Classic Gazpacho

Twelve Cheap/Easy (and mostly no cook) Things to Eat

Can’t Cook but Need to Eat?

Ever have those days when for one reason or another you can’t cook a “real” meal?  No time, illness, or any number of things can put us in a position where we might break the bank to feed ourselves or our family if we run out for fast food or buy frozen dinners.

Best Egg Salad Sandwich

The Best Egg Salad Sandwich

It’s great if you can pull something from the freezer, but what do you do if you have to wing it?

Here are a few of my standbys from items you might have at home or can grab quickly at the store – maybe they’re so basic they’re no brainers, but they work for me!.  They just take minutes to make, and have little to no cooking effort and very little clean up:

  • Peanut Butter Toast – seriously!  Peanut butter toast, or on bagels or English muffins. It’s warm, comforting and has a good amount of protein. Even peanut butter on crackers. Other nut butters are good, too. Take it to the next level with bananas or try a grilled peanut butter sandwich.
  • Crackers & Cheese – add some summer sausage or lunchmeat for your own “lunchables.” Make the crackers whole wheat and they’re even better. If you want to be a little fancy, do what my son does – he melts the cheese in the microwave.  For dessert? Jam on crackers.
  • Salad –  if your grocer has a salad bar, you’re set, if not grab a premade bag with all the fixin’s  – something I don’t normally advocate, but, hey, if it’s a choice between McDonald’s and a salad, I’d opt for the salad. Here’s my Salads Menu, everything from full meal to sides, easy to fancy.
  • Tuna Salad – open a can and mix with mayo; add some celery seed or garlic salt to dress it up. If you don’t mind chopping, add finely diced onion or green onion and finely chopped celery, perhaps some bell pepper. Put some cheese chunks in it or cheese on it and broil it open faced if you want to be “fancy.”
Healthier Tuna Salad or Tuna Melts

Healthier Tuna Salad or Tuna Melts

  • French bread pizza – slice the bread in half the long way, smear with pasta sauce, add cheese and broil.  You can do the same with English Muffins. You can add pepperoni or raid the fridge for complementary leftovers as toppings.
  • Grilled Cheese Sandwiches – always cheap and easy; you can go with the basic American style “cheese” and bread or use whatever you have and even layer in meats or vegetables. If you want to be fancy, use your grill pan or panini press, or layer your sandwich toppings on bread, open face, and make a hot broiled sandwich.
Hot Broiled Sandwiches

Hot Broiled Sandwiches

  • French Toast – even for dinner! Quick and easy. Try smearing it with jam instead of syrup, or serve with fruit to fancy it up. A sprinkle of powdered sugar can make it feel special. If you want to go high-end, consider this variation of Tyler Florence’s Oven Baked French Toast, although it’s not as quick and easy.
  • Gazpacho – Here’s a simple Gazpacho. Just roughly chunk the vegetables and pulse everything in the food processor.  Great for a summer day. I normally remove the skins and wait for it to chill, but really, this is optional. Talk about cheap and easy AND good for you.
  • BLT:  Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato – bake the bacon in the oven for about 20 minutes and you don’t have to watch it and turn it.
  • Egg Salad Sandwiches:  The beauty of egg salad is that it’s great with just eggs, mayo and salt or you can dress it up any number of ways: red onion, diced celery, etc. Make extra eggs – hardboiled eggs are a super portable snack. (They’ve found the cholesterol in egg yolk is not quite the culprit we’ve thought they were. There is, however, still saturated fat in them…but not as much as say, a single chicken nugget.)
  • Crostini:  Drizzle olive oil on bread and broil till toasted, then layer on your toppings from whatever you have in your fridge and broil.  In a pinch we’ve even used hot dog/hamburger buns, spread them with garlic butter, sprinkled with cheese and broiled. We call this Parmesan Toast. An amazing Crositini topping can be made with vegetables you might have in the freezer – especially Lima Beans or Peas.
Lime & Pea Crostini

Lime & Pea Crostini

  • Fruit Plate or Smoothie:  Throw whatever you have on hand in the blender with some juice and/or yogurt and ice. Add some cottage cheese to the fruit plate for a little extra protein.
  • Oatmeal:  I nearly forgot oatmeal, one of my favorite foods. Don’t go with the processed, artificial packets, get real, generally labeled “regular” oatmeal, preferably not quick, and make it in minutes in the microwave or make it on the stove. You can buy a boatload of “regular” oatmeal for the price of a package of individual packets. Dress it up any way you’d like, with a bit of sugar or cinnamon sugar, fruit, or milk., or eat it plain.  Add a teaspoon of jam if you want it “flavored!” Portion it out for several quick breakfasts – reheat them in the microwave. Dirty little secret? Regular oatmeal cooks in the microwave in two minutes.

