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/jp/ - Otaku Culture


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13952356 No.13952356 [Reply] [Original]

What is good NEET food?

>> No.13952365

There's no NEET food.

There's just food.

>> No.13952366

Simply asia: garlic basil. It is an instant noodle

>> No.13952375

>>13952356
Fish maybe, cuz' it's caught in a "neet" or some shit idk
i'm hungry

>> No.13952379 [DELETED] 

Cock! I love on it!!! Must be /jp/ cock ONLY!!!!!

>> No.13952390

Little clarification:
>keeps hunger away for a long time
>cheap
>easy/fast to prepare
>cheap
>nutritious/healthy (optional)
>cheap

>> No.13952419

Something high both in proteins and carbs. In other words: peanut butter, corn, salmon. Combine them to create your own recipe. Gulp down two vitamin supplements afterward for your daily vitamin intake.

>> No.13952426

>>13952390
Potatoes, just boil them and eat two

>> No.13952452

>>13952426
you can also decide to cut them and fry them to make french fries, or make mashed potatoes. Maybe hashbrowns too! Potatoes are the ultimate neet food! Plus Potato chips are potatoes too

>> No.13952459
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>> No.13952465

Parental tears.

>> No.13952466
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>> No.13952486
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>> No.13952497
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>>13952356
Rice is perfect NEET food
Get a good rice cooker
Just throw some rice and water in (wash it if you're hardcore) and you are good to go. Instant warm food whenever that is cheap and filling for the next three days. You can add mushrooms or other fixings to make mixed rice

Make some miso soup in bulk and you're good to go. Instant miso and a hot water faucet/pot might be easier for NEETs though.

Maybe add some pickled food for side dishes. They last awhile and don't need to be cooked. Canned sardines, saury, eel and other seafoods are great too. High in protein and nutrients, very long shelf life. Just open them up and eat.
I like to simmer some mushrooms in dashi-soysauce-mirin occasionally

Eggs are good too. Cheap, versatile, long shelf life, and good protein source.

>> No.13952506
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13952506

Once I bought a bunch of calorie mates on sale from a local place.
Kept them in my computer desk drawer.
I could stay on my computer all day and not have to get up. Just open my drawer and eat.

>> No.13952508
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13952508

>>13952356

>> No.13952509

>>13952466
Britneets not wanted in this thread

>> No.13952516

>>13952452
potatoes are pretty healthy too; you can't survive on potatoes alone, but they can make up a pretty big part of your diet if you want them to

>> No.13952549
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>> No.13952574

shuushoku

>> No.13952885

>>13952549
>tfw allergic to shellfish

>> No.13952993

NEETs should eat each other. Solves lots of problems for everyone else.

>> No.13953008

>>13952885
Shellfish could hunt you and real life and kill you thanks to your allergy. In your will you should demand that your remains be fed to shellfish.

Come on. Don't be selfish. Become shellfish.

>> No.13953117

>>13953008
That was crawful. Krill yourshellf.

>> No.13953120
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>> No.13953136

Sweet potato and rice are cheap, heavy food. Always have some readily available.

>> No.13953437

>>13952356
Get a rice cooker. One of the cheapest meals you can cook is rice+lentils+vegtable oil for your carbs, fat, and protein. I mainly eat this sort of meal, but I add olive oil, Frozen veggies on the steamer, beans, and Chicken breast meat to mine.

Lentils are probably the cheapest protein source, add them to rice or make lentil, potato and tomato soup. Potatoes are great. The tastiest to way to make them are potato wedges. Potato wedges with canned chili are one of the best meals there is. Use foil or parchment paper for easy clean up. Quaker oats with milk can be eaten just like cereal. Peanut butter has a great carb/protein/fat ratio. Sardines are good for omega 3.

