Hello, friends!
If you're reading this while I'm online (9AM to 11 AM, PDT), that's great. But if not, that's okay, too. If you have a question, just leave it in the comments and I'll check back over the weekend, then read and respond.
So, grab your favorite beverage, pull up a chair or fluff up those pillows, and join me for a couple of hours. Say "hi" in the comments and let me know you're here, if you want. Ask questions, share tips, or post a link to a favorite recipe.
To start, Ruthie asked about making pita chips the other day. I told her I'd post a recipe for homemade pita bread. It's pretty simple to make and would really bring down the cost of homemade pita chips. This batch of pita bread costs about 80 cents, including the electricity for the oven. It makes about 1 1/2 pounds of pita bread. If baking this into pita chips after making the bread, the cost per pound would be about 75 cents per pound for pita chips, including the oven use. Commercial pita chips cost over $6 per pound at Fred Meyer. Homemade chips from homemade pita bread is a substantial savings. If making the pita bread only for the chips, you can freeze the baked pita bread, two or 3 together, enough for making chips for 2 or 3 people.
If you've ever made flour tortillas, then you can definitely make pita bread.
1) Pita Bread (for Ruthie and anyone else)
1 envelope (about 2 and 1/2 teaspoons) active dry yeast
1 1/4 cups warm water (about 105 to 110 F or 40 to 43 C)
3 1/4 to 3 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 cup shortening (I used a scant 1/4 cup of vegetable oil - it's cheaper)
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
Soften yeast in water in a large bowl. Add 2 cups of flour, the salt, and shortening. Using a mixture, beat on low speed for 30 seconds, then 3 minutes on high speed. Alternatively, beat with a large spoon for about 3-4 minutes.
Stir in remaining flour. Turn onto a lightly floured board or countertop and knead for 3 to 5 minutes. (if your bowl is large, you can knead the dough right in the bowl. That's what I do.) The dough should be a soft dough, only sticks when you leave it in one place for a while. Return dough to the bowl and grease all sides of dough with a little oil. Cover and set in a warm place (80 to 90F degrees) for 15 minutes.
On the countertop or floured surface, divide the dough into 12 portions, smoothing each into a ball. Cover with a damp cloth and allow to rest for 10 minutes. After 10 minutes, re-flour your surface and gently flatten each ball. Allow to rest another 10 minutes.
Preheat oven to 450 degrees F.
Taking one ball of dough at a time, lightly roll into 6 to 7-inch circles, working the rolling pin from the inside of the circles to the edges. Place as many dough circles as will fit on an un-greased baking sheet.
Bake for 3 to 4 minutes, until inflated, then turn each over and bake for 3 additional minutes.
Remove from the baking sheet immediately, stack on a plate, and cover with a tea towel (this holds in moisture). When cooled, wrap in plastic. You can slice pockets into one end, or halve the pita and slice pockets through the cut edge (making 2 half-pita pockets).
Occasionally I pierce a pita when flipping it over, so that it has a hole which could leak a filling. These pitas can be used for flatbread pizza or as a wrap, gyro-style.
To turn into pita chips, here are 2 links:
One for no extra oil chips, just baked. And a second one,
for chips that are brushed with a little oil just before baking. The second variety will be crispier than the dry-baked ones.
2) Jam Milk, Jam Tea, and Jam Lemonade
This was a jam-making week for me, using up some of the foraged blackberries. When my son was a little boy, I would make him a special treat if he could entertain himself in a corner of the kitchen while I made jam using fruit from the trees in our rental's yard. The treat was very frugally-made with the empty saucepan after I poured the jam into sterilized jars and a cup of milk. There's always jam that sticks to the interior of the saucepan, and I hated to just waste that wonderful flavor. So, I would rinse out the pot with a cup of milk and let my son have this as his afternoon snack, The jam would both sweeten and flavor the milk. I never bought stir-ins for my children, like Nestle's Quik, so flavored milk was really a treat.
I still use the jam pot for making sweetened, flavored beverages, even though my "kids" are not so little. Instead of rinsing the saucepan out with 1 cup of milk, I now rinse it out with about 2 to 2 1/2 cups of water and make jam tea or jam lemonade.
To make jam tea, pour 2 1/2 cups of water into the near-empty jam saucepan and bring to a boil. Stir the jam off of the sides of the pan and into the water as it heats. When the now-flavored water reaches a boil, remove from heat and ad 1 tea bag or some loose black, green, or herb tea, and infuse. Strain tea leaves as needed and serve.
For jam lemonade, follow the instructions for jam tea, but instead of adding tea or herb leaves, use the flavored water for making lemonade. For lemonade, to the flavored water, add 1/4 cup of bottled lemon juice, and a scant 1/4 cup of sugar. Delicious, flavored lemonade. Nothing wasted.
