NormanH Posted July 23, 2012 Share Posted July 23, 2012 Interesting blog about stretching a tight budget to eat wellhttp://www.theskintfoodie.com/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
woolybanana Posted July 23, 2012 Share Posted July 23, 2012 Norman, your theme today is hunger and poverty. Could it be that the begging is not going too well? I told you not to wear the loincloth as it sometimes slips and what is revealed frightens your potential donors. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NormanH Posted July 23, 2012 Author Share Posted July 23, 2012 You missed the fire and catastrophe...brimstone not yet included. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nomoss Posted July 23, 2012 Share Posted July 23, 2012 A glance at the Cheeseboard's price list gives me the feeling that someone has a concept of "skint" which is rather different from mine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Christine Animal Posted July 23, 2012 Share Posted July 23, 2012 Jocasta Innes, The Pauper's Cookbook. I've got her book somewhere. No need to be rich to eat delicious. One of my favurites:http://www.cookipedia.co.uk/recipes_wiki/Onion,_bacon_and_potato_hotpot Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NormanH Posted July 24, 2012 Author Share Posted July 24, 2012 [quote user="Christine Animal"]Jocasta Innes, The Pauper's Cookbook. I've got her book somewhere. No need to be rich to eat delicious. One of my favurites:http://www.cookipedia.co.uk/recipes_wiki/Onion,_bacon_and_potato_hotpot [/quote]I used to have that book, and that was my favourite recipe. Thanks for reminding me of it [:)] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clair Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 [quote user="Christine Animal"]Jocasta Innes... [/quote]I remember her! [I]Didn't she used to be on telly a lot, at the time of Changing Rooms and all that decorating phase?She used to have a run of "decorating" shops where you could take a few courses. My boss at the time paid for a Mosaic course and I also did a Painted Floor Cloth, both of which I really enjoyed...I had no idea she had written a cookery book! Something worth investigating... Thanks for the link![:)]Edit: Evidently, she wrote more than one cookery book...http://www.amazon.fr/... field-keywords=Jocasta+Innes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Christine Animal Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 You're dead right Clair. All I knew about her was my little Pauper's Cookbook.Jocasta Innes, Writer, Cook and Paint Specialist [:)] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clair Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 As an alternative to Jocasta Innes' book, I'd suggest Saint Delia of the Smith's very own Frugal Food, re-issued in 2008. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Christine Animal Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 Mmmm yes Welsh rarebit, something my mother used to do so well. You're making me hungry!I was looking for Jocasta Innes' red cabbage recipe and found this, you can see 66 pages of The Pauper's Cookbook. I'm off to find mine now!The Pauper's Cookbook 66 pages of it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
5-element Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 I've still got my copy of "The Pauper's cookbook" too, and I consult it occasionally - always with results,,, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loiseau Posted July 24, 2012 Share Posted July 24, 2012 Katherine Whitehorn's "Cooking in a Bedsitter" kept me alive in the 1960s, and I still return to it for pancake batter, chocolate mousse, and zabaglione - as well as for Mediterranean Fish and a host of other tasty things.Angela Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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