Hey, I'm Bruce Weinstein and this is the podcast cooking with Bruce and Mark
Speaker:and I'm Mark Scarborough and together with Bruce We have well, I guess
Speaker:been together for 26 years, right?
Speaker:27 oh, it's a losing time 27 years and we have written three dozen books.
Speaker:We're writing our three dozen than one cookbook right now.
Speaker:We'll tell you more about that later down the line, but this is
Speaker:our podcast about food and cooking.
Speaker:We've got a one minute cooking tip coming up.
Speaker:We're going to tell you when to splurge and skimp at the supermarket,
Speaker:given these increasingly inflationary times, and we'll tell you what's
Speaker:making us happy in food this week.
Speaker:So let's get started.
Speaker:One minute cooking tip is about grating cheese.
Speaker:You know, it could be a mess when you try and grate.
Speaker:Soft cheddar or great.
Speaker:A block of mozzarella.
Speaker:It just gets mushy.
Speaker:Sometimes we're talking.
Speaker:We're talking to even semi firm mozzarella, not just even fresh
Speaker:months, which is almost impossible.
Speaker:So here's the trick.
Speaker:Freeze it for 20 minutes.
Speaker:You put your cheese in the freezer, not to freeze it hard, just so it firms
Speaker:up and then you can grade it without a mess without making that cheese paste.
Speaker:And let me also say about grading cheese while we're on it.
Speaker:If you haven't replaced your box grater in a while, now's the time.
Speaker:Because just like any blade, the blades on your box grater go dull
Speaker:over time and dull blades eventually will not really cut anything.
Speaker:If you notice, for example, when you grate a carrot that you end up with a lot
Speaker:of little shreds all over the counter, including the bigger shreds from the
Speaker:hulls, then your blades are going dull and are getting off center and all that stuff.
Speaker:Replace your box grater, and not only will you grate better cheese, but
Speaker:you'll grate better vegetables too.
Speaker:And let me say this, if you're getting a new box grater, and as Mark said,
Speaker:they're sharp, rather than shred the skin off your hands while you're shredding
Speaker:your cheese and your vegetables.
Speaker:Buy yourself a cut proof gloves.
Speaker:They sell them at hardware stores, they sell them on Amazon.
Speaker:You can get one of those and you can shred all the cheese you want without
Speaker:getting your palm into the mix.
Speaker:Oh, can I tell you a story before we go on to the next segment?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:One time I was making an apple pie, Bruce does this.
Speaker:I was making an apple pie and I was using a mandolin, not a box cutter,
Speaker:but a mandolin to shred or cut.
Speaker:thin slices of apples, and I wasn't wearing a cut proof glove, and I wasn't
Speaker:using the hand guard, I know, and I took the skin off one of my knuckles,
Speaker:and I couldn't find it among the apple pieces, so that night, there was a
Speaker:little bit of meat in that apple pie.
Speaker:Wasn't vegetarian.
Speaker:No, it was no longer a vegan pie under any circumstances, but, uh, anyway.
Speaker:Don't let that happen to you.
Speaker:Learn from my mistakes.
Speaker:Before we get to the next segment of our podcast, let me say
Speaker:that there's a Facebook group Cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:You can find us there.
Speaker:You can connect with us.
Speaker:We'd love to hear more about your cooking adventures too.
Speaker:We post these podcasts there and you can even continue the conversations
Speaker:we're having there on Facebook.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:On to the next segment splurging and skimping at the supermarket.
Speaker:I do most of the shopping in this house, so I kind of see what's
Speaker:happening with the prices, and I get dumbfounded at how expensive things
Speaker:like flour and milk have become.
Speaker:It's like crazy.
Speaker:And so I'm always looking for ways to save money at the market.
Speaker:And if you've listened to this podcast for a while, you've probably heard Mark and
Speaker:me talk about using the store apps on your phone where you will get Oh, yes, please.
Speaker:Discounts, exclusive savings, special offers, and it will
Speaker:really help you save some money.
Speaker:And let me just say that Bruce does most of the shopping, if you don't
Speaker:know, because he's the chef in RTO.
Speaker:It's not just that I'm a princess.
Speaker:It is that.
Speaker:But it's not just that I'm a princess.
Speaker:It's that, in fact, he is the chef.
Speaker:So He's creating most of the recipes for our books.
Speaker:So it's his list mostly to pay attention to.
Speaker:And he's right.
Speaker:Use those apps.
