Im embarrased at this point in my life to have to genuinely watch this to feed myself. But Im glad you posted it. Thank you sir. I hope everyone who is watching this for the same reason ia blessed in the near future.
dont be embarrassed u gotta eat to live, some meals can be cheap and good if u spend less on food and still have enough u will have more money over all so good on u for looking out for yrself :)
Please don't feel embarrassed, there's a lot of people in a similar situation, and there's nothing wrong with planning out your meals like this to make things stretch. I hope things also improve for you soon, best of luck to you my man.
You're in good company. There are a lot of people in your situation...and many more who realize they are almost there. Half the people buying food in grocery stores are buying on credit. It's far better to be frugal. No need to be embarrassed. You're being wise for saving money and smart for taking care of yourself.
Despite what the rich may want you to think, there is no shame in being poor. This comes down from God himself. I hope God blesses you and allows you to always have enough to be full and to be happy.
I just had to move suddenly because I was in an abusive situation...I'm completely starting over: No furniture, no nothing...a friend gave me a few plates and bowls, a skillet and 2 old cooking pots, and a few utensils. I have a little food, and your videos are teaching me a lot about stretching my food until I get paid again. I love your channel, been watching for a few years now. Thanks for all you do, you help people more than you know!
@@MaryTheresa1986 Thank you so much for asking!! Things are getting better every day, I found a place to live, it's a small trailer but it's perfect for me...I'm warm, safe, dry, and have food to eat so I couldn't ask for anything more! God bless you, have a wonderful day!! P.S. I have a great thrift store near me and they have been helping me get the furniture I need at a very low cost.
hey! do you happen to have an amazon wishlist? you can set it so that people can’t see your address, but can still send things to you. your info is kept completely private by amazon. if there’s anything you want or need, add it to the list and comment it here!! it’s good for groceries, but also some items that you might just want. you deserve things that make you happy at this time and i’d be really happy to help if i can 💗
Our gorl's favorite orange chicken as long as you can afford the spam unless you get the singles but if you get 3 singles just get a whole can they’re about the same price. (The price of spam singles in my area is 99 cents to $1.00 and spam is $2.90- $3.50)
I grew up hungry, and my parents always did their best to feed me and my brothers. Bless you for doing the same. A warm home cooked meal, no matter whats inside of it, always feels so much better then nothing at all.
I was 18 I got kicked out of my uncle's house and I didn't have any parents. I'm doing fine now, but I sure wish that I had this resource then. You're doing the Lord's work.
when I was 18 and homeless and obviously didn't have any cooking untinsels or a place to cook, we stole potato chips from the factory and cookies from the other factory, and someone would steal a ketchup bottle from the diner and we would dip potato chips in ketchup, and have cookies to kill our appetite. Sometimes we stole dairy products from the dairy, and went dumpster diving when Domino's threw out their pizza. When I went to sell my blood they said I must be on a healthy diet. I ended up doing time in county jails, and when I got out I never worked a job where I couldn't work at least 50 hours a week. Now I own a home and a new car. Isn't life grand? "Yes! yes it is my son"
You've proven that with stubbornness & having needs + wanting to provide for yourself will get you far. Having been a single mother at 18 will also help in getting you ahead but only if you're stubborn.
I just wanted to say that I'm not struggling but this made realize how dumb I am for spending the amount I do on food. Either by going out or by loading up at the grocery store only to throw away a bunch of once good food at the end of the week. Thank you Wolfe. I really hope this helps someone out too. You're a good dude.
I meal plan before I shop. this way, I can say, well, I need sour cream for this casserole, but not all of it, so I'll make another meal that takes sour cream. ^^b this keeps you from having odds and ends you end up trying to make into a meal later.
Yeah... most of us should really have more days where we eat less and cheaper foods. Porridge for breakfast, ramen for lunch and skipping dinner. Plus itll make whatever meal you eat the following day taste better.
@@RandomPlaceHolderName ...Hi Random...I understand your idea, but ramen has nothing but calories, and no nutrition. If you follow through with that diet, you will soon get sick....better to make a batch of this recipe and eat it for several days, or other recipes that The Wolfpit has videos on. But I get where you are coming from.
@@morninglight7544 instant noodles doesn't have to be thoroughly bad for you. the stash of nissin instant ramen i have, each packet gets complimented with 100g of chopped chicken fillet and 100g of frozen vegetables. and if i am carb loading, i use the leftover soup to boil up another cake of instant noodles. If i want more protein, instead of another cake of instant noodles, I put the soup and whatever chicken and veggies get left behind, whisk two eggs in, then pop the mixture into the microwave oven to make ghetto chawanmushi.
@@spaiduhz I think they were more saying if you eat the what the person they replied to posted, you wouldn't not be eating healthy. They posted porridge for breakfast and ramen for lunch and no dinner.
@@davidmarino9223 I hate the be the bearer of bad news rice isn't actually healthy for you. It's just cheap filler food. Rice is a grain I don't really want to go down the rabbit hole of nutrients but humans body's didn't devolpe in environments to handle grains. Now rats on the other hand can handle grains. Rice is healthier than McDonalds but that's not saying much.
