We would make beanie weenies. Cut up hot dogs in some pork and beans with a little syrup or brown sugar.
Spaghetti with a little butter melted on it.
You know the saddest part? My family wasn’t ‘poor.’ My father just wouldn’t give my mother money for groceries, and shopping for food was a woman’s job. I don’t know how we, or she, made it through until the divorce.
Sad indeed 😔
Pinto beans and corn bread.
spinach casserole
Rice and soft boiled eggs and soya sauce
Not sure if I qualify as growing up poor, but a plain potato cooked in the microwave is cheap, filling, and comforting.
I am European, so cheap food was definitely not in the form of processed food. I liked sandwiches made with country loaves buttered with lard, slices of summer tomatoes, salt and pepper.
Purple potatoes from the garden. Purple all the way through. I am 50, I still grow them and they’re still my favorite by far.
packet ramen noodle with an egg or leftover chicken pieces
shake ‘n’ bake oven chicken
hotdogs with canned chili and kraft mac ‘n’ cheese
dehydrated / boxed mashed potato and cheese
Instant Ramen Noodles for sure. I still love them.
You can incrementally make them better by adding:
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Broth Bouillon or any other ready made seasoning
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Mix butter at the end for a creamer sauce
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Remove some water at the end and add milk
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Or even better but more costly, heavy cream
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If you are super fancy, add some hotdog sausage
And the sauce you can do as much as you want, you can drain almost all water and make a more like a coating sauce or leave most of it and make a lot of sauce which also make one noodle package fill more.
Of course there is much more one can do but this is the most inexpensive things that I would do to make it more tasty.
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I grew up on a small farm and ever though we were so poor growing up, my mother was very resourceful. She cooked virtually everything from scratch. She also would go to both of the supermarkets in town and ask for their scraps and day old produce, dairy, and deli/meat market items. She told them it was for our animals, and the worst was fed to them, but we got to eat the better stuff.
But my favorite meals were when we got something prepackaged, because even though my mom cooked everything from scratch… she was not a particularly good cook. The two I have the most fondness for were a packet of ramen shared between the three of us, and another time a can of cream of mushroom soup (even though I greatly dislike eating mushrooms).
Oddly enough it was whoppers from Burger King! I think it was Tuesdays they would have $1 whoppers so we’d have those.
Pretty much every other day was pasta of some sort. I’ve grown to be probably the only person of Italian descent that avoids pasta because of it lol
Same thing, but KFC! In Canada they used to have Toonie Tuesdays, you could get 2 pieces of chicken and fries for $2.
Now for the weird part. My dad was kinda obsessed with KFC chicken. He had a colonel sanders shaped piggy bank, specifically for collecting $2 coins, for the singular purpose of buying fried chicken on Tuesdays.
Didn’t exactly grow up poor, but when my dad was between careers I just knew buttered noodles and parmesan was good eating. I didn’t know it was hard times food lol
Butter noodles and garlic salt is superior.
For anyone not in the know, “buttered noodles and parmesan” is code for margarine and the green cannister of pregrated cellulose dust.
Haha it was the 90s so it almost certainly was margarine
Anything that isn’t a boiled grain except for rice and buckwheat.
Canned tuna on grits. Yum.