Archive for February, 2010

Pie. It’s what’s for dinner.

// February 18th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Balance, Budget, Cooking, Time Management

If there is one thing I love even more than saving money, it’s spending money.  No, wait.  That’s not what I meant to say.  Let me try that again:

If there is one thing I love more than saving money, it’s saving time.  Lucky for me, I’ve found a way to do both.  I’ve recently been cooking a lot of freezer meals.  When I cook dinner, I basically make a double recipe and bake one pan and put the other in the freezer.  This means I cook half the days I normally would, and we’re also eating out less because there is almost always something at home to eat (unless I forget to thaw something, which usually results in a Sonic run.  Mmmm….tater tots).

Now, if you do an internet search for freezer cooking, freezer meals, or freezer recipes, you’ll find a lot of resources on once-a-month-cooking (OAMC).  I do not do OAMC for a few reasons:

  1. I do not have a separate freezer and could not fit a month’s worth of food in mine.
  2. I do not have the foresight to come up with a month’s worth of meal ideas before grocery shopping.
  3. I do not want to give up an entire weekend for shopping/cooking, even if it only is one weekend.
  4. No.  Just no.

Now, I know OAMC works for many people, and perhaps one day I’ll change my mind.  But for now, I can’t stand the thought of cooking 30 meals at once.

My freezer cooking usually is about 7 recipes, so two weeks worth of food.  I cook about every other night.  When I cook, we eat one dish and I pop one in the freezer.  The next night is leftovers (maybe two nights).  Then I cook again.  After a week or two, I start pulling things out of the freezer to heat and eat.  So far, it has worked pretty well.

Here’s what we had for dinner last night.  It had the benefit of being easy the first time around AND made an extra to throw in the freezer:

Ham and Cheese Quiche

2 frozen pie crusts
2 c. cubed ham
2 c. shredded cheddar cheese
2 t. dried minced onion
4 eggs
2 c. half and half
salt and pepper (there were measurements, but I just did to taste)

The real recipe called for baking the pie crusts first, but I always think you can skip that step.  I don’t know if that is pie crust crime or not, so do what you want.  It says to line with a double thickness of heavy duty foil, bake at 400 for 5 mins., remove foil, and bake 5 more.  Like I said, do what you wish here.

Okay, so next you layer 1 c. ham, 1 c. cheese, and 1 t. dried minced onion in each crust.  Beat together the eggs, half and half, and salt and pepper.  Pour half over each pie.  Cover one in foil and put it in the freezer.  Mine spills every single time, so be more careful than I am.  Cover the edges of the other with foil (I’m thinking if you skip that pre-bake thing, you can skip this, too, but who knows?) and bake at 400 for 35-40 mins.

A colleague of mine read my post with the Chicken Pot Pie recipe and suggested that I start including pictures of the meals I make, so now I’m going to become one of those people who photograph my food.  Look what you have done to me.  Here is my Ham and Cheese Quiche:

I didn’t exactly measure the cheese.  I had a 2 c. bag of cheese (that I bought on sale and with coupons, of course) and I estimated half the bag for each quiche.  I estimated poorly, and the quiche in the freezer has way more cheese.  I’m looking forward to it.

If there’s a food I love more than cheese, its . . . I got nothin’.  There is no food I love more than cheese.

Now, I realize I’m two for two on recipes about pie for dinner.  I promise that we do not have pie or pie-related meals every night.  Although, if you think about it, that’s not a bad way to go through life.

Good riddance, Tuesday.

// February 16th, 2010 // No Comments » // Life in General

My day, in a nutshell:

  • Oversleep
  • Running late = bad hair
  • Bundle baby in car, realize the car has no gas
  • Drive to gas station, which is out of my way (how I can have a 20 minute commute to the babysitter without passing a gas station is beyond my comprehension, but nonetheless true)
  • Fill up
  • Get back in car which won’t start
  • Call husband
  • Husband comes and jiggles a thingy on the car, which then starts
  • Cry
  • Drop off Bear at Auntastic’s
  • Work
  • Leave to pick up Bear, realizing car won’t start
  • Have random man parked beside me jiggle my thingy (not as dirty as it sounds) so my car will start
  • Pick up Bear
  • Have Uncle Awesome, the world’s best brother, tighten the terminals on the battery cables (previously referred to as “the thingy”)
  • Return to work to finish my twelve hour day (conferences and book fair)
  • Try to juggle Bear and book fair (which would have been impossible had it not been for some awesome co-workers)
  • Load up Bear to go home
  • Get in car and cross my fingers while turning the key
  • Say a hallelujah prayer as the car starts
  • Drive home thinking, “If I worked at home, none of this would have happened.”
  • Blog
  • Bed

Good night.

Help for Military Families

// February 15th, 2010 // No Comments » // Balance, Couponing, Life in General, Money Matters

I’ve been getting a lot of coupons lately from people who know I’ve been trying to cut my spending and save money.  Just this weekend, I threw out a stack of coupons that expired before I got a chance to use them.  Then, this morning, a coworker told me that military commissaries accept coupons for up to six months past their expiration date, and that military bases accept donated coupons.  Since I have a huge stack of coupons that will expire at the end of the month, I plan on sending them to military families.