Speaker:And I should say that you probably know we live in rural New England,
Speaker:but we were in Silicon Valley to visit Bruce's family a month ago,
Speaker:about, I don't know, a while ago.
Speaker:And, uh, the prices in rural New England are nothing compared to Silicon
Speaker:Valley.
Speaker:I couldn't believe it.
Speaker:I thought it was a lot to spend, you know, 6.
Speaker:99 on a pint of high end vegan ice cream here, that same vegan ice cream.
Speaker:It's 10.
Speaker:99 in their local store.
Speaker:We went out to dinner with his sister one night, and we stopped at a big up end
Speaker:chain in Silicon Valley to buy some ice cream for dessert back home, and Bruce
Speaker:wanted a bag of grapes for breakfast.
Speaker:And so we bought five pints of ice cream and a bag of grapes, and it
Speaker:was 65 to walk out of that place.
Speaker:I was like, what?
Speaker:Wait, what just happened to me?
Speaker:Explain that again.
Speaker:So, um, yes, prices are high here in rural New England, but they
Speaker:ain't nothing like Silicon Valley.
Speaker:So let's talk about.
Speaker:splurging and skimping.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:One of the places that I always splurge in the supermarket is in the meat department.
Speaker:I have a feeling that a lot of people feel this way, that if you
Speaker:go and you see the meat is really cheap, it's got to be a reason.
Speaker:So first thing is Ask the butcher why it's priced to sell.
Speaker:This particularly works with ground meat, in which there is pink slime
Speaker:and sludge and all that added to expand the amount of ground meat.
Speaker:Um, better meat that is truly just ground meat is actually
Speaker:going to be more expensive, and that is a place to, uh, splurge.
Speaker:And also, let's just say that, you know, be careful about less
Speaker:expensive poultry and pork products.
Speaker:Let's just be careful because a lot of times, if you don't know
Speaker:Poultry is injected with a solution.
Speaker:You can see it on the label.
Speaker:May contain up to 15 percent of a solution.
Speaker:And this is a brine that does make the poultry tastier, but you're
Speaker:also paying for that solution.
Speaker:You're paying for a water weight.
Speaker:Oh, great.
Speaker:Eight 99 a pound for water weight.
Speaker:Yeah, you are.
Speaker:And you're doing that with pork products too.
Speaker:You are.
Speaker:And let's face it.
Speaker:We have bought those super large packages of extra large boneless breasts sometimes.
Speaker:And yes, it has saved me a dollar a pound to buy them.
Speaker:Are they the best chicken I've ever eaten?
Speaker:No, they tend to be tough.
Speaker:They're not very flavorful.
Speaker:In poultry, you get what you pay for.
Speaker:So if you're looking for tender chicken, you're looking for flavorful, you're
Speaker:going to have to spend a little more.
Speaker:So the meat department is a place I splurge.
Speaker:But you can certainly figure out ways to skimp amongst the
Speaker:canned goods and dry goods.
Speaker:And let me just say that if you don't know, many store brands are actually
Speaker:packaged by the same manufacturers who make the big named brands.
Speaker:And in fact, many times it's just a different label or
Speaker:carton slapped on the product.
Speaker:So consider store goods in the canned department and dry goods department.
Speaker:Perhaps your go to.
Speaker:That is an excellent way to skim.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like beans.
Speaker:I mean, really, if you buy a store brand beans, I don't think you're
Speaker:going to notice a difference in your hummus all that much.
Speaker:And if you're buying unbleached flour, you don't need to spend
Speaker:9 for the five pound bag.
Speaker:If you're just baking a cake or cookies, or it's going to be
Speaker:the same with the store brand.
Speaker:Yes, exactly.
Speaker:And this goes even for packaged products like hummus is like dips.
Speaker:Remember that the store brand is often just one of the big brands repackaged.
Speaker:So just be really careful in what you buy.
Speaker:Now, are there differences in home?
Speaker:I Is that the plural?
Speaker:Are there differences in Hawaii out there?
Speaker:Of course there are.
Speaker:There are lots of differences.
Speaker:And in fact, some are much better than others.
Speaker:Some taste about like mayonnaise and some of them, I love mayonnaise,
Speaker:but not in my home is some taste about like mayonnaise and some have
Speaker:much more of that chickpea flavor.
Speaker:So are there differences?
Speaker:Of course, but also just be a wary customer and know that
Speaker:packaging can be deceiving.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And here's a place that I splurge.
