While on this subject -- my family and I very rarely eat out and it's been that way since before greedflation hit. I realize that's not the case or even feasible for everyone. For anyone in a situation where they actually need to eat out (or just really, really want to), start looking at your local sit-down restaurants. Some of them are cheaper to eat at now than to go through a drive through and grab a 'value' meal.
Cook At Home
Internet nerds teaching fellow nerds how to cook at home, and make higher-quality food than garbage in a wrapper or a box they're currently wasting money on. In our age of hyperinflation, shrinkflation, and general economic collapse, knowing how to cook at home is more vital than ever.
Share recipes, cooking guides, shopping and savings tips, and let's help our fellow nerds save some mother-freaking money. Feel free to vent about skyrocketing food prices here too. Share evidence of hyperinflation, shrinkflation, etc. when you come across it.
RULES:
- No spam, porn, off-topic content, hate speech, harassment, bootlicking
- No trolling or obvious troll bait
- Don't make me make more rules
In my experience, almost every small business restaurant has jumped on the greedflation train too. Otherwise these big corpos wouldve adjusted their pricing.
Mcdankles hash browns are always a waste of money, no matter the price :P delicious though
There has to be a recipe for people to make McDonald's style hash browns at home somewhere. That's just crazy to pay $3 for something like that.
They sell them in the frozen section at most grocery stores... Not McD branded or anything, but it's not like there's anything remotely special or unique about them.
Well most folks don’t have a deep fryer at home so how are you gonna bite into it and burn your mouth to hell as a pocket of oil bursts??
I like them air fried; still got that nice crunchy exterior.
Most potato products air fry at 400 for 12 minutes wonderfully (don't over crowd). It's great! There is a difference between brands though, some end up a bit oily after cooking, some don't. Depends what you like.
On my list to figure out is tempura and/or wetter things.
Trader Joe’s and other grocery stores have long sold ~20 packs of the exact same hash browns for like $5-7 dollars a pack. You just have to deep fry them if you want them to taste the same.
They are surprisingly good air fried.
Absolutely. I can make soooo many hash browns for $3. They're not exactly the same, but that's probably because I pan fry them like latkes
I love making hash browns like this! I use a salad shooter to shred a potato with a bit of onion, then put them in a nonstick pan and put seasoned salt and oil on top.
That's similar to how we made them when I worked at a steakhouse, but of course we had fancier equipment there than I have at home.
Some people dry the shreds with a paper towel beforehand to make sure they don't get soggy, but I've never found this step necessary.
Agreed, the drying doesn't seem to affect soggyness. I do notice they're less sticky in the pan if I have the wherewithal to soak them after shredding for a while, but usually that doesn't happen.
ALDI sells basically the same thing in their frozen food section. Unfortunately since I've been shopping at ALDI for the past couple of years it is one of the only things that has increased in price a lot (via the amount you get per package decreasing a lot). They used to sell these big packs with like 80 in them for $4 or $5. Now they come in something closer to a 20-25 pack for close to the same price.