Every Wednesday is Domestic Science day at Living Behind the Curve.
Do you love to entertain, with fancy-schmancy food that makes your friends “ooh” and “aah” each time the next course arrives at the table? Wouldn’t it be great to entertain like that while sticking to your fabulously frugal budget?
Inspired by a last-minute visit from an out-of-town friend, Mer and I did just that this past week. With a little creativity and some interesting number-crunching, we threw a dinner party for 6*, for under $25.
The $25 Dinner Party Menu
Appetizer: Fried Chinese Noodles with Sweet and Sour Dipping Sauce
Entree: Stuffed Teriyaki Pork Loin (pictured)
Side Dish: Peanut-Ginger Noodle Salad (pictured)
Dessert: Coconut Flan with Caramel Sauce
Beverage: Spiced Peach Tea Fizz
All of that for $24.71. The recipes are linked above, but this is how the money broke down (click to enlarge):
If you click through to both the recipes and the spreadsheet, you’ll notice that there are a lot of ingredients missing; that’s because I used a lot of what I already had on hand, and formed my menu to fit my food, and not the other way around. If there is one secret to entertaining well on a budget, it’s this: you need to know how to adapt your recipes. Want to try the flan, but don’t have coconut milk? Try sweetened condensed milk instead. Don’t have chai tea for the noodle salad dressing? Use good ol’ American black tea.
One other trick that made this possible was bulk-buying. I couldn’t get the amount of pork I needed for $5.92, because prices are higher in small quantities. Instead, I spent $17.76 on a whole pork loin, and cut it in thirds. One portion fed us that night (and lunch the following day), one was roasted off for Sunday dinner, and the last is in our freezer for a future meal.
I hope I’ve inspired you to do your own kitchen alchemy. If you have a frugal dinner worth drooling over, I’d love to hear about it!
*There were only 3 of us in attendance, but I purposely cooked enough for 6, so that we would have leftovers.
Categories: $25 dinner party| domestic science| entertaining| frugality| lifestyle| recipes
Very good idea. I don’t throw fancy dinner parties, but the kids have friends over often. Something like roast chicken and baked potatoes feeds a crowd much less expensively than frozen taquitos and chicken tenders.
@Jora:
If you have a few hours on a weekend, try making a big batch of homemade chicken tenders: take boneless skinless chicken (breasts or thighs) and cut it into strips. Dredge the strips in flour, egg, and breadcrumbs, and then sautee them lightly on both sides to get a nice brown crust. Pop them in the oven at about 350 for 15-20 minutes to cook through, cool, and freeze. When the kids want a snack, you’ve got your own microwavable chicken tenders!