Speaker:And skimp.
Speaker:So this is a weird one.
Speaker:Canned tomatoes.
Speaker:I can skimp on canned tomatoes, just like Mark said, with the
Speaker:beans and all that other stuff.
Speaker:If I'm dumping them in a soup, if I'm, you know, making something
Speaker:where they're going to disappear, you know, inside of a pot roast, maybe.
Speaker:But let's say I want to make just marinara sauce, or I want to
Speaker:make a bolognese sauce, where the tomatoes are the key ingredient.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Then I'm going to splurge and I'm going to get nice San
Speaker:Marzano tomatoes, but be careful.
Speaker:Why, Mark?
Speaker:There's often, again, a packaging problem here.
Speaker:Many cans of San Marzano tomatoes say San Marzano style tomatoes
Speaker:or Italian style tomatoes.
Speaker:Do not pay the upmark if it's San Marzano style.
Speaker:It's not worth it.
Speaker:Now, let me tell you another place here that's worth the splurge, in my
Speaker:opinion, and that is tomato paste.
Speaker:Tomato paste is most often added toward the end as a thickener or an
Speaker:enricher to a stew or a pan sauce or things like that and cheaper varieties
Speaker:of tomato paste just won't cut it.
Speaker:They're nothing but sweet.
Speaker:If you go up a little bit and spend a little more on tomato paste and it
Speaker:lasts a long time in the toothpaste tube in your fridge, if you're so
Speaker:willing to buy it that way and reseal it, the can is not really resealable.
Speaker:That tomato paste is actually worth a buck more than the cheaper variety.
Speaker:While we're talking about tomatoes and produce, let me say also, a
Speaker:really good splurge is to pay the dues for a big box store because their
Speaker:produce comes in large containers.
Speaker:You may think, well, I don't eat that much, but Mark and I belong to one.
Speaker:And we have found that the produce we buy there
Speaker:You know what we're talking about.
Speaker:Big
Speaker:warehouse stores where you can't where they ought to just charge your credit card
Speaker:300 when you walk in the door, you know,
Speaker:we could buy giant bags of avocados and giant bags of peppers and there's so
Speaker:much cheap in the supermarket and they don't go bad before we eat them because
Speaker:we find that they are so fresh that The splurge of that membership saves us so
Speaker:much money through the year on produce.
Speaker:I know we do eat a lot of avocados in our house and it is much
Speaker:cheaper to buy the big thing of avocados at the big box store.
Speaker:But let me also say that you can skimp in a lot of ways on dairy because
Speaker:listen, the store brands also include organic dairy and if that matters
Speaker:to you, don't pay the buck or two bucks or however much more it is.
Speaker:the quid, if you're listening in the UK or the euro up on the dairy stuff that is
Speaker:branded out and may not just be the store brand in many cases, it's the same thing.
Speaker:Now, there are some manufacturers who insist that let's say their organic milk
Speaker:is Only they're organic milk, and you can do a little research and figure that out.
Speaker:But if you're gonna pay up for organic milk, then skimp by buying
Speaker:the store's brand of organic milk.
Speaker:And when you're not talking organic, there is so little difference in the taste of
Speaker:standard milk from one brand to the other.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:That go ahead and buy the cheapest, but do look at the expiration date
Speaker:because sometimes your store might mark it down because it's going to
Speaker:expire tomorrow or the day after.
Speaker:And if that's the case, that's okay.
Speaker:If you're going to use it right
Speaker:away.
Speaker:And you're saying this for the U.
Speaker:S.
Speaker:listeners, his podcast, because Europeans and others put milk on
Speaker:the shelf for about 700 years.
Speaker:They have
Speaker:shelf stable, aseptic packaging.
Speaker:I know Mark and I were in Europe, Spain last year and.
Speaker:There was no fresh dairy milk to be had anywhere.
Speaker:All the milk was on the shelves with the Coke.
Speaker:As, well, can I dare say, as it should be.
Speaker:Okay, I'm not going to add that part.
Speaker:I'm just going to say that there you go.
Speaker:This is really the important part to skimp.
Speaker:Frozen fruits and vegetables are really great because when you find
Speaker:them on sale, you can buy a couple packages and squirrel them away.
Speaker:And if you don't know, many vegetables are picked.
Speaker:unripe and are quote unquote ripened or let us just say change color
Speaker:in transit to your supermarket.
