Although we've gotten most of our
kitchen toys when we had money to burn, and not as investments,
they've paid for themselves many times over. I've compiled a list of
the things we've frequently referred to as “the best investment
ever”. They're in the order that, if starting from scratch, I
would buy them now.
Chest Freezer (Cost: $120)
We couldn't do a lot of what we do –
once-a-month shopping trips, making 30 pounds of bratwursts, etc. -
without a chest freezer to store all the extra food in. I love,
love, love my freezer. If I could figure out a good organizational
system for it, I'd love it even more.
Food Saver (Cost: $80 + cost
of bags)
Meat
is always cheaper in huge family packs; this helps us repackage them
into more reasonable sizes. It also comes in handy for a lot of our
made-at-home products. We tend to go all out with projects –
making 30 pounds of bratwurst at a time, or making 100+ egg rolls –
which means we need a way to store all of our treats. The food saver
is a lot easier, and more efficient, than wrapping with plastic wrap
or foil, or using Tupperware after Tupperware.
Crock pot Cost: ($30)
By
now, everyone knows of the joys of crock pot cooking – just throw
a bunch of ingredients in early on, and come back a few hours later
to a nice dinner. We use ours mainly to make stock, though. Buying
chicken and turkey whole is much cheaper than buying cut-up, and we
use the bones to make stock. Our freezer almost always has over a
gallon of various stocks in it, to later use in risotto or soup.
Making risotto is a great way to not get tired of eating rice as
often as we do.
Kitchenaid mixer (Cost:
$250-$400)
This was a birthday present from Randy
seven or so years ago, and it pains me to put it so far down on the
list because I adore it. However, it's the most expensive thing on
the list, and is – in many cases – more of a convenience than a
necessity. I use it for everything I bake, because it gets me to the
good part (eating cookie dough!) much more quickly. It even makes
kneading bread - my least favorite part of bread-making - a breeze.
Without the mixer, I'm fine kneading for a minute or two, but all
recipes call for 7-10 minutes, which I don't have the patience for!
With the dough hook, I just set the timer and check a few times to
make sure I don't need to add more flour. This makes it much more
likely that I will bake something. While baking frenzies come and
go, we haven't bought bread for months, thanks to our ample freezer
space.
The best thing about the Kitchenaid,
though, is the zillions of attachments you can get for it.
Kitchenaid Attachments Cost:
($40-$150)
Although it made sense at the time, to
get a Kitchenaid, I don't know that I would buy one right now if all
I used it for was baking. Yes, it makes it easier, but tight budgets
and paying for convenience don't work well together. With the added
benefit of the attachments, though, its well worth saving up and
investing in one. Even if that does
mean you'll always have “just one more” attachment you want to
buy.
We use the meat grinder attachment most
frequently; for some reason, ground beef is often more expensive than
other cuts of beef. We go to WinCo (in my opinion, the best grocery
store for those on a budget, hands-down) and get whatever meat is
cheapest, and grind it up if a recipe calls for it. Some meats are
ridiculously cheaper this way - ground turkey can run $4/lb, but a
whole turkey is rarely more than $1/lb - and it lets us have a bit
more freedom in our recipe choices; if you buy ground meat, you can't
turn it into a roast, but it works well the other way around! The sausage stuffer is also getting
good use – sausage casings are cheap, and it's easy to turn a big
chunk-o-pork or a turkey into bratwursts. This summer, we plan on
branching out to more complicated sausages (salami, kielbasa) and
filling our freezer! If I
didn't have a Kitchenaid, I would get a meat grinder/sausage stuffer
independently.
We also have the pasta roller, which is
handy, although we only use it intermittently; fresh pasta is good,
but it's also really cheap to buy in bulk. I usually use it if I
want to make ravioli or experiment with a new type of pasta.
The slicer/shredder is basically a
salad shooter on overdrive. I mainly use it to make hash browns on
the weekend. They come out much better when I use the shredder as
opposed to the hand grater. We don't make salads often enough to
utilize it as much as it could be. However, since I'm married to a
hash brown junkie, it's worth it.
There are tons more attachments
available that I don't have but lust after: grain mill, pasta
extruder (to make macaroni and other tube-y pastas), ice cream maker
and more. Some would make sense on a cost-saving measure, but
mostly, they're fun kitchen gadgets. Please feel free to give me any
of them!
Meat slicer (Cost: Getting
married)
This was a wedding present from my
sister and brother-in-law and it makes me wish Randy and I had gotten
married years ago. We use it constantly – sometimes for meat, yes,
but mostly for cheese and bread. I can slice bread as well as any
four-year-old, but it is nice to have regular, even slices. Slicing
cheese to deli-thin makes it last longer (my cheese-slicing skills
are on par with my bread-slicing skills), and we can make lunch meat
for less than half the cost of buying it at the deli.
Barbecue with smoke box
attachment (Cost: $100)
This was quite a bit cheaper and harder
to find than I anticipated; it seems that most people prefer gas
grills (or at least that's what the stores think, because good luck
finding a regular charcoal grill). We found it shoved on a shelf in
a back corner of Lowe's a few years ago. We haven't used it as much
as it deserves, because at our old place, it required schlepping
everything downstairs (and back up afterward); here, we have no
stairs and it's already getting more use. Randy even snow-b-qued
this year (check one thing off his New Year's list!) It's good for
making ribs, and the smoke box (which was $30 or so of the total
cost) makes it easy to replenish the coals without losing the heat.
I'm still working on regulating the temperature for low-n-slow
cooking.
Espresso Machine (Cost: $60)
I
love, love, love mochas. I hate, hate, hate that they cost $4 or
more. As with most things, it's much cheaper to make your own. It
doesn't take long for this to pay for itself, since a can of espresso
is only $7 and makes dozens of drinks. Costco helps out with the
mega-sized Hershey syrup/pump combo, and you're in business. I like
the ability to make my drink the exact way I like it, too...way
overly caffeinated! The only downside is that it only makes one at a
time and it takes a little bit of time. If other people are over, it
can become a chore to make everyone a drink.
Dehydrator (Cost: $40-$100)
I'm
a bit of a texture wuss, so I hate the cheap-o red delicious apples.
I love dried fruit, however, and it's a lot cheaper to buy red
delicious apples and dehydrate them than it is to buy dried apples.
The dehydrator also comes in handy because we only go grocery
shopping once a month, and we tend to load up on fruit. When the
fruit starts getting past the stage where we want to eat it, we slice
it up and throw it on the dehydrator.
Little Chief Smoker (Cost:
Awesome parents!)
This doesn't really count as an investment on our part, because
Randy's parents bought it for him for his birthday this year.
However, given the amount of use we plan on getting out of it, I'm
going to count it. Look for lots of posts on jerkies, smoked fish,
and smoked sausages. Yum!