Go here to find out the guidelines for sending coupons and here to find a list of addresses of military bases that distribute expired coupons to military families.

When you’re living on a tight income, it’s hard to feel like you can donate sometimes.  Everyone, though, can donate coupons.  I was excited to find out about this simple way of giving.

Another coupon site

// February 15th, 2010 // 2 Comments » // Couponing, Money Matters

At work this morning, two different colleagues told me about the 918 Coupon Queen featured on our local news.  I haven’t had a chance to fully check out her site yet, but it looks like I’ll be adding it to my favorites.  She’s based out of Tulsa, so her sales might not always match up with mine, but she has some good information on her site.

Where did my weekend go?

// February 14th, 2010 // No Comments » // Balance, Cooking, Time Management

This weekend, the Bear’s grandparents were here (new word:  “Gumpa!”), and because of their attention to the little wild man, I was able to take a couple of naps, go to the grocery store, and fold laundry (which has already been replaced by a new pile of clean, yet unfolded laundry).  Somehow, though, I’m still incredibly tired and incredibly behind despite my naps and my extra time to work.  I have a few copywriting projects I need to finish soon, and I need to get started on my new job that I mentioned in an earlier post.

I feel like I never have enough time, and it can be quite overwhelming.  Honestly, though, I’m not sure working from home will help that much.   I mean, now, I work 40 hours a week while someone else takes care of the Bear.  If I’m working from home, I’ll work 40 hours a week while I take care of the Bear.  Still, I think it will be worth it.

If I’m going to be able to work from home, one of the things I’m going to need to work on, in addition to sticking to a budget, is time management.  It’s hard to manage something if you don’t feel like you have any of it, but as I discovered with our budget, there may be more there than you think, if you are just careful with what you have.

Sometimes I feel like one of the biggest drains on my time is cooking.  I enjoy cooking, but when I’m in a time crunch, it begins to feel like one more chore to mark off my list.  And lately, I’m always in a time crunch.  Being too tired to cook can also have a negative impact on our budget, as it is often much easier to pick up fast food than make a healthy meal for my family.

Any time I can find a quick, easy meal that my husband will enjoy, I add it to the “repertoire.”  The recipe gets bonus points if I can keep all of the ingredients on hand and not have to really plan ahead with my shopping.

A few years ago, my sister (I should write a whole post on her fabulousity as a SAHM) sent me a recipe for Chicken Pot Pie that fit all the requirements of a fast favorite:

  • I can keep all the ingredients in my pantry or freezer.
  • It has few ingredients.
  • Assembly pretty much involves nothing more than stirring.
  • My husband LOVES it, so I get wife-points for being lazy.  Double score.

As my Valentine gift to you, here’s the recipe:

  • 1 package of 2 frozen pie crusts
  • 1 can of chicken
  • 1 can mixed vegetables, drained
  • 1 can cream of chicken soup

Stir everything together (except for the crust, duh).  Dump it all in one of the crusts.  Pop the other crust out of the pan and put it on top, pinching the edges together a little (my sister says to turn it upside down on waxed paper for 10-15 mins. to flatten it a little, but I’ve started just putting it on top like a dome, and it works just fine–10 more minutes saved).  Bake at 400 degrees for 35-40 minutes.

To summarize:  4 ingredients, stir, dump, bake.

Perfect.

Worth a thousand words (and way more than $45).

// February 13th, 2010 // 1 Comment » // Budget, Couponing, Money Matters

I went shopping today while Jesse stayed home and played with Grandma and Grandpa.  I read my coupon blogs, gathered up my coupons, made a list, and hit the town.  I went to Homeland, Crest, CVS, and Aldi and I got all this for $45:

Kind of hard to see what all is there, but that’s quite a lot for $45, in my opinion.  Yes, I know there are coupon gurus who probably would have paid less than 23 cents for that, but I’m just a noob.  This pile includes 2 3lb. bags of frozen chicken breast, 3 half gallon jugs of juice, 5 2-liter soft drinks, 4 jars of spaghetti sauce, 3 deodorants (two of them were .18 each), and 7 protein bars (which, regularly priced, would have been $14 by themselves), 6 bags of frozen vegetables (including 2 Steamfresh), kitchen trash bags, bread, 2 packages of tortillas, bananas, pears, blueberries, a package of frozen rolls, oatmeal, salad dressing, and 8 containers of yogurt.

My best deals?  The 18 cent deodorant, 25 cent salad dressing, and FREE oatmeal.

I have now got my oatmeal free so many times that I’m going to be really annoyed when I actually have to pay for it.

How to make $87 an hour–tax free!

// February 12th, 2010 // No Comments » // Couponing, Money Matters

I was looking at my new favorite coupon blog, Simple Saving Savvy, and I stumbled across this article from the Wall Street Journal (Amanda at Simple Saving Savvy credits Common Sense with Money for the link).  It lists all the excuses people have for not using coupons (time consuming, little savings per coupon), and then crunches the numbers to show how much time is spent and how much money you would “earn” in that time.  Pretty eye-opening. 

