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There are so many places you can start when you decide to become more self-sustaining

But homesteading feels far away when you don’t have land

The good news is that you can still get started!

One of the most important parts of homesteading is learning how to cook from scratch

My journey started in the opposite direction though

I started learning to cook more from scratch before getting interested in homesteading

I started because of research connecting developmental delays to preservatives and dyes in our food

Since my kids had a bad developmental delay, I was determined to try cooking from scratch to see if it would help

Beginners learn to cook from scratch by paying attention to what is important to their family and slowly replacing one store-bought food at a time. Taking baby steps makes them less likely to get overwhelmed and quit.

When I started, I looked at the foods that my kids ate the most and replaced that

My kids are extremely picky eaters and had communication levels on 8-month-olds at the time

So their most eaten food was chips… sadly

The first food that I cut out of our grocery lists was potato chips

I learned to make them at home and played with different flavors

After a week or two, I was feeling more confident and was ready to move on

I didn’t move far, but I did expandI learned to make tortilla chips

Then I learned to make the tortillas for the tortilla chipsWhat you choose to start with needs to be something important to your family

If you don’t eat a lot of chips, starting with chips is not a good idea

You need to be excited and motivated

So look at what you are already eating and choose one of those foods to start with

What are the benefits of cooking from scratch?

There are so many benefits of cooking from scratch

Apart from the obvious that it is better for you, cooking from scratch gives you more freedom and control

I can make countless things from basic staples in our home

It is rare when I find something I want to make from scratch and I don’t have an ingredient

If you go back far enough, many things are made from a similar list of ingredients

So as long as I keep the stapes stocked, I can make something

This lowers emergency trips to the store

Another thing that cooking from scratch helps with is our grocery budget

We were easily spending $1100 a month on food before I started my cooking journey

We didn’t eat out a lot so it was less than some, but we bought a lot of frozen convenience meals

Now I can consistently feed us a nice variety of foods and treats for less than $500 a month, and

I can even go down to $400 or less if needed

Combining cooking from scratch with couponing, we lowered our monthly bills a lot

Obviously, the goal is to start growing and raising our food, but that isn’t doable for us until we get our land

So we start where we can start

How does cooking from scratch fit into homesteading?

A large part of homesteading is cooking

We need food, water, shelter, and companionship to survive

Food is where a lot of focus is because it is a never-ending job

We will never get enough food to never need to worry about it again

So we grow, raise, butcher, cook, and preserve food a lot on a homestead

At the time of writing this, we don’t have the land to grow and raise our food

But learning half the process now will make everything easier when we do get our land

For example, I started deconstructing whole chicken instead of getting it done for me

When whole chicken goes on sale, I usually buy 8 of them

Then I deconstruct them when I get home and put them in the freezer

The goal is to raise our own meat birds

But now all I need to learn is how to raise and butch them because I have already mastered deconstructing and preserving them

I already know how I like it done

This will make the learning process easier later because I have done half the work already

And I will not be learning on my home-raised chicken since there were some mistakes at first

This concept works for all from-scratch cooking

I will know what veggies to grow since I already cook every day

I can keep track of how much of everything we use so I can better plan for what I need to grow and raise

What should I start cooking first?

There is no right answer to this question

You need to start cooking something that makes you excited

I started with chips and quickly expanded to cooking all our dinners

What does your family eat a lot?

Bonus points if that food is expensive

Seeing a difference in our grocery bill was exciting for me

When chips are $3-6 a bag, and my kids easily eat 4 bags a week….

The difference added up fast

We still get some favorites sometimes, but only when it is on sale

There are some flavors I haven’t gotten just right yet

I don’t cut something out of the list until I can make it at home without missing the original

Oatmeal creme pies are an example of that

My husband loves those cookies and bought them every time he had a chance

I worked on that recipe for a while and now he doesn’t miss the store-bought ones at all

I didn’t force anything

Look at what you already buy and start learning to make it

Once you get good enough, not wanting the store-bought one becomes natural

What are pantry staples to keep on hand?

The ingredients that you want to keep on hand will vary slightly depending on your family’s diet, but there are some things I recommend always having on hand.

Some things that I keep in the pantry or freezer are:

  • Flour
  • Sugar
  • Molasses
  • Instant Yeast
  • Honey
  • Oats
  • Baking soda
  • Baking powder
  • Vinegar
  • Butter
  • Olive oil
  • Vegetables (canned or frozen)
  • Many different herbs and spices
  • Rice
  • Beans
  • Bone broth

But you don’t need everything all at once

Get the ingredients that you need for the foods that you are cooking now

Pay attention to what you are buying a lot when shopping

I use a lot of flour, so I make sure that I have at least 10 pounds on hand at all times

This is so I can bake most things and feed my sourdough starter without worrying about running out of flour

This is a trial and error thing in my opinion

If you run out of something, look how much you get and get more next time

9 tips when cooking from scratch

There are many things that you can learn to help you cook from scratch, but some of my top tips are:

  • Keep the most used ingredients on hand
  • Pay attention to things you want to buy
  • Make double and freeze when you can
  • Meal plan a week or two at a time
  • Create a meal master list
  • Schedule what you are making each day, but be flexible
  • Take baby steps
  • Make more than one load of bread and freeze some
  • Save your favorite recipes in one place for easy access
  • Spend a couple of hours a week on make-ahead meals
  • Follow and engage with others on the same journey

Cooking from scratch is a skill

All skills need practice and failure to learn

So don’t get frustrated and quit!

