Frozen Dinners

I wouldn't touch that **** with a 10 foot pole. I make almost everything fresh.
 
All I can say is eat what you want. But since my NDE last year I need to read labels carefully. Processed foods like these are not good for you, esp. in our age group. Way too much sodium, plus who knows what else. My advice, get a cook book and learn to cook healthy food. Bar BQ, grilled vegies, good stuff Maynard.
 
I'm a Banquet brand fan. Dinners & pot pies. Frozen dinners for me are about convenience, the cheaper the better.

Pro tip: The Banquet brand mystery meat/BBQ Rib makes a pretty passable McRib sandwich if that's your thing! :D
 
A couple Banquet Beef, Chicken or Turkey pot pies with some sort of salad are a complete dinner for me.
Boston Market's frozen Sweet & Sour Chicken, Beef Pot Roast, Meat Loaf or Salisbury Steak meals every now & then along with a salad of some sort.
Stouffer's family sized meals are another alternative that can usually yield 2 or 3 meals for me.
Living alone, cooking full meals are just a chore. If I do get in the mood to actually cook a meal, I try to cook enough to get 2 or 3 meals out of the left overs again with some sort of salad.
 
Trader Joe's has a bunch of very good frozen foods, all of these are better than the comparable TV dinners:

fettuccine Alfredo, orange chicken, pot stickers,
five cheese nochi,
country potatoes with wild mushrooms and verts,
several varieties of macaroni and cheese,
meatballs,
lasagna,
and a bunch of frozen seafood.

I'd much rather have Trader Joe's frozen dinners than anything by Stoufers or Marie Callener. Ironically, Trader Joe's is less expensive than traditional grocery store frozen dinners per portion.

Trader Joe's Indian dinners, tamales, burritos, mac 'n cheese with or without pepperoni, chicken and mushroom pelmeni, a few varieties of gnocchi. Two thumbs up for Trader Joe's.
 
Used to be in this county that 4 frozen dinner wrappers turned in with wife's body was a legal natural death. Since COVID they have relaxed that and you could be indicted for murder. I would rather eat a can of pork & beans myself.
 
I can eat most anything and like it if I'm hungry. Frozen taquitos get a lot of action and frozen french fries, breaded shrimp, chicken nuggets et al in an air fryer are pretty tasty followed by an Edward's southern style pecan pie or lemon meringue. I eat that garbage and then go watch a cross fit video. :D
 
I worked in the Fall and Spring and went to undergrad classes in the Winter and summer. One summer, Kroger's had pot pies on sale for 25 cents each. I bought $139 worth and ate them all summer. Have not eaten many frozen meals since then.
 
Mom cooked fresh turkey and made fresh pot pies. We were four sons who were active and hungry. She bought cases of foil pie shaped dishes then froze them.

We owned a restaurant in Westwood, nj. At onetime.
 
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Prefer to cook fresh.... but now the Boys have moved away or are in College............

Stouffer's Lasagna...... cus I'm too lazy to make lasagna from scratch.

Aldi's has some tasty BBQ chicken and pork.... works well for the wife and I now that it's just us.
 
I'm picky, and the only frozen dinners I've had anytime recently were a couple of Healthy Choice "Power Bowls", which were tolerable. The best one was the beef and broccoli, and the B'ef(Gardein fake beef, which, IMHO, tastes absolutely nothing like beef) was tolerable. Neither of them are enough to eat, not even close, and both of them are very bland, which seems odd for something named "Power Bowl" to be.

For making a one skillet meal, the P.F. Chang Signiture Rice is decent, not great. I add snow peas to it, along with some shrimp or fish and it's not bad at all. If I want great fried rice though, I get it at a local restaurant, and just add snow peas and some other stuff to it, it doesn't need any other seasoning than what's in it already. Light years better than the PF Chang rice is.
 

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