Posts Tagged ‘Frugal Fun’

National Garden Month


2011
04.06

I’m not sure how much faith one should put in an Internet search for “National ___ Month,” but I recently did just that and was surprised to discover that April is all of the following:

  • International Guitar Month (Rocktober is 6 months away and you need to study up!)
  • Keep America Beautiful Month (because, normally, we want to keep America filthy and roach-infested?)
  • National Poetry Month (check out Poets.org for ideas on how to celebrate this one)
  • National Garden Month (mmm, farm-fresh veggies)
  • National Anxiety Month (OMG, is there something on my face?!)
  • National Humor Month (is this to make up for the anxiety, or to further encourage it?)
  • National Welding Month (no jokes, because welding is serious business), and
  • Uh-Huh Month (no, seriously… wtf?)

That’s a mighty full basket to choose from, but personally I’m most interested in National Garden Month.

It’s spring in Austin, which means it’s allergy season and everyone is sneezing, coughing, snorting and hacking like they’re about to keel over and die. (BTW: Here’s a great article with tips on how to fight allergies with food at AchooAllergy.com, and if the store-bought drugs aren’t working, you may want to give the homeopathic methods suggested at Republic of Austin a whirl.) It may not be pretty, but I guess this is the price we pay for having roughly 300 days of sunshine a year and only 2 weeks of winter, while the rest of the nation is buried under 3 feet of snow, right?

Anyhoo, being that it’s spring, the wildflowers are popping up in vast fields across the state, and ordinary Texans are pulling over on the side of the highway to snap pix.

Like these:

"Wildflowers in Austin" (photo by Flickr user The 4/30 Murders)

"Wildflowers" (photo by Flickr user spyderella)

Dubbing April National Garden Month, then, just makes sense. Anybody with a bit of yard space can plant some sweet veggies (along with the wildflowers that will inevitably sneak in), and even if you’re an apartment dweller like me, if you get a bit of sun you can whip up a mini herb garden or sprout some tomatoes to enjoy throughout the growing season.

The National Gardening Association has tips and tricks on how to get started with their article 101 Ways to Celebrate National Garden Month, as well as suggestions for their project of the month, building a terrarium. Be sure to check out their article on starting seeds indoors and get ready for spring with some awesome edible or decorative plants!

Recipe Roundup: A few of our favorite cooking apps and websites


2010
09.26

We here at Shoestring Austin love finding new recipes, and cookbooks are a major source of inspiration and joy when we’re out cruising the bookstores. Of course, being Frugal Foodies, we don’t always feel like spending $25 (or much, much more!) when we find a book we love.

What’s a recipe hound to do? Hit the Internet and find it for free!

Here are some of our favorite cooking sites and inexpensive (or free) apps you can download for a great recipe in a hurry.

Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything On the Go app

As previously mentioned on this blog, we love Mark Bittman and his minimalist approach to cooking. With all the right ingredients, you can easily whip up something mind-bogglingly good, sometimes with only 3 to 5 ingredients. If you’re looking for a great way to get acquainted with his methods, check out his iPhone app, How to Cook Everything On the Go, for just $4.99.

To get acquainted with Bittman for free, subscribe to his Minimalist podcasts through iTunes and enjoy watching the man in action with new recipes by video once a week.

Jamie Oliver’s 20 Minute Meals


Jamie Oliver’s iPod app 20 Minute Meals is also highly recommended. While his recipes aren’t quite as simple as Bittman’s (“20 Minute Meals” occasionally coming off as a misnomer when you factor in longer prep times for all the chopping his recipes involve), we’ll forgive him this minor flaw. Probably because he’s the Naked Chef and we just want to pinch his cheeks!

In any case, Jamie Oliver’s noble quest to bring you a hot, fast, healthy dinner in 20 minutes (along with his Food Revolution, replacing burgers and fries in school cafeterias with actual nutrition) earns him high praise from the Shoestring blog.

Plus, the “grocery list” function on this app is, as Jamie might put it, BRILLIANT.

This app is just $7.99 and well worth the price.

AllRecipes Dinner Spinner

If you want a fun, free app to shake up your tired routines, check out AllRecipes.com’s Dinner Spinner. Offering a selection of the website’s most popular recipes, you can spin your dish type, ingredients and amount of time you’d like it to be ready in to sort out your choices.