Expect and allow yourself to fail

Then learn from those failures

I went from mainly cooking premade meals to making almost all our food from scratch in one year

It goes fast when you just focus on learning and improving a little every week

Keep the most used ingredients on hand

I live 30 minutes from the closest grocery store, so this is very important for me

But your budget will thank you if you go to the store less even if you live close

I don’t know about you, but something extra always ends up in the cart when I go shopping

If I can go shopping twice a month, I spend a lot less money than I do if I go shopping twice a week

This also allows you to get inspiration in a moment and act on it

I can see a video of cinnamon rolls on TikTok and instantly go make some because I keep the staples in the pantry

Pay attention to things you want to buy

Knowing where to start or what to do next is a common struggle

But you already have that information!

Look at what you want to buy when you go to the store

Are you buying frozen cookie dough?

You can make that!

Do you go through a lot of tortillas?

I never buy them anymore because I LOVE my sourdough tortillas

You don’t have to guess

I know that I like to have frozen convenience meals

I am tempted to buy frozen meals every time I go to the store

So I into the habit of making my own convenience meals

Make double and freeze when you can

One way that I help myself avoid temptation is to make freezer meals

I don’t even use a lot of extra time to do it

When I make pot pies, I make two

One for dinner and one for the freezer

If I am having a night when I just don’t feel like cooking, I can put that frozen pot pie in the oven for a couple of hours and still have a homemade meal

It isn’t that much more work to just double a recipe

And there are A LOT of recipes you can double and freeze

Just make sure that you separate it and freeze half before serving dinner

if you have a family that will eat double if they see double the food!

Meal plan a week or two at a time

Meal planning has made my life way easier

I don’t have to make decisions every day when it is time to cook

I can make sure that I have everything I need during one shopping trip so I spend less money

And I can start shopping for deals easier

I look at our local grocery ads to see what is on sale and then make a meal plan based on that

If I find an unexpected deal, I can buy it and add it to the next meal plan

Create a meal master list

When I started meal planning and cooking all our meals, I ran into a big problem

I can barely think about what I want for dinner tonight

Now I need to come up with 14 dinners plus breakfast, lunch, snacks, and treats?!

My solution has been creating a master list

Every time we have a meal that we like, I add it to the list

Then I can just look at the list when I am planning meals

This reduces stress and helps avoid the struggle to think of meals

Schedule what you are making each day, but be flexible

When I am making a meal plan, I schedule what I am making each day

Most of the time it makes everything easier since I don’t have to make any decisions

But there are times when the plan just doesn’t sound good

When this happens, I just switch days

As long as I have time to defrost the meat, there is no harm done

Take baby steps

Taking baby steps when learning to cook from scratch is super important

This journey can get overwhelming FAST

But if you just choose one thing to focus on at a time, that stress is taken away

If you don’t cook at all, choose one day a week to start cooking dinner

Or you can start making a snack instead of buying it

Pay attention to what makes you excited and start there

Then expand a little next week

Or in two weeks if you are still struggling with your current goals

Don’t try to change a bunch at once or you will burn out or get discouraged

It doesn’t feel like you have done much when you are taking baby steps, but you’ll be amazed at how much you’ve learned in six months

Make more than one loaf of bread and freeze some

I love making more than I need so I can preserve some

That can be through canning or freezingI am moving into freeze-drying too

But if you are just starting, I recommend freezing food at first

Bread is an easy place to start

It freezes great and defrosts fast

I make sandwich bread, bagels, English muffins, and more so I can freeze most of it

Instead of trying to make bread every time you need it, make more than enough and freeze some so you have it on hand next time you need it without needing to make it

Save your favorite recipes in one place for easy access

This goes along with creating a master list

When I find or make recipes that I like, I print them and add them to a binder

It is my own “cookbook”

That way I don’t have to look up recipes every time and hope that we like them

If I want to make pizza, I just grab my binder and make the pizza dough recipe that I have saved

The less brain work that you need for simple things every day, the less overwhelmed this lifestyle will make you

Spend a couple of hours a week on make-ahead meals

One thing that helped me a lot when making the switch to homemade meals is planning time to cook make-ahead meals

My husband loves the Jimmy Dean breakfast sandwiches

So I started making them and freezing them

I scheduled a couple of hours a week to get those meals made and in the freezer

And it works great!

The breakfast sandwiches I make are bigger, healthier, and way cheaper

Batching makes it possible for me

I prepped a lot of ground pork into patties, made a lot of English muffins, and then I put all the sandwiches together

By doing more of one thing, I save a lot of time even if the whole process takes a couple of days

But when I am done, we have a few weeks of that food available for use

Follow and engage with others on the same journey

Making friends with the same goals can make or break your goals

This could be real-life friends, people on TikTok, Facebook groups, etc

But don’t try to do it on your own

Engage with others on the same journey that will understand the excitement of your successes

This can help you learn and motivate you at the same time