Guys I need your help. I will be pretty broke for the next couple of months and I'm moving for myself. I need cheap/efficient and nutritious dinner recipes that won't break my piggybank. I literally dont know anything about cooking since mommy has done it for me my whole life.
>>9088259
mcchicken
Lentils and rice
Rice and beans
Pasta and lentils
Buckwheat and beans
Potatoes and lentils
Chickpeas and rice
Rice and peas
Sunflower seeds
Cabbage
Soup.
If you buy chicken, but it whole.
Get local shit. Are you by the sea? Get fish. Near farms? Get eggs.
Start going to events where they have snacks of free food.
Get a job at a restaurant as anything, they'll probably feed you there a bit.
>>9088463
Oh, and there's not much you should be buying that's premade.
>>9088259
You've seen your mom cook before. Do what she did.
Number 1 problem, especially being single, is waste. People make too much and discard leftovers.
Looking into giving blowjobs. Side Cash plus protein from swallowing
>>9088259
cook for yourself
shop at chinatown instead of le respectable big-name domestic chain store
make liberal use of noodles, rice, and potatoes
buy some fucken vegetables holy shit
chop things up and fry them together in a pan
eggs are crucial
it's extremely easy
>>9088259
Buy rice in bulk and make sure it's as dark as possible (either brown or black rice). Why? Because white rice isn't very nutritious but brown and black rice is.
If you know that you're going to use something a lot and if it won't spoil, buy as much of it as possible (for example: peanut butter, coffee beans, onions, garlic).
Eggs are cheap as fuck, especially if you buy them from a local farmer and full of protein, so buy a fuckton of them.
Look out for sales at your local supermarkets and base your recipes on that. For example, if chicken is on sale and so is broccoli, you can make chicken curry on rice with a side of steamed broccoli.
Also, if it's your birthday any time soon, be sure to ask for a bread baking machine. It's cheaper and much more nutritious than storebrand bread.
Don't buy small packages of anything (because it's not cost-effective) and refridgerate or freeze whatever you have left. You can always eat the same thing the next day or have a leftover day to eat all the smaller portions you still have sitting in your freezer.