Taste is fixable. Trust the Frumple on that one. Particularly combining a few different staples at one time (cooking a couple of days worth of food in one go) with limited seasoning (and while seasoning by
weight tends toward pretty expensive, by
meal it tends towards very much not so. Couple bucks worth of pepper or a bottle of soy sauce will last you a good couple months (60+ meals, or 3-5 cent per meal) and only be like two-three bucks or something) can work a whole array of wonders, as can either of those alone. It takes a very small amount of other things (again, notably more by weight but generally very little per meal) to do impressive (or at least
sufficient) things to a pretty wide variety of staple foods.
I've got basically a rotation where I rotate between a couple of sorts of noodles (mac and cheese, ramen, occasional varying sorts of pasta), rice, and potatoes as my meal base, and then whatever other stuff I've got on hand (usually cheese, occasionally meat, a few different sorts of sauces and seasonings). It is a little samey at times, but there's enough variation and enough unique tastes among the combinations to keep me sane with only the occasional more luxurious food indulgence. Most expensive non-luxury (not meat, not cheese, no seasoning) I eat is something like 12 cent to the unit of measurement (usually either ounce or gram), and most is less. The luxury (/perishable) stuff runs up to about 30 cent per unit, but gets spread out over a couple weeks (or a couple months) of meals which, again, makes a by day influence of
maybe twenty, thirty cent/meal at the high end. And I don't exactly optimize, t'be honest. Someone actually working at it, and with a more varied diet, could do a bit better. Minimalist cooking like that
really isn't difficult at all, you just have to muck around a bit to find out what suits your tastes.
And dude, if ramen's running you at like 75 cent a pack, we could probably set something up so I could buy it in bulk and ship it to you for an overall reduced price
That's like. 600-700% increase over what I'm getting it at. Get enough of it together and the shipping cost should be mitigated.
... alternately just find whatever that's in your area that's cheaper. Rice is cheaper than ramen (particularly the very large bags) where I'm at for some ungodly reason, iirc, as an example.