Now that Older Daughter is no longer living with us, I'm rediscovering my cooking skills. (For the duration of the time she was staying with us, Older Daughter's "rent" was cooking, and man was she good at it!) Recently I found a nice recipe online called "Sweet Chili Rice Bowls" and decided to give it a go. It was delicious, so the other day I made a much larger batch so Don and I would have several days' worth of meals.
Here are the ingredients:
• 1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-sized pieces
• 1 cup jasmine rice
• 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
• 1 cup broccoli florets
• 1 red bell pepper, sliced
• 1⁄4 cup sweet chili sauce
• 2 tablespoons soy sauce
• 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
• 2 cloves garlic, minced
• 1 teaspoon grated ginger
• 2 green onions, chopped
• Salt and pepper to taste
• Sesame seeds for garnish
I made a few changes to accommodate what ingredients we had on hand. I used canned chicken instead of uncooked chicken. I didn't have any red bell peppers, so I chopped up an onion. I used apple cider vinegar instead of rice vinegar.
However I would like to point out that every single ingredient (with the exception of the chopped garlic, which I canned last fall) is store-bought, not home-grown. I didn't make the vinegar, or the soy sauce, or the sweet chili sauce. I didn't grow the ground ginger or even the broccoli or onion (too early in the season). The chicken was also not home-grown. Yep, all store-bought. Keep that in mind for a bit.
Making the dish is easy. While the rice cooked, I drained the canned chicken...
...then added it to a pot with some olive oil (another store-bought ingredient). Then I chopped an onion and some broccoli...
...and added it to the chicken.
Since the chicken was already cooked, all I had to do was soften the broccoli and onions a bit. I covered the pot for a few minutes to let steam do its job, then uncovered and kinda stir-fried the mix.
Then I added all the spices and sauces.
This portion of the dish was ready before the rice was finished cooking, so when the rice was done, I dumped the stir-fry part into the rice and mixed everything up.
It's not fancy, but it's hearty, filling, and provides enough for at least six meals (three days for two people).
Now let's break down the costs a bit. Since I tend to buy some things in bulk (notably chicken breasts which I can up, as well as rice in 50-lb. bags), let's bring the prices up to reflect current grocery-store costs for the triple batch I made. For convenience's sake, I'll use the Walmart check-a-price website, even though I don't shop at Walmart since it's so far away:
• 2 pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-sized pieces (about $8)
• 4 cups jasmine rice (about $3.22)
• 6 tablespoons olive oil (about $2)
• 2 cup broccoli florets (about $1.25)
• 1 onion, chopped (about $0.75)
• 1 cup sweet chili sauce (about $1.81)
• 1/2 cup soy sauce (about $1)
• 2 tablespoon apple cider vinegar ($0.07)
• 2 tablespoons chopped garlic ($0.19)
• 1 teaspoon ground ginger ($0.05)
• Salt and pepper to taste ($0.05)
• Sesame seeds for garnish ($0.05)
These ingredients add up to $18.44. From this enormous batch I made, I estimate we'll get at least six meals (three meals apiece) for Don and I, which comes out to about $3.07 per meal. Understand, however, that since we buy so many things in bulk, the actual cost is a whole lot less.
Now why, you may ask, did I go through all the trouble to break down this particular meal? Two reasons. One, it consists of store-bought (as opposed to farm-grown) ingredients). Not everyone has the benefit of a homestead to supplement their diet, so realistically most people get their food from the grocery store. And two, it illustrates how inexpensive it is to create meals at home, even for people (like me) who are less-than-enthusiastic cooks.
This whole exercise came about because of an opinion piece I read recently by someone named Ward Clark entitled "Young People Drowning in Food Costs? Try Boomer-Style Frugality."
Mr. Clark wrote, "It's a bit frustrating, and not just for us aging Boomers, to see young people whining about the cost of eating, and then to learn that they are getting much of their food from Uber Eats or DoorDash."
He then profiled a Twitter (X) post in which a young person complained, "Lunch just costs $28 now. Are they not supposed to eat?" To this, a Boomer named Joel Berry jumped in and broke down the cost of a healthy homemade lunch made with store-bought ingredients (wheat bread, deli turkey, cheddar, condiment of choice, apple, hard-boiled egg, carrot sticks, tap water) for a grand total of $2.05 and concluded by saying, "You can do this."
As of the publication of Mr. Clark's opinion piece, Joel Berry's X post had received 9.3 million views, most of which presumably applauded his Boomer frugality. Conclusion: Don't gripe about $28 lunches when there are far more inexpensive alternatives, none of which take much by way of kitchen skills.
Does it seems a lot of younger people are deliberately sabotaging their own finances beyond repair through spectacularly bad decisions and behaviors, like regularly having $28 lunches instead of $2 lunches? Maybe it's because, as journalist and technology columnist Taylor Lorenz pointed out, DoorDash has become a "necessity" because Zoomers lack the "capacity" to cook. But are Zoomers incapable of making a sandwich? For some people, that $28 is a week's worth of groceries.
It took me about fifteen minutes to throw together those rice bowls, which provided enough food to last both of us for three meals. And don't forget that turkey sandwich and veggies lunch recipe. If you're incapable of pulling together a lunch that simple, then you have more serious problems than you realize.
My "Boomer" advice to young people is this: Learn to cook. Or at least, learn to make a sandwich. Your future self will thank you.











