Frugal Kitchen Tips
Stretching Your Food Dollars - Saving on Chicken & Using Radiant Heat
By Mary Moss, published May 14, 2008
Published Content: 129 Total Views: 84,073 Favorited By: 32 CPs
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I can remember a time not so long ago when we literally lived on chicken! It was so inexpensive, up until a couple of years ago. Now . . . it's crazy expensive. I really had gotten hooked on the frozen skinless boneless chicken breasts in the mega-packs. We often bought them at Costco and even at Kroger on a good sale.Now chicken is just so expensive! But . . . there are ways to have your chicken and save money in the process! The first thing to keep in mind when buying any product, including chicken is that the more someone else had to do to it, the more expensive it's going to be. In other words . . . the least expensive way to buy chicken is to buy it whole, unfrozen. The next least expensive is probably whole chicken, cut up. If you buy chicken in the packs by legs, thighs, wings, etc., that is fairly affordable as well, but just remember the rule--less costs less!
To really save on chicken:
Buy whole chickens when they go on sale - Kroger has a sale sometimes for $.99/lb.--sometimes even less. Buy several. Take them home, take out the "stuff" on the inside, rinse them off and drop them in a big pot and boil them. If you can get two into a big Dutch oven, even better; it won't take as long. You can do this over a couple of nights if you have a lot of chickens. You may decide to bake one or two and have a nice dinner and then save the leftovers. I've even "baked" whole chickens in my crock pot!
Cool the chicken. Pull all the meat off. Divide it up as desired. I usually try to separate the nice slices of breast meat and the rest of the pulled-off meat. The slices are great with gravy over mashed potatoes, noodles, rice or even as open faced sandwiches with gravy.
Store the meat in the freezer in freezer bags, labeled and dated. If you divide it up by intended use/needed quantities it will be handier for you to pull it out later. Now you have chicken handy for chicken salad, chicken and rice, or to toss in for a minute to heat with stir-fry vegetables.
Radiant heat.
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Takeaways
- The more someone else had to do to it before you buy it, the more expensive it's going to be.
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