Feed your family and still pay your power bill this winter
Wednesday 11 July
How to feed your family and still pay your power bill this winter
Love Food Hate Waste wants to ensure that Kiwis who are facing high power bills this winter can still feed their families and put healthy food on the table this winter.
The winter edition of Easy Choice – Family Kai, a free dinner meal plan and recipe book which allows families to feed themselves for just $60 a week, has been released today.
The timing of the winter Easy Choice comes in the depth of winter as thousands of Kiwi families are struggling with energy poverty and, in some cases, are having to go without food in order to be able to afford to heat their homes.
“When it comes to paying high bills or unexpected expenses it is usually the food budget that takes the first hit,” said Love Food Hate Waste spokesperson Jenny Marshall.
“We know that winter is a hard time for so many families, so we are hoping that Easy Choice can help ease the financial burden for some by providing low cost meals.”
Easy Choice consists of four weeks of five dinner meal plans that will feed a family of six for approximately $60 a week.
“Easy Choice employs many different strategies to help keep the cost of food low while ensuring that each meal is healthy and balanced. From making sure that no food goes to waste to utilising frozen vegetables and using the leftovers from one meal to make another, we have included all sorts of tricks to make food go further.”
The winter edition of Easy Choice is the
second of four seasonal meal planners to be released,
following the launch of the autumn edition in April. The
spring booklet will follow in October with the summer plan
being released in January.
"Easy Choice has really
changed the way I go about planning, buying and cooking my
food. I’m saving a lot of money and enjoying new recipes,"
said Sierra de la Croix from Rotorua.
Click here to download the Winter Easy
Choice – Family Kai meal planner and recipe book.
Love
Food Hate Waste’s top tips for saving money on your food
bill this winter:
• Cook in bulk. If you know you are
going to eat foods like rice, pasta or potatoes more than
one night a week, cook two nights worth in one go to save on
power. Leftover cooked rice is safe to eat, provided it is
cooled quickly and reheated until it is piping hot. To cool
rice quickly, spread it over a large tray and put it into
the fridge as soon as it is cool. You can also rinse the
rice under cold water to cool it.
• Eat seasonally. It
is important to eat seasonally as winter vegetables are
cheaper in winter, while summer favourites are either
non-existent or are prohibitively expensive. Choose
vegetables like cabbage, leeks or parsnips which should be
cheap this time of year. Alternatively, frozen vegetables are always a great
optionas they are cheap, nutritious, pre-prepared and
won’t go bad.
• Cook once, eat twice. Either cook
enough food so that you can eat it the next night (or freeze
it for another time) or use the leftovers as the starting
point for the next meal. In the winter Easy Choice, you roast a chicken with
vegetables for the first meal, make chicken noodle soup for
the second meal and turn the leftover vegetables into a
roasted vegetable frittata for the third.
• Eat all
parts of the vegetable. Broccoli stalks, silverbeet stems and
the green part of the leek are all edible and can help bulk
out a meal and add an additional serving of
vegetables.
• Use a slow cooker or crock pot. Not only
are slow cookers an energy efficient way to make a meal,
they turn inexpensive cuts of meat into delicious meals.
• Limit how much meat you eat. Meat can be really
expensive so try to reduce how much meat you use in a meal
or go meat-free entirely for some meals. Beans, lentils,
eggs and tofu are cheap, non-meat protein sources. If you
need inspiration, Easy Choice includes recipes for family
favourite meals nachos and burritos, using beans instead of
mince.
• Store potatoes and onions away from each
other. If you have bought large bags of potatoes and onions,
make sure you store them far away from each other. While
they both need to be kept in cool, dark places, storing
potatoes and onions together will make them sprout faster.
Keep your onions in the pantry and your potatoes in a
different cupboard or part of the kitchen.
• Make the
most of your oven. Your oven is the most energy-demanding of
all your kitchen appliances, so if you are going to use it,
try to utilise it as much as possible e.g. can you roast
vegetables for a meal later in the week at the same time
your pie is heating in the oven?
• Put away your
leftovers before you tuck in. If you have made a meal which
you intend to have as leftovers, pack away the leftovers
before you serve the meal. This will stop you from
overeating or your family accidentally eating tomorrow’s
lunch.
• Serve soup. Soups are a wonderful way to make
a small amount of food go a long way. You can add all sorts
of leftover meat, vegetables and grains to
them.
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