Please help!

I’ve got two things to say.

Firstly, I’d take a picture of Anna wearing all her beautiful, “pretty” jewelery that she loves to wear around the house… she’s got about ten on around her neck now… but I don’t want everybody to see my underwear which she’s just raided out of my drawer. Buy this girl necklaces for Christmas please!!!!

Secondly, the following post comes from http://kimberlovesadeal.blogspot.com/ by a lady who is my hero. I’ll copy and paste the post now…

A tale of 4 turkeys…
Okay, I’m owning it.

I went waaaaay over budget this month. And, I plan to go in one more time! Blargh!

But, I have a good reason if that helps.

I’m buying turkeys to fill my freezer.

Let me really super duper break it down for you. I talked about it in my previous post, but I wanted to cover it more as Thanksgiving is almost here and I am hoping this will inspire someone.

Meat is expensive. Truly. But, most of us are carnivores and crave it. On my extremely conservative budget every month, it is really hard to make room for cheese (which is why I buy it in bulk when it goes on sale, then I shred it and freeze it so not a drop goes to waste), milk and eggs (which is why I now use powdered milk and eggs unless I luck into an amazing deal and then I buy in bulk and freeze it— yes this can be done) and meat.

But, I knew Thanksgiving was coming and I knew there would be ways to get cheapo turkeys.

Here is my clever plan. I have to give mad props to Amanda and Wildman OConnor for teaching me the ways of the turkey.

Here is what they do (and I shall be doing):

1. Cook yourself a nice fancy turky dinner.
2. Eat it.
3. When you are stuffed (tee hee hee) carve the rest of this bird up.
4. Put the meat in jars.
5. Dump some water and a bit o’ salt in the jars as per the Ball Blue Book of canning (aka the canning bible). Really, use water, it will turn into broth!
6. Pressure cook the crap outta it (again, as pur the Ball Blue Book)
7. Put it in your basement for your munching pleasure.
8. You should get at least 20 of the pints(? think that’s the size I’m envisioning) of meat.

Hold on, we aren’t done with the bird!

1. Now take the carcass (lets be honest, you didn’t do THAT great of a job getting all the meat off of the bones) and put it in a ginormous baggie.
2. In a few weeks when it’s frosty and you are hungry, pull that carcass out and toss in a pot o’ water.
3. Make some tasty turkey soup!

But, wait, it gets even better if you are a black belt in tightwaddery!

1. Make that turkey soup, but just add things like carrots, onion, peas, celery… nothing fancy.
2. Put aside just enough for dinner (we’ll come back to it, promise)
3. Now can the rest of it and you have homemade soup whenever you want! Just dump in a pot, toss in a handful of pasta (you have a bunch in your storage, I just know it!) and when it boils you get to eat it! Cheaper than Campbells and tastier too!
4. Finally, your soup for din din. Make some homemade noodles (recipe below) and eat!

You’ll get around 10 or so jars of this too.

Homemade noodles recipe (from my granny J)

1 or 2 cups of flour
An egg
just enough water to make a dough that isn’t too sticky, but that you can roll out
mix and roll it out
cut it into skinny strips and plop into your soup!
Cheap, easy and for me it tastes just perfect (I’m not much of a seasoning gal)

I plan to make one turkey a month for the next however many months there are turkeys in my freezer. So, while I slowly empty my freezer (which makes it cheaper to run) I will be restocking my food storage with cans of turkey and soup stock and slowly adding more meat when it is on great sales. And I’ll be able to be picky about the sale and NOT go over budget again (fingers crossed, knock on wood).

Look at all the meals you made for your family from one cheap turkey! (See my post below for how to get that turkey cheap!)

That is all.


I have three turkeys for $.23/lb. and I spent the other $25 to get the deal on other on-sale meats. I am more over budget than her because there were no coupons. She is amazing. I am thinking about this turkey canning/soup canning idea. Sounds good!

2 Comments

Filed under Everyday Stuff

2 Responses to Please help!

  1. e

    That is weird. And since I have a lot of cleaning to do I couldn’t read the whole amazing story, but I know how amazing you are at these things…example: The baby food buys. Inspirational.
    I’d say that canned turkey would be really good, maybe a bit fall-apart-ish, but like broth that was simmered for a REALLY long time.
    You impress me.

  2. e

    The ‘weird’ was in reference to your comment on my blog. 🙂 sorry for being confusing.

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