Walmart.com has some
Walmart.com has some
Eddie Valiant: "That lame-brain freeway idea could only be cooked up by a toon."
https://wayne-ayearwithbigfootandbubba.blogspot.com
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Wayne,
Sorry I'm so late for the party but our buddy Dutch has a pretty good collection at his site. Hope you find what you need.
Last edited by Farr Away; 04-18-2017 at 11:50.
Blackheart
Chia seeds are the magic fix here! They don't taste like anything or weigh much, are a great source of omega 3 and fiber, and soak up lots of water.
I eat them in my yogurt, but I wouldn't hesitate to put them in anything. You can buy white ones if you don't like having little black seeds in your food.
Something i have always done with ramen and the sort is use extra water to cook it but than before adding any of the flavoring or the sort i will take my fork and use it as a makeshift strainer to reduce the amount of water to a slightly below typical amount. Than i let it sit for mayby 5 minutes than add my flavoring.
You can quite easily make your own dehydrated vegetables. Buy a bag of frozen veggies of your liking, rip open bag and either spread on a dehydrator tray or on a cookie sheet for oven dehydrating. Put them on still frozen. Works great and is likely the easiest thing you will ever dehydrate. No washing, no blanching, no cutting, no peeling etc etc.
Add a big Funky Dumpling
In Praise of Dried Okra
I purchase either dried dried green beans or dried okra from local grocery stores (Krogers and Walmart) to add to my trail dinners of Knorr pasta sides, Knorr rice sides, or mac and cheese. Those dried vegies are marketed as snack foods. Right now I'm munching a few dried "Green Bean Chips" from Walmart. Because they contain some canola oil, but no water, these dried green beans generate a respectable 126 calories per ounce. I use them to add variety, and also some fiber, to my trail diet.
After soaking a handful of dried green beans or dried okra (yummy!) for 10 minutes in my pot with cold water, I then heat that water, including the green beans or okra, to prepare my meal. Recognizing that some water is absorbed by the vegetables, I use slightly more water than package directions specify to make Knorr meals.
Last edited by Siestita; 05-25-2017 at 05:36.
Add 1 TBL corn starch to water to have it boil with food(Ramen). That's what I tried today for lunch, worked great. I cheated a little...added a Thomas, thin bagelUntitled 0 00 03-09.jpg
bagel thins.JPG