The picture is your starter. Assume a basic pantry for your other ingredients. What are you cooking?

These two ingredients were less than $4 total when I bought them.

For me, an obvious choice here is quesadillas. A little bit of salt, baking powder, oil and water and you have tortillas. You could add a little sour cream or hot sauce or peppers and onions or any number of other things to make this into a meal.

What are you going to make? How much is it going to cost per a person? Bonus points if you know how long it’s going to take? You kind of have to rest tortilla dough for 30 minutes. So for two people this meal is going to take me about an hour.

Not included in the price is the cutting board. I made it years ago as an experiment to see if I could frame an edge face cutting board without it cracking breaking itself apart. It’s made of poplar and it refuses to die. Materials caused on it was probably about $10. Labor time was probably about 2 hours.

Poplar makes a horrible cutting board. It’s too soft even though it’s a hardwood. However, for end grain butcher blocks it’s a champion. I usually only use this for cutting and serving pizza because every knife mark shows on it.

  • FauxPseudo @lemmy.worldOPM
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    7 days ago

    Every time I’ve tried hasselback potatoes, I’ve been disappointed. It always seems like they don’t cook evenly. So the centers are raw and the outsides are overdone? I suppose lower and slower might work. What’s your time and temperature on them? Do you wrap them? What fat are you using?

    • TeNppa@sopuli.xyz
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      7 days ago

      I have successfully made the hasselbacks every time. I just cut a small slice horizontally at the bottom so they stay put when I slice into them and slice them very carefully very thin. If you slice them thick, they won’t cook well enough. Then just add melted butter and salt on top. 45-60 minutes in the oven at 225°c (435°f).