What are your favorite cheap and easy meals to get on the table fast?  How do you dress up these simple meals?

13 thoughts on “Twelve Cheap/Easy (and mostly no cook) Things to Eat

  1. I confess to buying and eating the packets for lunch or even after supper snacks instead of desserts. Would you have a ratio of oatmeal to milk.water for a single serve portion cooked in the microwave? I still have part of a package of rolled oats in my pantry and wouldn’t mind using them up. 🙂

  2. This is the stuff we grew up eating as my mother didn’t like to cook. I mean, she made meals but I remember an awful lot of this on weekends and after school. I did’t realize we were so frugal! I thought she just didn’t like to cook! 🙂 ha! Even now I’ll eat oatmeal for dinner when Matt’s out at sea. I’ll make the steel cut oats in the crock pot and eat on it for days. I love that darn crock pot!

    • *S* about your mom. Plus, if she was anything around my age, raised in the 60’s or so, there was the whole culture of processed foods and meals starting up – all to free “Mom” from the kitchen. I think there became a disconnect in passing down information from Mom to Child. A lot of my friends have never learned to cook. Home-Ec became Facs, then two working households became the norm, and few and fewer people cooked. (I think hippies, public television, the internet and foodtv are responsible for a lot of people cooking today. We’ve been saved from getting our food from a tube!)

      Noticed you mentioned your love of the Crock Pot on your site! I haven’t tried the crock pot with the steel cut oats – those I usually soak overnight on my counter, then cook them haphazardly! They are really the best oats nutritionally, I think. Do you have a special process you use?

      • Yes, mama is a baby boomer. And we were raised in a two-person working household when we got older, but when we were little mama was home. Cooking simple things. I feel her mother never gave her the love for it, because she didn’t like it either. I’m determined to break that cycle.
        Hooray for the hippies, publice television, the internet and foodtv then. It’s bringing us back!

        I have a crock pot blog, as well. I started it to keep me trying different things and to keep me out of the kitchen while I was writing a manuscript. And honey, those steel cut oats. You will never go back! I use one cup steel cut oats (any brand will do), to 3 cups of 2% milk. The higher the fat content, the creamier. I put it on high for one hour. And usually it’s still a bit chewy so I’ll leave it on high for about another 1/2 hour. Then I let it cool on the stove and it soaks in all that milk. It’s so creamy and good, sometimes I eat a bowl right there at the stove. Or for my next meal. I chip up pecans in mine and throw in some blueberries. But I don’t put any sugar in mine. Feel free to sweeten it. My mother says I have no taste buds. (I wonder why.)

        But all crock pots are a little different, so I’d check it at the hour mark. You might like yours chewier than mine. I’ll add a link on here so you can see what it looks like, but it might go to spam.

        http://gicrockpot.wordpress.com/2011/11/19/irish-oatmeal/

        Let me know if you try it! I think you’re going to LOVE it!!! 🙂
        I’ll never go back.

  3. I like quinoa because it’s a complete protein and it takes on any flavor you add.

    You use it just like you would rice. I even cook quinoa in my rice cooker.

    A lot of quinoa recipes on the Web are savory. You can make a “rice pilaf” subbing quinoa or you can make a cold salad using vinaigrette. But people are wising up to making it sweet so I am finding recipes for the aforementioned parfait and also hot cereal concoctions.

    On the downside, quinoa’s pricey.

  4. I love all of those ideas. In fact, I had P.B toast last night. Don’t forget a bowl of cereal. Some nights, that’s all we want. I am also enjoying Greek yogurt parfaits with sliced fruit and quinoa or granola. Delish

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