I’ve got to admit, I never thought I’d be a coupon user, but now that I’ve started, there’s no going back.  My time is very valuable to me, but I think $87 an hour seems like a good return.

Opportunity knocks.

// February 11th, 2010 // 4 Comments » // Work at Home

And sometimes, it ding-dong ditches.  You know, rings the bell urgently as you rush bleary-eyed to the door, tripping over toys and laundry, only to hide in the bushes giggling when you fling open the door.  Yeah, sometimes it does that.

At the end of last school year, I heard about a possible opportunity working from home at an online high school.  A friend of mine is working for them and found out that they planned to hire several new people.  She told me about the job and put in a good word for me.  I applied and debated going ahead and packing up my office.  I mean, I was IN.

But that sneaky little job sprinted around the corner laughing the whole way.  It wasn’t that I didn’t get the job; it was that there was no job to get.  The company did some restructuring shortly after telling their staff about all the new hires they would be making, and they ended up not hiring after all.  *sigh*

My friend seems to enjoy working for them, and it has allowed her the flexibility to work from home and spend her days with her little boy.  I know that if the company does end up hiring again, I can count on her to give me a heads-up.

Despite my disappointment when August rolled around and I still hadn’t received a call for an interview, I did take a couple of really good things from the experience.  First, it made me realize that I couldn’t just wait for an opportunity to drop into my lap–I’d have to find something and make it happen.  Second, it helped me realize some different work-at-home opportunities out there.

Here are some of the jobs I have tried or am currently doing:

Copywriter
Online Assistant Shopper
Dictation Typist
Independent Sales Consultant
Online Writing Lab Tutor

Some of these have worked out great; others have taken way more time than they are worth.  I’ll talk about each of these in upcoming posts.  I’ll tell you the pros and cons of the things that I have tried, but know that what didn’t work for me might work great for you.  Just like with any job, your success depends a lot on what you want to do and what you are willing to do.

When you look for a job that you can do from home, don’t be afraid to try something new.  Brainstorm different ideas; search the internet to find out what types of jobs are available for telecommuting; talk to friends, colleagues, and family members to see if they know of possibilities.  You never know what will turn up.  During the course of a conversation about coupons, I had an acquaintance offer to pay me to do her grocery shopping.  As much as I hate grocery shopping, I’m actually considering it.

(On a  side note, now that I’m using coupons, grocery shopping has almost become more of a game than a chore.  It’s kind of a fun challenge to see how big I can get that “You Saved” part of my receipt to read.)

If you are just beginning to brainstorm ideas, or if you have no idea where to begin, I recommend WAHM.com.  Visit the job listing page or browse the forums.  You’ll be surprised at how many legitimate opportunities there are.  Among them may be the perfect work-at-home job for you.

What jobs have you tried or considered?

Housekeeping for Dummies

// February 10th, 2010 // No Comments » // Balance, Family, Life in General

Bear’s Grandma and Grandpa are coming for a visit.  They should be here waiting when I get home from work on Friday.  That means that I need to get the house cleaned tonight and tomorrow night.  However, I have a little problem when it comes to housework.  You see, I’m–what’s that word? Ah, yes–lazy.  I’m also an excellent procrastinator (as evidenced by the fact I’m updating my blog and fixing my Facebook feed instead of, say, vacuuming).

I did manage to get the sheets off the guest bed and into the washing machine.*  I even went as far at to put them into the dryer instead of forgetting about them and leaving them in the washer until they smell like a raccoon died in my utility room.  Now, getting them on the bed?  That probably will happen tomorrow evening.  Perhaps even Friday when Grandma and Grandpa are trudging bleary-eyed to bed after playing with Bear all night.  But rest assured, I will put the sheets on the bed myself.

Last time, I forgot and Grandma and Grandpa did it themselves.  Imagine my mortification when Grandma brought me a pair of my (clean) panties that fell out of the (clean) sheets when they made the bed.

So.  That’ll teach me.

*Yes, I did consider spraying them with Febreze and calling it good.**
**The sheets, not the grandparents.

I think I might gripe too much. Maybe.

// February 10th, 2010 // No Comments » // Balance, Life in General

I sent an email to my husband at the end of the day yesterday, and the text said something like, “I’ve had it with today.  I’m going home.  I’m DONE.”

Then this morning, I sent him an email complaining that I was going to have to substitute for another teacher today.

He read the emails in the reverse order from when I sent them. He saw that I was complaining, then saw that I was going home, and he thought both emails were from this morning.

He had to call my cell phone just to be sure I didn’t quit on the spot.  I told him I wouldn’t do that.  Even though I think I’ll be able to work from home next year (pleasepleaseplease), I know that I don’t have enough work lined up, or enough steady work lined up, to make it right now.

Maybe I ought to complain a little less convincingly so that I don’t give my husband a panic attack every time I get a little (lot) huffy.  At least I’m sure he knows I’m serious about trying to stay home!