Practical, plain advice on setting up a low-cost first kitchen, the money math behind cooking versus ordering, and two easy recipes anyone can master—even if they’ve only ever used apps to get food delivered.
Too many young people assume ordering in is cheaper and easier than cooking, and that mindset is costing them more than cash. The real problem isn’t laziness so much as a gap in basic life skills: shopping, planning, and simple cooking. If someone is willing to learn, the return on time and money is immediate.
Take a clear example: an ordered burger-and-fries meal might cost $14.99 for one sitting, while the same components made at home can stretch to multiple servings at a fraction of that price. Take this X post that of a burger and fries meal bought from a fast food joint compared to the unit cost of buying the ingredients and making the food at home. People who only look at the grocery receipt total miss the point that those groceries can produce several meals.
Part of the problem is basic numeracy: comparing total basket cost to per-meal cost without dividing by yield. Leftovers and freezing are practical tools most newcomers ignore, though they transform bulk purchases into long-term savings. Teaching someone to think in servings instead of single purchases flips their whole budgeting outlook.
“Equipping your first kitchen in your first apartment is not only affordable, it’s downright cheap.” Buying used isn’t a downgrade; it’s smart. Thrift stores and secondhand markets can supply core gear for a fraction of new prices, and that’s more than enough to get started.
Assume a working stove and fridge, but if not, cheap alternatives exist: a single electric burner and a small fridge will do the trick for temporary setups. Start with a minimal toolset and add as you go—this keeps costs low and reduces clutter. The essentials cover most recipes and teach basic kitchen rhythm.
- 1 large skillet
- 1 large saucepan with lid
- 1 small saucepan with lid
- 1 large pot for pasta or soup with lid
- 2–3 mixing bowls
- 1 spatula
- 1 pair of tongs
- 1 good chef’s knife
- 1 drainer/colander
- 1 cutting board
- 3–4 wooden spoons
- Plates, glasses, and flatware for four
At most thrift stores you can collect those items for under $50 if you look patiently, and often for much less. From there, add a baking dish or an extra pan if a recipe calls for it. This setup covers soups, sautés, one-pan bakes, and the two recipes below.
Start with two forgiving, low-cost meals that scale well and teach technique: one-pot beans with sausage and a classic baked chicken with potatoes and veggies. Both show how bulk basics like beans, root vegetables, and inexpensive cuts of meat deliver nourishment and leftovers. They use straightforward steps so a novice can follow and gain confidence.
Bean and sausage stew
https://x.com/Bornakang/status/2062082725213831447
- 1 pound dried beans such as navy or white beans ($2)
- 1 pound Italian sausage ($6)
- 1 medium onion (89 cents)
- 2 stalks celery (about $2 for a whole bunch, use two stalks)
- 1 bay leaf (about $5 per jar, about 20 leaves per jar)
- Olive oil, salt, and pepper (negligible per serving)
Soak or rinse the beans and cover them with about twice as much water as beans; salt the water and add a bay leaf. Bring to a boil, then simmer covered for about 90 minutes until tender, checking occasionally. While the beans cook, brown crumbled sausage in a skillet with chopped onion and celery until soft and cooked through, then stir that mix into the pot for the last 15–30 minutes.
Finish with a splash of cream or a few dashes of hot sauce if you like, and serve with bread or a simple salad. This yields multiple hearty portions, with an estimated cost per serving around $2.65. It teaches basic simmering, seasoning, and how one pot can feed you for days.
Baked chicken, potatoes, and fresh vegetables
- 2 pounds chicken legs or thighs ($4)
- 1 pound carrots, peeled and cut ($3)
- 2 large russet potatoes, chunked ($2)
- Olive oil, McCormick Montreal Chicken Seasoning, salt, and pepper
Coat a baking dish with olive oil and season the chicken outside and under the skin with the seasoning. Toss the potatoes and carrots in oil and spread everything in one layer in the pan. Roast at about 375 degrees for roughly 30–45 minutes until the chicken juices run clear and vegetables are tender.
This is the kind of home cooking that fills you up and teaches roasting and timing without fuss; estimated cost per serving is about $2.75. With these two recipes and a thrifted kit, a beginner can learn to shop, cook, and save money while eating well. Bon appetit!