The other day I made a pot of blackberry jam tea, using lemon balm harvested from my garden. This may be hard to see in the photo, but the pink color of the tea is a near match for the pink in the dishes. Beautiful, delicious, and virtually free (okay, I did have to pay for the 2 1/2 cups of tap water).
3) Watermelon Rind to Use in Savory Dishes
I finished making watermelon rind pickles for the season, so I was mindlessly tossing any watermelon rinds into the compost. Well, I was brainstorming ways to make chutney and I thought about watermelon rind chutney. Yes, there is a recipe for that! When looking up that recipe I came across a link to a recipe for watermelon rind curry. Now, you may have noticed, my family is going through a curry phase. This sounds like a wonderful use for something that I was composting.
Check out this link for watermelon rind curry. And while you'e checking sites,
the same site has that recipe for watermelon rind chutney that I just mentioned. Anyway, I still have a quarter of a watermelon in my fridge that has a fair amount of rind on it. Here's my thinking with regards to using the rind: every time I use something that I salvage or forage, I save on something else that I have to work to produce or buy. It just makes sense to use as much of a watermelon as possible.
4) Saving Some of the Current Batch of Yogurt to Use as Starter in Future Batches
Now that I have a good supply of milk again, I was able to make a new batch of yogurt. I let my yogurt incubate overnight. Then the next morning I refrigerate the jars. The day after that, I scoop yogurt into containers for the freezer, about 1 cup of yogurt per container. I did 4 containers the other day, marking each as yogurt starter, along with the date. This will be enough starter yogurt for 4 more batches. No need to buy fresh yogurt to use as starter. I save $14.16 per year by freezing 2nd-day yogurt to use as my starter.
5) Scoring More Fuel Rewards by Buying Gift Cards
Fred Meyer had a 4 X the fuel rewards deal going on with gift card purchases this past week. That means that instead of getting 50 fuel reward points for a $50 gift card purchase, I got 200 fuel rewards with a $50 gift card purchase. 200 fuel rewards will save me 20 cents per gallon on a purchase of gas. If I buy 10 gallons, I will save $2.

So, I don't go overboard on loading up on gift cards. But when Fred Meyer has this promotion going on (they do this 3 or 4 times per year), I assess our close future spending and determine the amount of gift cards we would need to make purchases in other stores. We're working on a landscaping project this summer and getting our supplies from Home Depot. I estimated that we will spend about $60 for the remaining supplies for this project. Therefore, I bought 2 $25 Home Depot gift cards, which will be used this month. For an extra 2 minutes of my time picking up the gift cards while I was doing my other shopping, I saved us about $2.
6) Free Trash Bag for Our Kitchen Garbage Can
Do you see what I see? This package of bathroom tissue is just about the same height and width as our kitchen trash receptacle. By cutting off one of the smaller end panels with a pair of scissors, I have a perfect "bag" for our trash can. Saved 6 cents, and I did something environmentally-responsible.
7) I've been Christmas shopping this week. While at Fred Meyer on Senior Day, I picked up a food item that I know one of my recipients will love, using a high value coupon. Basically, I bought this item for half-price! And this wasn't an impulse buy, but something I had planned on buying for this individual.
Suggestions For Patching or Repurposing a Pair of Jeans
These are my favorite around-the-house jeans, and sometimes running-casual-errands jeans. My question -- how to make them not so indecent and still okay for running to the store or bank? The fabric has a dark side that is not the same color as the front. The dark side is just threads and you can see through them when I'm wearing the jeans. What do you think? Would you patch them from the inside (and have dark threads showing on the outside), or patch them on the outside? Would you use an iron-on patch, then stitch around edges, or would you try something else? Would you abandon the idea of patching the jeans and make them into something else -- jeans' skirt? a bag? go in the scrap pile for something else? My first choice is to patch them, as I don't want to spend the money to replace them right now.
Need a Recipe for Rhubarb Chutney that has a Bare Minimum of Ingredients
We just ran out of homemade plum chutney. We'll have a very limited amount of apples and plums from our garden this year, and I don't want to spend the money to buy raisins or other dried fruit. I do have rhubarb that I could use. Has anyone made a rhubarb chutney that did not call for raisins or dried cranberries? I could maybe sacrifice one apple from our trees for a batch, plus I will have onions, spices, vinegar, sugar, and molasses to use. I'm looking for a recipe that I can can to keep for a year or two. Any recipes or links?
What's on your mind this morning? How was your week? Any frugal successes this week? Did you try any new recipes? Do you have any questions for me or anyone else who is here today? I'll be here to answer any questions just before 9 AM, PDT, and will stay online until 11 AM.
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