Reddit Reddit reviews Tasty Bite Indian Entree Madras Lentils 10 Ounce (Pack of 6), Fully Cooked Indian Entrée with Lentils Red Beans & Spices in a Creamy Tomato Sauce, Microwaveable, Ready to Eat (782733000020)

We found 16 Reddit comments about Tasty Bite Indian Entree Madras Lentils 10 Ounce (Pack of 6), Fully Cooked Indian Entrée with Lentils Red Beans & Spices in a Creamy Tomato Sauce, Microwaveable, Ready to Eat (782733000020). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Tasty Bite Indian Entree Madras Lentils 10 Ounce (Pack of 6), Fully Cooked Indian Entrée with Lentils Red Beans & Spices in a Creamy Tomato Sauce, Microwaveable, Ready to Eat (782733000020)
BOLD SPICES: Tasty Bite's Madras Lentils Indian Entrée is a quick and delicious way to bring bold, Indian spices to your dinner table. Made with a mix of lentils and red kidney beans in a creamy tomato sauce, it's delicious as a hearty soup or over rice.EASY AND DELICIOUS: Tasty Bite's Indian Entrees make it easier than ever to have the delicious flavors of Indian curries, sauces and stews in no time at all. Toss the packet into the microwave for 60 seconds then enjoy your delicious, spice-balanced meal.ANCIENT TRADITIONS, EASY MEALS: Flavorful Indian recipes have evolved over thousands of years. We’ve taken this wisdom and sealed it in a convenient package. Our fresh vegetable and lentil Entrées deliver you centuries of taste in less than 60 seconds.FAST, FLAVORFUL, ALL NATURAL: For close to 25 years, Tasty Bite has been making fast, flavorful and all natural ethnic food - including entrees, sauces and rices - to delight consumers, with a focus on supporting local farms and protecting the environment.UNBEATABLE TASTE: Tasty Bite's rices, sauces & entrees compare favorably to similar products from Uncle Ben's, Knorr's, Nishiki, Niko Niko, Fiesta, Lundberg Farms, Mahatma, Barilla, Healthy Choice, Marie Callenders, HMR Entrée, Whole Foods, Southern Living
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16 Reddit comments about Tasty Bite Indian Entree Madras Lentils 10 Ounce (Pack of 6), Fully Cooked Indian Entrée with Lentils Red Beans & Spices in a Creamy Tomato Sauce, Microwaveable, Ready to Eat (782733000020):

u/norbert94 · 89 pointsr/EatCheapAndHealthy

I can't believe nobody has said this but Tasty Bite has a bunch of different Indian/Thai pouches that are pretty low calorie and very filling. The lentils one is my go-to but they are all pretty good of the ones I've had. I usually get a big pack at Costco. Also if you want to make it a full meal you can add rice.

https://www.amazon.com/Tasty-Bite-Indian-Lentils-Microwaveable/dp/B0007R9L4M

u/joonjoon · 14 pointsr/iamveryculinary

I've been reading up on curry for the last hour and it's truly a fascinating tale of culinary history. It's so crazy that we have this word, that everyone thinks is a word from India that refers to their food and spice, yet is actually a western word to describe said food and spice. And somehow it spread all over the world. Then we have places like Thailand where their word for curry is one thing and we call it curry, and in neighboring Indonesia they have dishes that are literally called curry/kare.

Thanks, British empire!