It is very efficient if you systematically plan and eat your food. For example, I buy some chicken breats. I will cut them up into to about 200g pieces and cook them all in the oven. Then, I store them all in the freezer in plastic bags and eat them for the next two weeks. I will make rice, soup, or whatever, store it in the fridge in microwaveable containers, and eat it for the next two days.

It's psychologically hard to eat the samish food all the time, but you will eventually get use to it and not care about food.

>> No.13953452

>>13953437
Forgot to mention tea. Get one of those 2L thermos and you will have hot tea for the whole day.

>> No.13953945

>>13952356
でん六豆

>> No.13954196

Thanks for the tips, mates. I guess the next big purchase for me is going to be a rice cooker.

>> No.13954197

I've been NEET for a year now. A special treat is beef tacos! Premade shells, ground beef, refried beans, cheese, lettuce and sour cream! You can get twenty ~250 calorie tacos for $20 dollars if you do it right!

Don't eat ramen for every meal like I used to. Yeah you can put cheese, meats and veggies in it but in the end it's delicious garbage.

>>13952497
good post

>>13952506
what do these taste like?

>>13953120
This looks like the ultimate NEET food. Cheapest carb + cheapest meat + cheapest vegetable.

>>13953437
This guy knows his stuff.

>> No.13954550

eat spinach
dont cook it just eat it raw
no taste and is healthy and (a little bit) filling

>> No.13955163
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>> No.13955460

Actually if you don't live in Asia, then rice does not offer the best price per calorie ratio. Pasta and oatmeal are better.

This comes from my own experience as being an uni student living on a budget, as well as that of a lot of bodybuilders who have gone through multiple stages of bulking.

Also don't buy ramen. It is food for the lazy, is not cost efficient.

>> No.13955475
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13955475

I've been eating rice and beans regularly since I was a child. Now I eat it most of the time most of the week, and I'm honestly perfectly happy and in wonderful health. If you come from a background where meat is uncommon or if you can just get used to eating it rarely, you can easily subsist on plant proteins. Beans and lentils last far, far longer than meats and are generally cheaper. Cheap vegetable oil is good to use in your rice and bean dishes.

This is personal preference, but when I do cook meats I usually prefer fish or shrimp over terrestrial meat. You can often get frozen shrimp in large quantities for good prices and tilapia is a great relatively low-cost fish for grilling, pan frying, and deep frying alike, and also maintains very good quality when frozen. Sausages and other cured meats are made to keep well over long periods and are also good choices if you don't want to have to freeze your unused meat. I can't give any advice on uncured red meat since I have never been particularly familiar with it, but chicken and other sorts of poultry can cheap as well, though I haven't had the same success freezing them as I have had with seafood.

With such simple foods seasoning is important to maintaining a diverse palate and with all the money you save you'll be able to afford plenty of spices. Salt is the most important, pepper and chilli powder next, and all the various other masalas and spice mixtures come after that. Most are made for specific dishes but really you just have to experiment and see what you like. If stored correctly garlic, onions, and potatoes also last for a good while and can make great additions.

These hearty foods are abundant and relatively cheaply produced and bought, making them staples among both subsistence and surplus societies. However, as such a diet lacks a good volume of relatively expensive fruits and vegetables (some may be cheap depending on location) nutritional supplements are a must. Please don't let yourself get sick.

>> No.13956492

>>13955460
Pasta and rice offer the same amount of calories per 100g, check the nutrition facts on the back of the package.

>> No.13957441

>>13956492
Yes but 100g of pasta doesn't cost the same as 100g of rice..

>> No.13957465

>>13952390
who quot

>> No.13957879

>>13952390
>>13952885
Who are you quoting?

>> No.13959092

>>13952356
Garlic and Onion Burito

>> No.13959965
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13959965

What does /jp/ think of vermicelli?

>> No.13960048

>>13959965
It's a nice way to add some carbohydrates to broths and thin soups. I like it.

>> No.13962939

Hardest part is eating the same shit every day. I try to make different rice and egg dishes... But you can't really run from rice.

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