Speaker:But frozen vegetables and fruits most often must be picked very close to
Speaker:ripeness because they are often flash frozen either right in the field or within
Speaker:a couple hours of coming out of the field.
Speaker:And therefore, the strawberries, let's say, and the frozen strawberries have
Speaker:to be picked very close to ripeness.
Speaker:So remember, frozen vegetables are at times a deal.
Speaker:And if you can find them on sale stock
Speaker:up.
Speaker:Okay, I want to talk about a splurge jarred pasta sauce.
Speaker:And here's why I think that when I go to the store and I look at the
Speaker:jarred pasta sauces that are 1.
Speaker:99, look at the label, they're made with sugar, sugar,
Speaker:They're made with corn syrup.
Speaker:They're made with reconstituted tomatoes.
Speaker:When you look at the more expensive jars, they tend to have no added sweeteners.
Speaker:They're made from fresh tomatoes.
Speaker:So read the labels there.
Speaker:I do personally think the flavor of the higher end jarred pasta
Speaker:sauces is worth the splurge.
Speaker:They are, but Here's the thing.
Speaker:Pasta is not.
Speaker:And you can skimp on pasta.
Speaker:And I know that there are all those nasty Italian husbands on TikTok and Instagram
Speaker:who are so snotty about North America.
Speaker:I just hate them.
Speaker:They're so snotty about everything is terrible in North America.
Speaker:Listen.
Speaker:Is, is pasta, is there a great variety of pasta?
Speaker:Yes, there is.
Speaker:Are there great differences amongst dried pastas, particularly in North America?
Speaker:Yes, there are.
Speaker:But if you're looking for good semolina pasta, then, you know, you don't have to
Speaker:go for the most expensive imported brand.
Speaker:You can skip that kind of, dare I say, Italian husband induced
Speaker:marketing, and you can buy a Decent semolina pasta dried for less money
Speaker:without all the folder all including
Speaker:store brands, including store brands,
Speaker:and the same thing goes for oats.
Speaker:If you're making oatmeal, that kind of stuff, listen, the store
Speaker:brand is going to save you money.
Speaker:Over the other stuff and it mostly comes out of the same facility and I
Speaker:should just say just remember if you or someone You know is either celiac
Speaker:or has a wheat allergy in some way.
Speaker:Remember Oats are only good for you if they are certified gluten free Oats are
Speaker:processed mostly in the same facilities that process wheat and there can be
Speaker:wheat dust residual on the oats so, you know great pay for certified Gluten free
Speaker:oats, but by the store brand, seriously.
Speaker:And the last one on our list, butter.
Speaker:If you're eating butter on toast, if you're eating butter just from the stick
Speaker:form, if you're just eating butter.
Speaker:Eating a stick of butter.
Speaker:That's what I meant, if you're just eating it from the stick.
Speaker:Oh god, gross.
Speaker:Then you splurge and you get really Good butter.
Speaker:If you're baking cookies with it, I know a lot of people are going to argue
Speaker:with me on this and don't argue with me.
Speaker:It does not going to make a difference in the cake.
Speaker:If you use store brand butter when
Speaker:I was in grad school in Madison, Wisconsin, this is long before Dr.
Speaker:Now and my 600 life.
Speaker:Um, there was a guy brought into the UW Madison Hospital and I was famous
Speaker:with some of the docs and residents there just as graduate school friends.
Speaker:And this guy had been brought in.
Speaker:He had to be airlifted out of his house.
Speaker:He was huge, you know, 800 pounds and he lost like a hundred pounds.
Speaker:Unfortunately, the guy did die pretty quickly of heart failure, but he did lose
Speaker:like a hundred pounds in the first week.
Speaker:And I said to one of the docs, I said, how come, how could this guy
Speaker:lose a hundred pounds in a week?
Speaker:And the answer was they.
Speaker:took him off his daily snack of two sticks of butter.
Speaker:So yes, that would cause you to lose some weight, to stop
Speaker:eating two sticks of butter a
Speaker:day.
Speaker:I wonder if he skimped or splurged on that.
Speaker:But just remember this, and we keep
Speaker:saying, go ahead and order those tacos, because everybody on my 600
Speaker:pound life has a girlfriend or a boyfriend, so don't worry about it.
Speaker:You won't be alone.
Speaker:If that's.
Speaker:If you're not eating the tacos because you're worried, don't
Speaker:worry.
Speaker:Somebody's bringing them those tacos, right?
