Money is SUPER tight for us this right now and we ran out of milk and couldn’t go get more. I found a box of coconut milk in the pantry and looked up recipes for coconut milk bread.

Turns out that there is a Samoan Coconut Bread called Pani Popo that fit the bill perfectly. A very easy dough to make that is forgiving and very tasty.

The slightly sweet bread is a great pairing for the pork shoulder that I cooked sous vide for 36 hours.

I used this recipe: https://youtu.be/Tkx4lNpX3N4?si=D8ysm_BgWRsvw7JF

8 points

You know you don’t need any kind of milk in bread?

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5 points

Depends on what kind of bread (and flavor) you’re going for. Bread with milk is definitely different than without.

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2 points
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Especially when money is tight…

Also, 36 hours of cooking a pork shoulder… I mean if you can’t afford to buy milk just cut slices and cook them on the range real quick instead of building an electricity bill for 36 hours?

Oh and switch to tofu, it’s cheaper.

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The pork shoulder was in a discount bin because it was on the way out so was cheaper per pound than anything else available. There is enough meat on it to feed us for about 2 weeks of 1-2 meals per day.

Sous vide can be exceptionally efficient with regards to energy. There are several resources that dive into the breakdown of the cooking method and cost of electricity but the most detailed analysis I’ve seen which accounted for cooking vessels, humidity levels, and temperature stability found that at a rate of 15 cents per kilowatt-hour a properly insulated sous vide machine cost $0.30 for a 24 hour cook.

My electricity is slightly cheaper so my sous vide cook cost me maybe $0.40 for the entire thing.

Source: https://www.amazingfoodmadeeasy.com/info/modernist-cooking-blog/more/how-much-energy-does-sous-vide-use

Oh I almost forgot: The cheapest Tofu in my area is $2.30 per pound and I got the pork shoulder at $1.15 per pound. Plus I have yet to find a Tofu recipe that I enjoy eating. I had an incredibly delicious Mapo Tofu from a mom and pop Chinese restaurant in Los Angeles when I was out visiting family but have been entirely unsuccessful trying to recreate it at home.

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4 points

That person’s being a jerk, you don’t need to defend yourself.

Your rolls look delicious. Very clever of you to use the coconut milk I don’t think it would have occurred to me. Hope your situation turns around soon, but in the meantime, it looks like you are doing an incredible job working with what you’ve got.

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1 point
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1 point

Why are you being so needlessly judgy? Maybe they have more money coming that will allow them to comfortably pay the electric bill by the time it comes. Maybe they wanted a special meal and buying & slow cooking the pork is how they budgeted their money. We have no idea about OP’s circumstances and frankly, it sucks that you felt the need to comment on how they’re doing everything wrong. They were excited about their ingenuity in the face of difficult circumstances and just trying to share something they were proud of with the community.

(Btw, I was curious so I did some googling and using this guy’s sample numbers, a 36 hr cook would use around $0.60usd in electricity. So changing cooking methods is not really an effective way here to save money.)

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2 points

Looks delicious, does it have a coconut flavor?

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A very mild coconut flavor, it’s almost similar to Kings Hawaiian rolls. If you just gave someone one to eat I’m not sure they would be able to pick out the coconut.

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