and don't forget to practice safe food... always use a condiment
ReplyDeleteWhen I was commuting 2.5 hours each way to work, every day, I was not about to bring a sandwich from home with carrot sticks. The high point of my day was picking out something nice for lunch! This was midtown Manhattan, so it was pretty expensive. We did usually cook dinner at home.
ReplyDelete*snort*
ReplyDelete- Patrice
It's just propaganda. Articles in which Boomers mock Millennials and now Gen Z for not knowing how to do X are a dime a dozen. It's designed to make Boomers feel smug about all those foolish youngsters, rather than dealing with very real complaints about very real economic issues. For example: It's not that Millenials can't afford to buy a house because houses are less affordable than ever before in history, it's all those avocado toast lattes they ordered on DoorDash!
ReplyDeleteThat's a bingo. As a 40-something Millennial I've been rolling my eyes at Boomer BS for a few decades now. The average Boomer is incapable of acknowledging younger generations have and are experiencing serious headwinds that are structurally different than what was experienced before. Instead they (pick one more):
Delete- Cherry pick extreme cases like this and act like they're the norm
- Deny a problem exists
- Deny they caused or had any ability to address the root causes of said headwinds
- Deflect by calling observations of problems whining
- Make it about themselves, usually with a disingenuous explanation as to how they had it worse
The last one is often the freebie. Bunch of narcassists.
An example of a rare gem that gets it is Charles Hugh Smith. Check out his blog, OfTwoMinds.
No worries. Boomers will be irrelevant outside of the federal CMS budget within a decade, if that budget still exists by then.
I have to agree. I'm Gen X. I'm sandwiched between. We worked hard for every penny. We are resented by the boomers and the millennial generations. Everyone spouts complaints as much as they do advice. No one listens! Turn back to God and get your heart right.
DeleteI'm Gen X too. People complain about mortgage interest rates now--when I bought my first house in 1995, our rate was 8% and that was considered good. We had to pay back our student loans, etc etc etc. But we don't whine like boomers or millennials.
DeleteWhen I bought my house my interest rate was thirteen percent.
DeleteA gift from president Carter.
I was making 2.85 an hour.
I was going to college paying as I went. It was hard to find money to eat. Every generation has struggled.
It's just how life is.
Generational envy? Anon seems to need someone to blame for his/her "serious headwinds" .
ReplyDeleteSuck it up, Buttercup.
You live in the age where almost all the knowledge in the world is available to your phone. Use it.
I find it shocking that there is so much anger and hate in people today. Things are tough now and will most likely get more difficult. We should try to adapt to our changing circumstances as best as we can by finding better ways to deal with modern problems.
ReplyDeleteMy kids all got turned onto brown-bag lunches when they started their professional careers. One of the wealthiest men I ever met told me his experiences with his work-crews demonstrating the same poor choices - they pile into one car and shoot to McDonalds for lunch, while the OWNER OF THE COMPANY, ate a peanut butter and jelly sandwich in the front seat of the company truck, drank his water from a thermos.
ReplyDeleteI worked for a pretty wealthy doctor. He was an ER doctor.
DeleteHe worked off days for cruise ships. He also worked as a doctor for our pro football team on game days. I worked with him 20 years.
He brought a brown bag lunch to work every day
A peanut butter sandwich,gold fish crackers and a cookie.
I asked him why he didn't eat out with the staff.
He said this is what I like.
He wasn't a cheap man.
I often asked him for money when
I was collecting to help one of my coworkers who was struggling.
If they had a stay in the hospital or
their car broke down and they couldn't afford the repair.
He would always pull it his wallet and hand me a hundred dollar bill.
We chose what is important.
If you’re in your 40’s and hating on others for your situation, boomers aren’t your problem
ReplyDeleteThere must be something like this in their heads :
ReplyDeleteOn Friday evenings in the late 1960s, Billy Lee and I would ride our bikes to Hardees and buy a plain cheeseburger, fries, and Coke, with the 75 cents our mothers gave us. The patties were thin and almost flavorless, the cheese was artificial, and the bun was almost nonexistent. LOL, we loved them. Meanwhile, Mom offered to make us as many thick and juicy burgers as we wanted - you know, the ones with actual flavor - but we just had to have those anemic store-bought burgers.
(Insert facepalm emoji here)
Reminds me of that Bible verse that says :
"When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things."
By the way, that same meal costs about eleven bucks today.
I hope that we can come to a point where there is less envy and resentment. As a boomer, I didn't know I had an easy life. To me, it hasn't seemed easy. As I approach the end of my life, I try to use what God has given me to bless others, but I am not sure it makes a difference.
ReplyDeleteI don't think Walmart's check a price was right. I get boneless, skinless, chicken breasts there for $2.67 a pound. They also sell 5 and 10 pound bags of legs for less than $1 per pound.
ReplyDeleteThis year I will probably can some breast meat by itself, but I love those meaty legs more. They aren't as dry.
But if I was really counting pennies, I'd sub the dark meat into the recipe.
Since I like the dark meat for juiciness, I will probably mix it with the white meat to can.
This will work out great for my dogs too. Instead of canning legs for them I'll probably leave a little meat on the bones and can jars of the raw bones to make dog food with that I mix into their kibble. The chicken bones, and pork bones as well, crumble after pressure canning.
Anyway, when people really need to eat, if they put their minds to it, it can be done.
And eggs are $7.12 for 5 dozen eggs right now. Another great buy for my dogs food, and snacks for them. And me too if my hens aren't laying enough. And if people are hungry and need protein, those eggs cost about 2 cents per gram of protein. They are great in a stir fry with mixed veggies. Cheap cheap cheap!