For $2.99 you can go Pro and get all of the site’s recipes, plus a variety of bonus features like the ability to transfer recipes wirelessly using Bluetooth and access to your personal Recipe Box.

Epicurious.com

Call us old-fashioned, but we like the Epicurious website more than their Epi iPhone app. It’s free, which is nice, but it’s not quite as functional as some of the other apps out there. Plus, users have complained that it doesn’t sync with your online recipe box, which is a bummer. (And since AllRecipes.com will do this for $2.99, you might as well use theirs!)

Tequila Shrimp recipe from Epicurious.com (photo by Romulo Yanes)

Still, the Epicurious website does have a lot of great recipes, and they divide them up in ways we adore. The Seasonal Cooking section varies recipes depending on Mother Nature’s availability, so you can feel good about buying products that will be less expensive and earth-friendly if they’re grown locally. International Cooking brings global variety to your dishes (and is sortable by country), while the Holidays & Celebrations breakdown offers menus based on traditional holiday dishes for everything from Bastille Day to Weddings.

Be sure to check out their Dinner Rush recipes with quick menus, including hits like the Tequila Shrimp shown above—not to mention fabulous wine pairings—for every night of the week!

What are some of YOUR favorite
cooking apps and websites?

Frugal Fun: Internet radio


2010
07.25

Okay, y’all, I must admit that while I am a pretty frugal person by nature, sometimes there are things even I don’t realize that are free and totally worth checking out. For instance, the exciting world of Internet radio. Thanks to Celebrity Intern, I’ve recently discovered the brilliant tab on my iTunes labelled “RADIO,” and the vast wealth of tunes contained therein!

Don't touch that dial! Wait, what dial?

The first radio station I found that truly kicks ass is under the Classical heading. Before you roll your eyes and surf to the next blog on your To Do list, hear me out! The station you want is called Venice Classic Radio, and it plays excellent non-stop classical music of all genres (i.e. early, baroque, chamber, symphony and even opera), and only interrupts the tunes for a short station tag with a woman saying “Venice Classic Radio – beautiful classical music!” in a funky Italian accent. I have been imitating her all week long, asking if my cat wants to listen to BOOO-tee-full claaaaahsical mooooosique” and he, in turn, has been giving me the wide-eyed “you crazy” stare.

Ned says: "Human, you CRAZY!"

Something like that, but usually with less tongue and more terror.

Anyway, after that I started clicking around on the other stations in other genres to see what tricks they had up their sleeves. And it’s a goldmine!

If you like the blues—and I mean real blues music that’s got heart and soul and is played by the people who wrote it, not the bastard versions covered by popular bands like Led Zeppelin and (god forbid) Eric effin’ Clapton—you must check out the appropriately named Blues Classics channel, featuring American blues from the 1930s to the 70s. Right now, for example, they’re playing Louise Johnson singing “Long Way From Home.” Pretty much everything on there is golden, Ponyboy.

Another great one for the golden oldies is JAZZRADIO.com’s Swing and Big Band station, though if you are a jazz connoisseur, you will probably want to check out all of their stations to find the genre that best suits your tastes, as they’ve got everything from cool to hot, bebop to funk, Latin jazz, piano trios, and even divide things up by instrument and contemporary or classic vocalists. Get hep!

Now, in the realm of stand-up comedy, you’re also in luck, cus Comedy Pipe Radio Network is spinning everything from old George Carlin rekkids to David Sedaris reading his humorous books to Margaret Cho screaming “Her fucking pussy exploded!!!!” Seriously, these people play everything, and whole albums too, not just a few bits here and there. Full-on comedy, totally uncensored, as it should be. Awesome.

I must say, I find it hilarious that the CBC (that’s Canada’s national radio station, FYI) gets listed under “Adult Contemporary,” a genre I recommend avoiding at all costs. Unless you are 100 years old and living in a nursing home, or are trapped under something very, very heavy. Okay, to be fair: the not-entirely-weak CBC Radio 3—an online-only station that features 100% CanCon, a very dubious designation indeed—made it to the “Alternative Rock” category. I will blame this on the fact that while CanCon can be extremely weak (i.e. the usual suspects: Celine Dion, Avril Lavigne, Rush, etc.), sometimes Canadians can be very cool. For instance:

One of the reasons Canadians actually do rock: David Suzuki's "Playlist for the Planet"

If you don’t know who David Suzuki is, you should definitely look him up. He’s about the coolest Canadian I can think of, and not just because of his naughty fig-leaf photo and dashing good looks!