BTW I absolutely agree American chili could fall under curry. I guess it depends on how you define curry though. I have a friend who claims to hate Indian food, but loves chili and this stuff: https://www.amazon.com/Tasty-Bite-Indian-Lentils-Microwaveable/dp/B0007R9L4M

She actually calls it chili and I always make it a point to remind her it's Indian food. :D

u/crazymusicman · 3 pointsr/vegetarian

I think you could make cheap snack bars with things like oats, (almond) milk, pretzels, seeds (pumpkin, chia, sunflower), protein mix, chocolate, maple syrup (or honey), maybe something like cranberries. Basically mix that in a bowl and then spread it out on a pan and bake it.

also madras lentils are really tastey, though amazon is not where to buy them for cheap. just basically rice and beans that are microwavable are good choices.

personally I really like cereal (like cereals that are grains and nuts), and bananas go well with cereal.

hmm, thats all i got. But I second werewolfgirl34's like to vegan sandwiches. they all look good honestly.

u/Starla479 · 3 pointsr/EatCheapAndHealthy

The Tasty Bites meals are good, you can reheat them on a stove without adding water. My favorite is the Madras Lentils.

http://www.amazon.com/Tasty-Bite-Madras-Lentils-10-Ounce/dp/B0007R9L4M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1453392134&sr=8-1&keywords=tasty+bite

u/theFlyingExplitive · 3 pointsr/MealPrepSunday

OK so this one is a little more complicated. I use the same chicken as the curry.

  1. Heat up butter in a pan, add diced mushrooms (baby bellas), garlic and red peppers.
  2. When mushrooms are near done, add onions - season.
  3. Add chicken, cook until warm.
  4. remove food into a bowl - reserve the liquid.
  5. add a little more butter (we use butter twice, so be careful how much you use.)
  6. You need to make a roux
  • and some chicken stock in another pan.
  • melt the new butter in the old pan then sprinkle flour a little bit at a time, stirring it in before adding more.
  • stir and heat until the roux turns brown. When it starts to turn brown, it will turn dark VERY FAST - you need to pay attention here.
  • add the chicken stock (should be around a slow boil now) a little bit at a time, stirring into the butter/four mixture. (if you have a stainless steel pan, or coated wisk, use the wisk). The more chicken stock you add, the thinner the sauce - I like it somewhat thick.
  1. Add the chicken/mushroom/onion mixture back in, season, stir and simmer for 1-2 mins.

    It's hard to see, but I like to put it on a bed of brown rice and lentils (I use half a package per tray). I also usually eat it with some laughing cow cheese.


    As for amounts, I believe it was 1200g of chicken, 350g of baby bellas, 142g of onions, 3 tsp of butter.

    ~490 calories per serving with 54g of protein
u/giraffevomitfacts · 2 pointsr/bicycletouring

All natural as in just nuts. That's usually how it's branded. The other stuff just tastes like sweet brown lard to me.

I tour a lot in cold climates and dinner is pretty important to me. If you eat cheese, boxed mac and cheese works really well. Some nights I'd eat two entire boxes with olive oil and the cheese packets, or butter if I had it. You can add one of those Indian entree pouches (amazon.com/Tasty-Bite-Indian-Lentils-Microwaveable/dp/B0007R9L4M) to mac and cheese as well, or just to a shitload of pasta with butter/oil and chunks of cheese. As for bread, buns from grocery stores work well, they are squishy rather than crumbly like bread slices and they are scalable. Buy however many you need. Slather one with butter, peanut butter, honey and a throw in a chunk of cheddar, it's a good breakfast. Avocados are a good green to eat, they go well with cheese and bread and travel reasonably well near the top of a pannier. They also have a ton of calories. I'd get a carrot once in a while to eat raw and feel like I was getting vegetables. You can also grab some broccoli, chop it up, throw it in about halfway through your pasta/mac cooking, and you get some veggies in the meal. I'd supplement every meal with as many spoonfuls of some kind of butter/honey/peanut butter slurry as I needed to feel full.

u/FrugalChef13 · 2 pointsr/povertyfinance

Do you have a crock pot? If you don't, that's likely the best way to spend these $15 for long-term easier cheaper food. Amazon Warehouse Deals is the best place to look (imo). The Crock-Pot SCR300-SS 3-Quart Manual Slow Cooker, Silver is $15.67 right now but there are a bunch of other options too. It makes cooking dry beans a lot easier, and is just overall a great kitchen tool for spending less money on food and making cooking simpler.

