We all overbuy something at some point in our lives. It may be that great sale on jars of mayo, or the too-good-to-pass-up deal on salad greens, or in my case a 20-lb bag of white rice. We don't set out to buy more mayo, or greens, or grains than we plan on eating. The amount all seems reasonable at the time. Then at some point, we realize we have more than we really want.
Back in 2023 my husband told me he really, really preferred white rice over brown. We'd been a brown rice household for 35 years. I thought we all enjoyed it. Turns out, 2 of us enjoyed brown rice a little less than the rest of us. In my search for the best price per ounce, I found 20-lb bags of white rice from Walmart to be the best deal. So I bought 2 bags. Might as well really save big and buy 40 pounds, right? It really was a good deal, that is if we could have eaten it in a timely manner. Stocking up on foods can save money. It can also provide some food security in the event of an income downturn, a bad garden year, or significant grocery inflation. And rice is one of those pantry "safety net" foods. It's inexpensive, versatile, and can be stored at room temperature for many months. But if the food isn't eaten before spoilage, the large purchase is money down the drain, or in my case, onto the compost heap.
Do you know how many servings 40 pounds of dry rice cooks into? A little over 550 half-cup servings! 550 servings divided by 4 people, that's 137 meals with rice as a side dish. After about the first 40 meals of white rice, my family members that had once preferred white rice over brown now told me they missed the brown rice. So I focused more on using brown rice instead of the white. And now, we're sitting on about 30 pounds (more or less) of white rice.
As strange as this sounds, I feel ashamed that we have so much white rice, like I should be featured on Hoarders: Kitchen Edition. My sister, who has never hoarded food at all, would be mortified to see her little sister on an A & E show talking about her rice hoarding. But, that's what this blog is here for. I can confess my issues and think through ways to work through them.
My Plan
First of all, I should let you know that the rice is now stored in the deep freeze to prolong its nutrition and quality. Despite this, I'd like to finish off this surplus by years' end. That's a reasonable goal right? Seven months to eat 30 pounds of rice. Is this doable?
We have 420 servings of rice to go, and 7 months to do this. That's 60 servings per month, or 15 family meals with rice as a side dish per month. In actuality, we eat more than a standard 1/2 cup serving. Tonight I made rice as a side dish and used 1 cup of dry rice. This cooked up into 3 cups. We had about 1/2 cup leftover. So in 1 family meal, we use 2 1/2 cups cooked rice, or 2/3 cup per person. At this rate of consumption, we'll need to have rice 12 times per month, or 3 times per week. That's a lot of rice.
Fortunately, we've just recently used the last of our potatoes. For the next 4 months, we can focus our starchy side dishes more heavily on rice. How to do this?
- make traditional rice desserts, such as rice pudding, once per week.
- cook rice in large batches to divide and freeze in meal or recipe size portions.
- Substitute rice for bread and pasta in savory dishes, such as a rice base under marinara sauce or an egg, cheese and rice "strata," at least once per week.
- invent new desserts to use rice, such as cooked rice folded into sweetened whipped cream and sliced strawberries -- oh, this has already been invented. There's something called Glorified Rice that combines sweetened whipped cream, cooked rice, miniature marshmallows and fruit.
- use cooked rice combined with an egg and shredded cheese for a quiche crust, at least twice per month.
- grind dry rice into flour to use in baking cookies and quick breads, weekly.
We all make miscalculations from time to time with our purchases. I'm wondering how much of your sense of shame with your rice purchase stems from childhood expectations about how to use resources wisely. I say this because you mentioned your sister, and also because I have had my own reactions over the years to my imagined responses from my siblings/parents regarding decisions I have made. Those growing-up years shape us more than we know. To put this into perspective, if the worst thing you have ever done in your life is to overbuy rice, I'd say that you are doing pretty darn well. :)
ReplyDeleteAre you able to donate any of the rice, or is it past its best-by date? Are there any events coming up (potlucks, etc.) where you could make a rice-based dish or dessert?
This looks like an interesting recipe: https://www.mydiversekitchen.com/rice-bread-making-bread-with-leftover-rice-recipe
I hope you have a great day today!
Thanks, Kris. I think the rice is past its best by date. I will definitely center meals for potlucks around rice. I'll check that recipe out. I use leftover cooked rice in muffins by running the rice along with the liquids through the blender. I just have to remember to do this every week.
DeleteThank you for the good wishes for today. I have my crown placement day today. I now have pretty bad dental anxiety, so even going in for the crown placement gets to me.
Wishing you a beautiful spring day, Kris!
