/internet (18Mb connex) Normally $55 for internet (- $30 promo credit for 12 months)
$18/non-monthly charges (taxes and fees)
$17/additional charges (wtf?)

Another way of looking at it:

$160/month
$5/day
$1,920.00/year 2010
$2,280.00/year 2011 In 2011, we lose the $30/mo. Internet promo credit

Our Goals

For us, that is way too much to be spending on a system that offers us too few price points on content packages: We have 200 channels of which we watch 15 to 30. Spendy overkill for the convenience of a cable box and DVR. That's gotta go. Savings ~$804/year

Historically, we kept a "land line" for Susan's benefit, but I think we have turned the corner on that one with a new iPhone 3GS for her. So, the AT&T Phone is going as well. Savings ~$396/year

Reducing the Internet portion is a non-starter: we have an internet business, we play games, we surf all the time and have a computer in every room. 12-18Mb is probably just fine for our media needs, but we might need to move to a 24-30Mb connex in the future. Savings ~$0/year

So...cable pricing sucks and the content packages are overdelivered with stuff that we will never watch. The "land line" is really just a voip phone that is delivered over the internet connection anyway. What are we planning to do?

  1. Replace Cable with internet delivered content: Netflix, Hulu, PlayOn and content websites.
  2. Reduce our monthly AT&T bill to $55/mo. + charges for internet
  3. Replace AT&T land line with a pair of smart phones that offer better service and the ability to access the content on Netflix, Hulu, etc.
  4. Add a new iPhone (~$99 one-time) and data plan ($20/mo.)
More on how we do it all in the next article.