I am necroing this topic because I may be living on my own for the first time soon. What are some good ways to cook potatoes, as well? It looks likely that my diet in such a case would be mostly cheap grains with dairy, eggs, spices and butter to go with.
What precisely is your goal? Minimize expenses? Minimize time and effort spent cooking? Live as extravagantly as possible while still maintaining a "reasonable" compromise with the other two factors?
You can make fried rice better than most restaurants:
* Cook standard white rice. Use 1:1 rice:water ratio rather than 1:1.5 usually recommended. This makes it less moist.
* Allow rice to sit in open air until cool
* Sprinkle it as you like with any combination of black pepper, red pepper, onion powder, garlic, curry powder.
* Fry it lightly in oil (Olive oil is more flavorful, but more expensive. Corn oil will work) while mixing/stirring regularly with a spatula
* Add soy sauce. Continue to mix/stir regularly.
* (Optional) Fry strips of chicken or sausage, then cut into bite sized chunks
* (Optional) Cook any sort of vegetables: onion, carrots, brocoli, califlower, etc.
* While the above is cooking, mix eggs in a bowl with any combination of above spices
*
Partially fry the eggs. Stir regularly and don't let them cook all the way. Once they are partially cooked but still runny, add to rice.
* Continue frying the rice/egg mix until it is cooked.
If you make the meat/vegetables they can be served separately or together with the rice.
potatoes
I find that potatoes are something best served in small quantities while mixed with other things. They don't make good primary dishes. However, if potatoes are what you have to work with, it's very simple to make "good" mashed potatoes simply by peeling and cutting them into small pieces, then boiling them until soft. Then mash them into a paste and add any combination of the following:
* Milk (this is for texture and consistency more than flavor)
* Black pepper, onion powder, garlic powder, basil, cilantro
* Shredded cheese (any kind) and/or sour creme/creme cheese. Cottage cheese will work in a pinch, but it substantially alters the texture.
Experiment with quantities. Mashed potatoes can probably take more garlic powder than you'd think would be reasonable and still be very tasty. But too much and it will become inedible. Cheese is something that's very difficult to use too much of, but there comes a point where the cheese, while being tasty, changes the texture so that the "mashed" potatoes become "sticky" potatoes. Experiment to find out how you like it.