Speaker:I know, but it's like, come on.
Speaker:You know, like I, I starved myself all through my early thirties
Speaker:so that I would be thin and, you know, be able to attract a guy
Speaker:like Bruce.
Speaker:Oh, it goes back to my, just my basic philosophy.
Speaker:There's someone for everyone.
Speaker:And I know Mark doesn't agree with me, but there is someone for everyone.
Speaker:I have a much more tragic
Speaker:vision of life.
Speaker:But anyway, I starved myself.
Speaker:I should have just been eating the tacos.
Speaker:Because, you know, what did it matter?
Speaker:Well, anyway, that's a story for another day.
Speaker:So those are our splurge and skimp bits for this podcast.
Speaker:Thanks for listening, and let me remind you that we do have a newsletter.
Speaker:It's not necessarily connected to this podcast.
Speaker:It comes out about a about twice a month.
Speaker:Sometimes the recipes that appear in this podcast appear in the newsletter
Speaker:a week later, a few days later, sometimes a couple of weeks later.
Speaker:Again, it comes out about twice a month.
Speaker:You can sign up for that by going to our website, Bruce and mark.
Speaker:com or cooking with Bruce and mark.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:Either way goes to the same place.
Speaker:Uh, you can sign up there.
Speaker:And again, as I always Tell you, I do not capture your name or your email.
Speaker:I don't even see it.
Speaker:I just see the numbers go up or down on the number of subscribes
Speaker:and unsubscribes, and I don't allow the service to capture it either.
Speaker:So you can always subscribe and you can always unsubscribe whenever you want to.
Speaker:You can find that on our website, the form, scroll down the
Speaker:splash page and you'll find it.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Last segment.
Speaker:What's making us happy in food this week,
Speaker:Chinese ribs.
Speaker:I have developed a way.
Speaker:So if you have watched any of my TikTok videos on our TikTok channel, could be
Speaker:Bruce and Mark, you have seen me make char siu chicken and char siu pork.
Speaker:So I have taken my char siu marinade, which I have perfected at this point
Speaker:with fermented red tofu and soy and brown sugar and vinegar and ginger.
Speaker:Red tofu is just not your ever, you, it's not a splurge or a
Speaker:skimp item that's just ridiculous.
Speaker:But go on.
Speaker:And I puree that all up and I, what I, we had company over the other night and I cut
Speaker:up a rack of baby back ribs and I put them in a Ziploc bag and I poured this red,
Speaker:sweet, luscious marinade over it all day.
Speaker:I put them in the air fryer and I gave them about.
Speaker:10 minutes at 375.
Speaker:I turned them 10 more minutes.
Speaker:They were luscious.
Speaker:They were delicious.
Speaker:And at that same dinner, what's making me happy were the red oil dumplings.
Speaker:Bruce made the pork dumplings, Asian dumplings that are so
Speaker:called red oil dumplings.
Speaker:And he put a ton, which is really nice for me, a ton of cucumbers
Speaker:and chopped up scallions and peanuts and all that around them.
Speaker:So it wasn't just the dumplings.
Speaker:And he put fresh.
Speaker:Green Szechuan peppercorns, which are super numbing and then he poured
Speaker:a hot sizzling oil over the top.
Speaker:It was Ridiculous and I can say that four people ate how many dumplings
Speaker:there were 57 dumplings Four
Speaker:people ate 57.
Speaker:I don't know why my stomach and the
Speaker:whole regular ribs And I don't know why my stomach hurt and how many glass how many?
Speaker:bottles of champagne
Speaker:that I was very careful about, but the rest of it, um, I don't know why my
Speaker:stomach hurt, but boy, it was so good.
Speaker:It was worth the stomachache at midnight.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So I played bridge for an hour on my phone and then fell asleep.
Speaker:So it was worth it because those red oil dumplings were so delicious
Speaker:and I can't wait to have them again.
Speaker:That's our podcast for this week.
Speaker:Thanks for joining us in our passion.
Speaker:food and cooking.
Speaker:We're glad you're a part of this journey, and we look forward to connecting with
Speaker:you on social media or however we can.
Speaker:And every
Speaker:week we tell you what's making us happy in food.
Speaker:So tell us what's making you happy in food this week on our Facebook page.
Speaker:Cooking with Bruce and Mark.
Speaker:If it's really great, we'll share it and talk about it
Speaker:here on Cooking with Bruce and