Praying for a successful and pain-free experience for you. You certainly have had a lot of dental procedures to deal with--no wonder you have anxiety about it.
DeleteThank you, Kris.
DeleteI typically do a pantry/freezer challenge in January. As I was inventorying my freezer one year, I realized I had THIRTY bags of shredded cheese in there! Goodness. Well, I didn’t buy cheese again for a VERY long time. And now, when the B2G3 sale comes along, I just buy 5 bags instead of 10 as I had done previously.
ReplyDeleteHi Lynn,
DeleteOh my goodness! Thirty bags of cheese. My family would be overjoyed to find that much cheese in the freezer. But I understand your thoughts on this overbuy. You know, I wonder how much of overbuying happens at a time when our households or appetites are shrinking. Maybe at one point buying 10 bags at a time made sense for your household, but later found that was really too much to have on hand considering it's just your hubby and you.
As I make my plans to prepare a lot of rice dishes, I will be thinking of you and your many cheese dishes you must have cooked at your similar point.
Have a great day, Lynn!
Dry rice and dry pasta keeps for years.Flour and oatmeal and cornmeal will go rancid eventually but also keeps longer than the best before dates.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this, friend. I keep cornmeal in the freezer, always. It also gets buggy long before my other grains. I should pop a few of my bags of flour into the freezer. Thanks for the reminder.
DeleteNot sure how it works, but sometimes your posts don't show up until a day later or more after you posted them, like this one.
ReplyDeleteThat's a lot of rice. Rice does get old and sometimes doesn't soften up with cooking. I've had that experience recently even though the date on the bag was okay. Maybe you could make some microwave heating bags with some of it. Good luck.
Hi Live and Learn,
DeleteIf you're referring to posts not showing up in a feed reader, that's been an ongoing problem for me. I've put in a lot of hours and can't figure it out. Do you mean you can't go to my web address and the new post doesn't show up there?
Good suggestion for rice heating bags. So far the rice is still good as far as softening in cooking. It cooked in the normal time last night. I'll keep that in mind, though. Thanks.
I follow your blog through Blogger, and it supposedly puts posts in my feed that I follow when a new one is published. Sometimes, I wonder if the three hour time difference has something to do with it, although I get other west coast blog post in a timely fashion. It's not a big deal, so I wouldn't worry about it.
DeleteOkay, so there is one thing you can try with Blogger's reading list. you can unsubscribe then resubscribe. That will sometimes work with this platform.
DeleteThis past week was particularly bad with blogger for me. I had several days I couldn't get either of my blogs to appear in the reading list or some other feed readers. I am now trying to publish at the exact same time each morning. It is said that might help. So anyway, if my blog hasn't shown up by just after 7 AM your time, you could check the my web address. My "new" publishing time is set at 4 AM pacific time, instead of publishing as I finish writing. The consistency might help with it showing up in feed readers. I wish I were more computer savvy.
I'll give that a try.
DeleteI laughed at the white rice and brown rice discussion. I tried brown rice when the kids were still at home and no one wanted to eat it. White rice was their choice. Fast forward to a new method of cooking brown rice (first option was the bake it in the oven and it changed the look, the texture and was a big hit. Second option was instant pot which is as big of a hit). Now I rarely use white rice except for some dishes that specifically use it and isn't the same substituting brown rice. I love texture of brown rice and will buy a 20 lb. bag and I always store rice in the freezer. I made white rice for a change last week and though it was nice, I still prefer brown.
ReplyDeleteHi Alice,
DeleteHmm, you provide some interesting new-to-me ways to cook brown rice. I'll check out directions for oven baking the rice. Thanks! One of the meals we've enjoyed white rice with is Chinese food. When all the kids were smaller, if I made Chinese at home, I'd cook white rice to go with it. I couldn't sell brown rice as an accompaniment to beef and broccoli or Kung Pao chicken.
Thanks for sharing your experiences with the white vs brown dilemma.
With the summer garden coming along, we enjoy stuffed peppers. I use different combinations, but always include rice. Black beans, rice, chopped tomatoes, cilantro, garlic, onion, cumin. A little leftover shredded chicken, rice, corn, zucchini. You get the idea. Sometimes just rice and a mixture of vegetables. You can also use the same combos minus the peppers and wrap in a tortilla. Annie
ReplyDeleteHi Annie,
DeleteSomehow I missed your comment. (That was a hard week for me, with a lot of residual nerve pain from a dental appt.)
If you are still checking back I wanted to say thank you for the suggestion of stuffed peppers. Your ideas for stuffings sound very tasty. I planted 6 bell pepper plants this summer, so I see stuffed pepper in my future! Thank you!