Also weirdly miscategorized is Austin’s own BOB-FM, the station famous for its slogan “We play anything.” Currently they’re rocking Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” which hardly falls under the “Adult Contemporary” genre, but maybe someone at iTunes is confusing the concepts of “Adult” (aka pr0n) with “Adult Contemporary”?

Looking for something different? Scan through the 705 offerings in the International/World music offerings; you’re sure to find something to catch your fancy. Maybe even AM 940 Hawaii, featuring all traditional Hawaiian music 24/7?

One of the stations I really want to like, but which has been streaming some truly annoying artists today, is the all-female music station, KGRL. (Don’t be fooled; when they say “flower-powered” they’re not talking about hippies, if you catch my drift.) As a lady, I do like hunting down chicks who rock in the often male-dominated music world. But Chantal Kreviazuk? You’ve got to be kidding me (yet another instance of CanCon suckitude!). Also, if the station’s supposed to be “sugar-free,” then she violates your first tenet right there. However, they did just introduce me to Dragonette, a Canadian band that rocks 80′s style. So if you like chick-rock, check it out. For me, the jury’s still out, cus I’d like to see some more Joan Jett, Ani DiFranco, Hole types of ladies dominating this station.

And if you’ve got rather, um… let’s just call it special taste in music, do check out both Zappa Radio (the home of Frank Zappa and the Zappa Family Trust) and GothVille Radio (“dark music for people dressed in black”).

You can also find pretty much any major city’s radio stations, like the “world-famous KROQ” (out of L.A.) and K-Rock (out of NYC), both of which are, oddly enough, “alternative stations” playing most the music the kids are diggin’ these days. Bi-coastal, baby!

Got any recommendations for iTunes radio stations you’ve been grooving on lately?

Austin freegan alert: free movies!


2010
05.10

As a conoisseur of the freebie lifestyle, and an unreformed member of the spoiled Press Club who simply refuses to (over)pay to see movies, I was beginning to think that Austin’s freegan claims had been vastly overrated. The SXSW film end of the fest is clearly no place for bargains (nor entry sans badge, harumph!), and for those who love film, I began to suspect that free flicks were just another rainbow-colored pipe dream.

But after a fateful tip from a guy on the bus (the source of many an insider tip, Chez Shoestring, btw), I discovered the wonderful world of gofobo.com. Film-related sweepstakes and free screenings abound here, but alas, they are only accessible with a magical (and rather mysterious) RSVP code.

Curses, Batman, foiled again!

Luckily, using my mighty memory, I recalled that my mystery bus man had informed me that gofobo.com was just one of several sites he regularly cruised for access to freebies in the movie world, implying that there were others, were a young Jedi so inclined to look for them. Thus, with a quick flick of the Google button I discovered the untold riches at The Movie Outsider’s Austin page.

As The Movie Outsider notes, freebies may not always be easy to come by, but they sure beat the heck outta paying full price for admission. If you’ve got to dig a little, you may just appreciate those hard-earned tickets a bit more, too. Or at least avoid the truly terrible pap that Hollywood deems to dish out.

Whatever the case, here were some of the best sites I found in my mission to uncover movie freebies, to help you along your way:

Tell 'em Shoestring Austin sent ya!

If all else fails, Netflix is still offering a pretty sweet one-month-free subscription, where you can instantly stream movies straight from your computer (or Blu-ray player, or gaming system), or rent movies with no late fees and free shipping to and from your house. Set up your home theater and you’ll be set; at only $8.95 a month, that’s still way cheaper than paying for admission at your local theater.

Still too rich for your blood? Hit up the nearest branch of the Austin Public Library for a selection of totally free movies and TV shows, which you can keep for a full seven (7) days. With the Interlibrary Loan system, you can even snag flicks from far-away branches (provided you agree to pay a $1 fee if you fail to actually pick up your items within 10 days of your notification email), all from the comfort of your Internet connection.

Friends, freegans, countrymen: bemoan your free movie quandary no more, and may The Force be with you.