If food is the thing you need most, here's what I'd buy personally (I don't live anywhere near a whole foods, and Amazon Fresh is not available in my area). I'm focusing on convenience foods for this because the real basics- rice, beans, oats, flour, are at least twice as expensive on Amazon (for me) in comparison to local options. The three items listed below are the same price or cheaper on Amazon as they are locally, and total $14.02 .

u/Chef0053 · 2 pointsr/recipes

there is a product that you can buy. it is stored in the pantry no refrigeration required. it's meatless, vegan and still really good! they are called Madras Lentils. they can be found in the grocery store. and sometimes Costco will carry them. Much cheaper at Costco. you can get a box of 9 packs for $10. Here is a link

[Madras Lentils]
(https://www.amazon.com/Tasty-Bite-Indian-Entrée-Lentils/dp/B0007R9L4M/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1488163873&sr=8-1&keywords=madras+lentils)

they are good as a bowl of chili, in tacos, nachos, and on hot dogs or hamburgers for chili burgers or dogs.


Another idea is when you cook to make more than you are going to eat so that you have leftovers. for instance, Rotisserie chicken. after dinner. pick the chicken clean. now you have meat for soup, casseroles, burritos, enchiladas, etc...

Ground beef, can be made into meatloaf sliced and frozen. sloppy joe sauce can be frozen, Salisbury steaks also can be made ahead and made into meals and frozen. would make great lunches or dinners.


Cooked ground beef, you can make again taco seasoned meat, for tacos nachos, burritos etc. also you can make sloppy joes, hamburger gravy etc.


[Sloppy Joes]
(https://www.copymethat.com/r/VNiVafA/ms-sloppy-joes/)

[Hamburger Gravy]
(https://www.copymethat.com/r/Ltrnn4g/hamburger-gravy/)

u/ryneches · 2 pointsr/trailmeals

These things are called Retort pouches, and they are amazing. One of my favorites for hiking trips is Madras Lentils.

u/misskhephra · 1 pointr/Frugal

Sliced good salami, (smoked so doesn't require fridge), oranges/tangerines don't smell bad, go to bulk section of grocer and get nuts and trail mix ingredients, Costco has these beans & lentils that you just heat up they are good, (these ones: http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0007R9L4M/ref=mw_dp_img?is=l), baby carrots in Tupperware with a napkin to absorb moisture, pretzels, (peanut butter to dip both in!), beef/turkey jerky, raisins.....now im hungry.

u/yuhkih · 1 pointr/fitmeals

There is a brand called Tasty Bites that makes ethnic style foods that come in an envelope and they don't need refrigeration until you open the pouch. (amazon link to one variety) do you have access to a microwave? When the roofers came to work on my house they brought their own microwave, lol.

u/Pr0veIt · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

I'm pretty sure my sister lived on peanut butter pretzel crackers and Chipotle while in studio (undergrad and masters). But, I'd suggest a bag of apples, Tasty Bites with minute rice, and peanut butter/banana tortilla roll ups.

u/shazie13 · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

I am looking forward to blasting myself out of my neighborhood and exploring more of my city. It's time to be a hometown tourist in 2015.

Link.

Thank you.

Edit: added link

u/MysterManager · 1 pointr/Frugal

I have started substituting lentils for meat in large pots of chilli. I used to use two lbs of ground turkey breast, now I use 1 pound of turkey and around half a pound or a little more of lentils. They work very well in chilli. I got the idea because I bought these from Costco and they are very tasty.

u/EmiraTheRed · 1 pointr/Candida

My lifesaver has been Cindy's Balsamic Vinaigrette It is DELICIOUS and I put it everything! They also have a Vegan Thousand Island you may like too! I usually take sliced bell peppers and some Cindy's to dip it in (so you can digest all that fibrous goodness) as a quick snack. Apples and almond butter are yummy, and microwavable lentils similar to these can make for a good snack when you want a little more than just a fruit or veggie.