The Pilot News - The Shopper

DIY Breakfast Kits Save Money, Time and Sanity

- (c) 2022 King Features Synd., Inc.

What? Didn’t summer just start? I just realized school is already starting in communitie­s across the country.

Before you think I’m a goofball, my kids are adults, so I’m blissfully detached from the school year schedule. But I’m not detached from morning chaos. We all have that in common. The only way to mitigate the morning madness is to organize the chaos.

Here’s one trick I’ve found: If we make self-serve breakfasts, it frees us up to drink more coffee and search for matching socks. So, let’s make a freezer full of homemade breakfast scrambled egg kits. You know, the kind you “just crack an egg” into. Wink, wink.

Have you seen those scrambled eggs kits? Microwavab­le cups holding diced potatoes, sausage or bacon with veggies and cheese, ready to stir and microwave. I love everything but the price. So I make them myself.

To compare prices, these ready-made kits sell for around $3 each and contain about 3 ounces of ingredient­s, and you supply the eggs. I made a bunch of kits in a variety of recipe combinatio­ns. Mine weighed between 4 and 6 ounces and cost an average of 75 cents, including the cost of two eggs. Frugal and fabulous!

The ready-made kits are refrigerat­ed and thus perishable. So, I made freezable kits, so they last indefinite­ly.

You’ll need zip-top bags for this project. Snack sized baggies are great but if you find snack sized “portion pack” bags, they’re perfect. The bags are printed with measuremen­ts in quarter cup intervals up to one cup. How cool is that?

To make the kits described below, I purchased bags of frozen diced hash brown potatoes, frozen pepper and onion blend, frozen (fully cooked) breakfast sausage links, diced ham, cooked real bacon crumbles, and a variety of shredded cheeses. As a guideline, a 32-ounce bag of diced potatoes makes approximat­ely 20 quarter cup portions or serves as the base for 20 kits. A 16-ounce bag of peppers and onions makes approximat­ely 16 (two tablespoon­s) servings.

These kits are totally customizab­le. Don’t want potatoes? Ditch them and add more veggies. Vegetarian? Swap the meat for more veggies. Like heat? Add chorizo and jalapenos.

Here’s the secret: If your kit contains between 1/2 cup and 3/4 cup of ingredient­s, it will combine with two eggs and cook according to the directions below.

MAKE-AHEAD SCRAMBLED EGG KITS For each kit:

1/4 cup frozen diced potatoes

2 tablespoon­s frozen 3 pepper and onion blend, chopped 2 tablespoon­s chopped ham OR cooked sausage OR cooked, crumbled bacon

2 tablespoon­s shredded cheese

Place ingredient­s into a zip-top plastic bag and freeze until ready for use. Measuremen­ts don’t have to be exact. This is a great job for the kiddies.

When ready to serve, place the contents of bag into a microwave-safe coffee cup that has been sprayed with cooking spray. Heat on HIGH for one minute. Remove from microwave and stir. Add two eggs and stir well. Heat in microwave in 20 to 30 second increments, stirring each time, until fully cooked, about 2 minutes total time. It’s best to err on the side of slightly undercooke­d as the carry-over heat will continue to cook the eggs. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Use caution as the eggs and the cup will be hot.

One benefit of these breakfast kits is kids can make breakfast themselves with adult supervisio­n. Teach them how to use a timer and hot pads to protect against burning. You’ll be rewarded by knowing if they starve to death in college, it’s on them.

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Lifestyle expert Patti Diamond is the penny-pinching, partyplann­ing, recipe developer and content creator of the website ‘Divas On A Dime -- Where Frugal, Meets Fabulous!’ Visit Patti at www.divasonadi­me.com and join the conversati­on on Facebook at DivasOnADi­meDotCom. Email Patti at divapatti@ divasonadi­me.com

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