this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2024
47 points (100.0% liked)
Comradeship // Freechat
2166 readers
32 users here now
Talk about whatever, respecting the rules established by Lemmygrad. Failing to comply with the rules will grant you a few warnings, insisting on breaking them will grant you a beautiful shiny banwall.
A community for comrades to chat and talk about whatever doesn't fit other communities
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
How short are you on time and do you have access to at least a stove, a frying pan, a pot, a knife and a cutting board? Because sometimes when moving you may suddenly find that everything is already packed and/or disassembled. In which case you may be stuck with only instant noodles as an option.
But in general, assuming that you have at least a few basic tools you can always make rice or pasta, add a few vegetables and a very basic sauce and spice it to your liking. You can hardly go wrong.
For example, you can get a basic rice and coconut curry done in under an hour (minus the time to go to the store and buy ingredients). All in all, the actual cooking part should take no more than half an hour, the rest just depends how skilled you are at cleaning and cutting vegetables. Here's my recipe:
1a. Go out and buy some rice, a can of coconut milk, some garlic, a couple of onions (shallots work too) and a few vegetables of your choice (two bell peppers and two or three carrots work well, but you can also go with broccoli or zucchini, green beans or cauliflower, mushrooms or baby corn, or really pretty much anything).
1b. If you don't have spices at home also buy either a blend of curry spices (something with ginger and cardamom is nice and gives a pretty intense taste) or pre-made curry paste if you can find it in your local store.
If you are eating it right away serve it with the rice on the side, else if you are planning on storing it in the fridge to eat over the next day or two (the quantities i recommended here probably make about three to four portions so you will have leftovers to reheat) then just dump the entire contents of the pan into the pot with the rice (but obviously don't do this if you use a rice cooker!).
If you need it to have some more protein and are ok with eating meat you can roast some diced chicken breast in the pan in step 4. Otherwise i guess tofu or chickpeas work too as a vegan option (i strongly recommend chickpeas here, because no offense to tofu lovers but tofu is just kinda boring to me).
I'm moving in with some of my comrades so basic stuff like stove, pans and all this stuff is decently there.