
Anyhow, I had a decision to make. Since I've won the $2.00/Day contest that I was recently in, should I soldier on with the same budget? I weighed a couple of things in my decision making. The first is that I didn't feel deprived at all while on the $2.00/day budget. Number two, I was prepared to do this for much longer than just a week and had prepared a list of possible dishes. Those dishes are still there and are still waiting to be cooked. My final decision was to cook as cheaply as possible but not try to maintain an arbitrary price ceiling...pretty much what I was doing before the contest started.
edit: George just got home and convinced me to go as long as I can on $2.00/day. I've agreed.
This is kibbe.
Here's how you make it. This recipe is pretty much stolen straight out of this stupefyingly good cookbook. The many arguments for eating more whole grains usually center around the well-documented health benefits; however, I think the best, most convincing argument of all is that they taste good! Well, to me at least. This recipe uses bulgur wheat (to some people...vulgar sweets, inside joke imo). At the store, you'll find different grades of bulgur wheat...they range from 1-4. The grades aren't in any way indicative of quality. Instead, they refer to the grind...the higher the number, the more coarse the grind. This recipe uses #1 fine grind although I think #2 would also be fine.
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
Measure out one cup of bulgur wheat. Here's what it looks like dry:

Bring a little over 1 cup of water to a boil. Add a large pinch of salt to the water. Throw in the bulgur wheat, give it a stir and turn off the heat. Cover the pot and leave the bulgur wheat alone for ten minutes.
While you're waiting for the wheat, rough chop one onion and throw it into a food processor. Blend.

Take 1/2 of 1 largish bunch of Italian parsley. Pick the leaves off, give them a thorough wash to get rid of any dirt and throw them into the pureed onion. Blend again to combine the parsley with the onion. Add some seasoning. The recipe calls for 1/2 teaspoon of ground cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon of ground cumin, 1/4 teaspoon of ground all spice and a bit of cayenne. I used 1.5 teaspoons of ras-el-hanout and a large pinch of cayenne pepper. Here's what you should have:






Take your seasoned mixture and spread it into a lightly oiled, oven safe pan. You can use some baking dishes if that's what you have handy.


While the kibbe is cooling, get some stuff ready for pita pockets. I had some romaine lettuce. I wish I had a tomato as well. Tear/cut the veggies into bite size chunks. Make a dressing for the romaine (and/or tomato)...if all you have is lemon juice and olive oil, that'd be fine. Doesn't have to be fancy, just squeeze the lemon over the veggies, drizzle a bit of oil and mix. Sprinkle with salt. I used tahini and lemon juice. For my taste, the lemon juice is key...it really helps perk up the kibbe.
Grab a pita bread and open it up. Stuff it with the dressed vegetables and some chunks/scoops of the meat. Here's what you should have:



Time: Let's see...I came into the kitchen, turned the radio on and started listening to the Rabin recording of Paganini #1...the mono recording, not the stereo. Did all the dishes and started cooking. By the time the concerto ended, the kibbe was in the oven. Wait...what? This isn't helping you? Classical music nerds are at an advantage here.
Food cost:
$0.37- Wheat
$2.00- Beef
$0.60 Incidentals
$2.97- Total...will serve PLENTY of people. Lots of pita pockets...