Cooking from Scratch on a Budget: The Homesteader’s Kitchen Guide
- Cooking from scratch saves the average household $1,000β$3,000/year compared to convenience foods and takeout
- A well-stocked pantry of 25 staple ingredients lets you make hundreds of meals without a recipe
- The 5 foundation skills: roasting, sautΓ©ing, making soup, baking bread, and building a sauce
- Batch cooking on Sunday saves 5β10 hours per week of daily cooking decisions
- Connect your garden to your kitchen β a garden-to-table meal plan maximizes freshness and minimizes waste
Cooking from scratch sounds like a full-time job until you actually learn how to do it efficiently. The truth is, a simple homemade dinner takes 20β30 minutes β the same amount of time you spend waiting for delivery. The difference: it costs a fraction of the price, it’s healthier, and it tastes better.
For homesteaders, cooking from scratch isn’t optional β it’s the whole point. You grow food, you preserve food, and then you turn it into meals. This guide covers the essential skills, the pantry staples, and the batch-cooking strategies that make from-scratch cooking sustainable every day.
The From-Scratch Pantry: 25 Staple Ingredients
Stock these and you can make hundreds of meals without a special grocery run:
| Category | Staples |
|---|---|
| Grains & Starches | Flour, rice, oats, pasta, potatoes |
| Proteins | Dried beans, eggs, canned tuna, chicken thighs (freezer) |
| Fats | Olive oil, butter, lard or coconut oil |
| Acids | Vinegar (white + apple cider), lemons, canned tomatoes |
| Seasonings | Salt, black pepper, garlic, onions, dried herbs (oregano, thyme, cumin, paprika, chili flakes) |
| Sweeteners | Honey, sugar |
| Dairy/Ferments | Milk, yogurt (or make your own), cheese |
Cost to stock: $50β$75 for everything. These staples last months and form the backbone of daily meals.
From our homestead: I haven’t bought bread in two years β our sourdough handles that. I haven’t bought yogurt since learning to make it at home. I haven’t bought pasta sauce since I started canning tomatoes. Each skill you learn is one more thing you stop buying.
The 5 Foundation Cooking Skills
Master these five techniques and you can cook almost anything without a recipe:
1. Roasting
Toss vegetables or meat with oil, salt, and pepper. Roast at 400β425Β°F until golden. This is the simplest way to make anything taste incredible. Roast a whole chicken with root vegetables for a complete meal in one pan.
2. SautΓ©ing
Hot pan + fat + aromatics (onion, garlic) + protein or vegetables + seasoning = dinner in 15 minutes. This is the technique behind stir-fries, pasta sauces, and most weeknight meals.
3. Making Soup
SautΓ© aromatics, add liquid (homemade broth is ideal), add vegetables and protein, simmer 20β30 minutes. Soup is the ultimate from-scratch meal: cheap, nutritious, freezable, and endlessly variable. One pot of soup feeds a family for two meals.
4. Baking Bread
Flour, water, salt, yeast (or sourdough starter). That’s it. A basic loaf costs $0.50β$1.00 in ingredients vs. $4β$6 at the store. Bake twice a week and save $300β$500/year.
5. Building a Sauce
Fat + flour = roux. Add milk = bΓ©chamel. Add cheese = cheese sauce. Add broth = gravy. Understanding this one technique unlocks lasagna, mac and cheese, pot pies, creamy soups, and dozens of other dishes. Tomato sauces are even simpler: canned tomatoes + garlic + olive oil + herbs = perfect pasta sauce in 20 minutes.
Batch Cooking: The Sunday Strategy
Spend 2β3 hours on Sunday preparing components, then assemble quick meals all week:
| Sunday Prep | Time | Weeknight Meals It Becomes |
|---|---|---|
| Roast a whole chicken | 1 hr (passive) | Chicken salad, tacos, soup, sandwiches, stir-fry |
| Cook a pot of beans | 10 min + simmer | Burritos, soup, rice and beans, hummus, chili |
| Cook a big batch of rice or grain | 20 min | Fried rice, grain bowls, stuffed peppers, side dish |
| Bake 2 loaves of bread | 30 min active | Sandwiches, toast, breadcrumbs, croutons all week |
| Make a big pot of soup | 30 min | Lunches for 3β4 days, freeze extra portions |
| Prep vegetables (wash, chop, store) | 20 min | Ready-to-cook veggies for any meal all week |
Total Sunday time: ~3 hours. Weeknight dinners now take 15β20 minutes because the hard work is done.
