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  • AHopeOnceMore [he/him]B
    ·
    1 year ago

    Here are some ideas!

    • Peas and rice. It's a Caribbean coconut rice with beans in it and very good. Coconut is a great source of vegan fat, which increases your calories on the cheap.

    • Chili.

    • Basically any Indian dal. Chickpea dishes, black dal, red beans, toor dal.

    • baking your own bread is pretty easy so long as you have a pot you can put in the oven - or if you can spritz with water every 5-10 minutes.

    • tofu can be reasonably priced and is delicious. Make east Asian food with it. Fry it in a little oil the lazy way - cut into triangles, let it fry for 5-10 minutes per side.

    • pasta dishes can be reasonably priced

    • pb&j is underrated

    • Mexican rice and frijoles negros

    • making your own seitan is reasonably doable, just get some broth (better than bouillon is yummy) and vital wheat gluten, combine, knead, and steam. It can then be used as a meat substitute, like in a pasta dish. Put some fennel and a couple other spices in it and you have a sausage substitute that you can brown and incorporate into a pasta with peppers. You can also make tacos and burritos with it.

    • Don't sleep on soups. A nice Greek chickpea soup is so easy. Chop up carrots, celery, onions, and fry a bit too develop flavor. Then add water and your broth mixture, cooked chickpeas, salt, olive oil, black or white pepper, and lemon to taste.

    • thai curries are actually very easy and go great with fried tofu and veggies.

    • there's a ton of Chinese stuff that's good. Just like with Indian food, could probably write books on good vegan options. Various styles of tofu, noodles, vegetables, dumplings...

    • Soy curls are really good, they're basically tvp with a better texture. Just soak em and then flavor with broth, use as a substitute for chicken. Good in salads, good deep fried, good dry fried with a bunch of spices (like for tacos), good with sesame soy sauce.

  • edwardligma [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    people have covered actual meals pretty well, just want to add to try and find spices in the big bags that they often sell at asian/indian groceries (maybe also some supermarkets) depending where you are. you can get a giant bag for like $2.50 where i am that will last for ages for the same prices as one of those little white people spice containers they have at the supermarket, its literally 10x cheaper. adding plenty of spices is one of the keys to making cheap vegan food tasty so its well worth it

  • GaveUp [she/her]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Potatoes (with skin on) are by far the best calories and nutrition you can get with money in a lot of places

    Make curry with it and add carrots and onions

  • NephBeans [none/use name]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Lentils and rice can be cooked together in a rice cooker or a pot. Rice and split red lentils have pretty much the same cooking time, so when one is done the other is as well. You can use vegetable stock at half strength instead of water which makes the flavour nice. Beyond that maybe a little hot sauce and you're good.

    No chopping, no knives, one pot meal. prep time is about 20 minutes.

    I would use 1/2 cups rice and 1/2 cups lentils. With 2 cups of half strength vege stock (or water).

    Protein = 23g +7g =30g

    Calories= 340 + 350 =700

    If you wanted to add some more cheap calories and flavour I would put in 1-2 TBSP olive oil, the meal is pretty low in fats to start with.

    I think you could make this for well under 2$ per serving, and it makes a pretty large meal.

    Good luck my vegan comrade

  • WoofWoof91 [comrade/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    spuds are good and versatile
    sweet potatoes also if they are cheap where you live
    carrots are hilariously cheap where i am, so i eat a lot of them
    frozen peas
    onions
    mushrooms are cheap here too

      • Kuori [she/her]
        ·
        1 year ago

        if you ever manage to scrape together enough cash/room for a cheap mushroom-growing setup you can have more than you know what to do with pretty easily

        a single bouillon cube can make you 2~ full meals (depending on how much you eat) worth of soup if you add in a can or two (or whatever) of vegetables and some rice. it's not much but it can be a nice and inexpensive option.

  • StarlightGlimmer [they/them]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Sign up for EBT? I'd suggest flour and oil, sugar baking powder/soda etc. So you can make waffles, pancakes, cakes for treaties. Also oatmeal

  • LaBellaLotta [any]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Chili and Rice. Covers all the important macros, filling and delicious. All you need is onion, tomato paste, some kind of chili spices and beans of course

  • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Depending what kitchenware and time you have access to I'd suggest flour and corn flour, a thickener like cornstarch for soups, then some sort of fat like margarine or corn oil for cooking and frying. Hominy, frozen strawberries are other cheaper bulk things I can think of that you can do a lot with. Also noodles and pastas, depending on location.

    With flour you can make tortillas, then have rice and bean burritos with salsa. It doesn't have to be the expensive flour for tortillas, any AP flour will do. Could also make dumpling drop soup with carrots, potatoes, whatever herbs you can get your hands on, and a little plant milk of some sort.

    With corn flour you can make sopes and top them with pretty much anything you have around, usually beans. Also with corn flour you can make corn tortillas, and if you fry or bake those you'll end up with corn chips.

  • Nagarjuna [he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    Anything free is vegan since you're not supporting the meat industry, so anything you. Get from the food bank is vegan.