My recipes for gamerz and/or other easily distracted folks:
(We buy our rice in big bags so we generally fill a canister w/rice and put it in the freezer overnight; we wash our rice prior to cooking so we control what sorts of protein is in it <grin>. )
2 cups water per washed cup of rice
bring water to boil then add rice, let it come to a boil again.
Turn burner off and leave rice, covered, on the burner and go back to your game. Twenty minutes speeds by and your rice is done w/o having to pay too much attention. Usually I add spices to the water before I start so the rice is already flavored - usually, a curry of some sort. Once cooked, rice can be treated like cooked patatos. You can add any food you have in the fridge to the rice - fry the rice then break a couple eggs into it and stir w/onions and garlick, and so on. If you don't wash your rice use about 2 1/3 cups water per cup rice. i like this methode because the worst thing you can do is boil away the water.
Go to most any Asian grocery store and peruse the ramon isle. You can get all kinds of soup and fried noodle packages for about 50cents - not as cheap as TopRamen but better flavor. Usually you pour boiling water over the bowl with noodles cover and go back to your game. When you remember the ramen it is cooked and may even be cool enough to eat immediately.
Buy a cheap 7-bone roast, throw some carrots into a caserol-like dish along with some water and the roast, cover and put in the oven. If you start in the morning, set the oven to about 225 F. and forget about it until until about an hour or 2 before dinner. Throw some patatos in for another hour then uncover it to brown until you can't stand how good it smells and start eating. This is probably the best beef you will ever eat. I still prefer this roast with the bones in but it is getting harder and harder to find. This method works for turkey also, I called mine soft-sculpture turkey because the whole bird begins to collapse by the end of the day.
At a bbq or out camping, wrap a chicken hind quarter (leg and thigh) or breast along with a patato in 2 layers of aluminum foil (alternate closing side so juices won't leak out); throw it into the fire/bbq, come back in an hour or 2. The chicken will be really ugly and pale, you can brown it if on a piece of metal (grilling) or on a stick (roasting) when it is done.
Most of this food will survive even if you come back the next day ( the ramen will probly be disolved but...). The first time I cooked something, I was distracted while the butter was melting and I blackened all the walls in the kitchen (my parents were really pissed!). When I was a batchelor, it was the only way I could cook w/o burning the apartment down.
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Posting Maven
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since Feb 2004