Garden-to-Table: Cooking What You Grow
The homesteader advantage: your garden dictates the menu, and that’s a good thing. When you eat seasonally, you eat at peak flavor and peak nutrition.
- Spring: Salads (lettuce, radishes, peas), herb-heavy dishes, asparagus
- Summer: Tomato everything β fresh, sauced, canned. Grilled zucchini, cucumber salads, berry desserts
- Fall: Squash soups, root vegetable roasts, apple everything, fermented harvests
- Winter: Pantry meals β dried beans, canned tomatoes, preserved foods, root-cellared vegetables
The Cost Comparison: From Scratch vs. Store-Bought
| Item | Store-Bought | From Scratch | You Save |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loaf of bread | $4β$6 | $0.50β$1.00 | $3β$5 |
| Quart of yogurt | $4β$7 | $1.50β$2.00 | $2.50β$5 |
| Jar of pasta sauce | $3β$6 | $1β$2 | $2β$4 |
| Quart of bone broth | $5β$8 | $0.50 (scraps) | $4.50β$7.50 |
| Granola | $5β$8 | $2β$3 | $3β$5 |
| Pizza (family) | $15β$25 delivery | $3β$5 | $12β$20 |
10 Meals Every From-Scratch Cook Should Master
- Roast chicken with vegetables β one pan, one hour, feeds 4 with leftovers
- Bean and vegetable soup β the ultimate cheap, nourishing meal
- Homemade pizza β dough is flour, water, yeast, salt. Top with whatever you have
- Stir-fry with rice β clear the fridge, add soy sauce, done in 15 minutes
- Pasta with tomato sauce β canned tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, herbs. 20 minutes.
- Baked potatoes with toppings β butter, cheese, sour cream, chili, or broccoli
- Frittata β eggs + whatever vegetables and cheese you have. Oven, 20 minutes.
- Rice and beans β complete protein, costs pennies, endlessly customizable
- Homemade bread β sourdough or simple yeast bread
- Sheet pan dinner β protein + vegetables on one tray, 400Β°F, 30 minutes
Frequently Asked Questions
Is cooking from scratch actually cheaper?
Yes, significantly. A family of four eating primarily from scratch spends $400β$600/month on groceries vs. $800β$1,200+ with convenience foods and regular takeout. The savings are $1,000β$3,000+ annually. The biggest savings come from baking bread, making broth from scraps, cooking dried beans, and avoiding processed packaged foods.
How do I start cooking from scratch if I’m a beginner?
Start with one meal per week. Make soup on Sunday β it’s forgiving, cheap, and teaches you the basics of sautΓ©ing and building flavor. Next, learn to roast vegetables and bake a simple bread. Add one new skill per week and within a month you’ll be cooking most meals from scratch naturally.
How much time does cooking from scratch take?
A simple from-scratch dinner takes 20β30 minutes once you have the skills. Batch cooking on Sunday (2β3 hours) can reduce weeknight dinners to 15 minutes of assembly. The key is prep: keep pantry staples stocked, prep vegetables ahead, and always have cooked grains and beans in the fridge.
What kitchen tools do I need?
The essentials: a good chef’s knife, a cutting board, a large pot, a skillet, a sheet pan, a Dutch oven (for bread and soups), and a wooden spoon. That’s it. Avoid gadgets β most take up space and do one thing. A sharp knife and a hot pan handle 90% of cooking tasks.
How does a garden connect to cooking from scratch?
A garden is the ultimate from-scratch ingredient source. Grow herbs to replace $3 packages, tomatoes for sauce, lettuce for salads, and zucchini for everything. Preserve your surplus through canning, freezing, and dehydrating, and your pantry fills itself. The garden-to-kitchen pipeline is what makes homesteading cooking so satisfying and cost-effective.