Advice from an Asian: 1) Don't wait till the omelette is halfway done before you add the rice, add in it ASAP so the egg coats it nicely 2) If you can afford it, add diced Chinese sausages (lap cheong). Cook it with the rice, so that when the rice is done you get the sausage juice soaked nicely in it. If Chinese sausage isn't available or too expensive, any kind of sausage or ham you can get would do, just sear it before throwing in 3) Turmeric powder if you have it. Throw in a little just before you're done cooking
@@toga20000 you're perfectly right. Wash the raw rice in cold water several times before you cook, so the end results don't stick together into a goopy mess. That's the standard way we do here in most Asian household though so nothing special
@@DangNguyen-xx3zi But some people might not mind the sticking, especially since what you wash off is nutrients which could fill you more. Instead of turmeric/curmin, you can use ground pepper for the spice and some tomato juice/sauce (from a jar from the store) for the color. Also, you can coat the sticky rice with some flour and flatten it, then fry it in a pan (with little to no oil, if you have a non-stick pan) to make a meal with more texture. You can mash boiled rice, flatten it on a tray with baking paper or clingwrap on the bottom, freeze it, cut it into the shape of fries, then fry those fries. Or use more flour (of any type) to thicken the mashed boiled rice dough, flatten that with a roller/bottle/cup, cut it with a knife, and fry that, if you don't want to freeze a wet dough. The base ingredients are cheap, but they give more texture. Instead of rice paper, if you don't have rice flour or is too expensive for your budget, you can use what flour and make lumpia wrappers instead (the pastries-like oil-stacked-dough-circle method, the paint-brush method, or the low-heat thin-crepe-batter slow method). And all 3 can be fried to make chips, and you can mix other flavours (i.e. shrimp or herbs or spices or nutritional yeast) into the dough or batter. And it's a good skin/casing for homemade sausages, as well, especially since you can make the shell crunchy and the interior soft and juicy.
@@JohnDoe-nj3vj Saving and buying massive bulk of Dried goods and owning a deep freeze for other stuff is in the long run, of course if you can afford to at that point to begin, but these are nice for other cases as well
Botchamania JEEZUS How is this that hilarious lmao. Jesus, people laugh at shit and go “ OMG, SIRRRR YAS YOU WON THE INTERNET.” At everything. It’s dumb. Stop
get some rice. cheap meat. tomato sauce. should be good. u can even add some carrots. if they come cheap in the stores or local grocery salesman. u can cook what ive seen as : plov. nice easy and u need 1 pan.
I do that with my leftovers at least once a week=I am cooking for 6 people-so leftovers aren't another meal for all. I store it in the fridge until there is enough to make another meal. Or in the Fall and Winter season I make soups. The rest goes to the chickens - compost.
I love 'everything soup'. Such a great way to use up scraps and adding water makes it feel like it goes further. Can't go wrong with adding curry powder.
little tip that i’ve used since becoming a college student, always ask for a crap ton of sauces if you ever have a chance to go into a fast food restaurant! (i usually never order anything, just ask and they will give!) works great for sauces that are otherwise expensive like honey!
Damn Wolfie been watching you for a year now and I gotta say I genuinely enjoy you as a person. You constantly are making people in a tough spot feel better just through food alone. Not only are you always helpful with cooking tips and advice on what not to eat, but you really have a way of making people feel at home while watching your videos. You always have that really understanding nature that is all inclusive of people no matter their financial status, it really helps especially around this time of the year to know decent people are still trying to be decent. You really are a man of the people and for that I thank you.
Most kind SIR I THANK you for this series, at this time I'm personally am not struggling, BUT I have in the past. My mom and dad was raising my 2 oldest sisters during the depression and believe me my mom could make a meal out of what seemed like nothing. I'm the youngest of 9 kid's 6 girl's and three of us boy's and mom made sure we could all cook, mom died when I was 13 year's old and I can remember her cooking 56 years later. I love this series and watch each episode and hope it helps lots of people get over themselves and pay attention to what you say. GOD BLESS and MERRY CHRISTMAS
I love how youtube is suggesting all these “struggle meal recipes” and pantry recipes now that everyone is clearing the shelves at grocery stores due to this pandemic💀
I made this YEARS ago, for no other reason than the fact I was craving fried rice and the Chinese restaurant was closed. This is VERY good fried rice. I used frozen peas and carrots along with the egg, yellow onion (no green onion) and soy sauce. I used no meat, since it had eggs for protein. It truly was as good if not better than the restaurant's, because I controlled how much of all of the ingredients.
You don't have to be poor to appreciate your money. A huge part of appreciating your money is spending it wisely. Being efficient with your meal ingredients can help you afford to save money or to spend down debt.
I grew up on this and the hoover stew you made. there are some finer points to the cooking that make it even better: 1. rinse and drain the rice thoroughly a few times until the water coming from it is clear. 2. use onions and garlic in the oil as it is heating (garlic just the last minute, onions the whole time). making flavored oil pumps up the taste considerably. This is an excellent video/lesson for people on making fried rice for your family. It is a good dish. namaste
A lot of the current thinking is that modern rice doesn't need to be rinsed, but that said, it probably doesn't hurt. i definitely agree with you on the onions and garlic. Both are cheap and add tons of flavor.
"I can eat this all by myself" Sure, many of us could, but that's not what you do when you're struggling. You split what you have with the people you care about. This meal WILL feed 10 people. And if an eleventh person stops by, it will feed 11 too.
@Robin Taylor I am just curious what did John Obannon write that is nasty? I’ll admit my husband and I went from making well over 6 figures to being cut off at our knees. I personally believe in God so we took it as a life lesson. We pulled ourselves by the bootstraps back when it happened and made concessions and prioritized. We were able to keep ours girls in private school because it provided them what they both needed and by the grace of God never had to ask for assistance but I now know looking back I took what we had for granted and did not appreciate it and valued the wrong things. It was a life lesson. This video and what @John Obannon shared is not about indulgence but survival and how you can take simple items to make something good that is protein and veggie filled to care for your family during times of struggle. What is wrong with that @Robin Taylor? It’s called sacrifice and making ends meet. So please explain your nasty comment. Also typing “you’re” means “you are” which you followed with an “a” then nasty. So technically you typed “You are a nasty” which makes zero grammatical sense. I am not being shitty just curious about your thought process.EDIT apparently you are not all that asking for PayPal donations. Irony at its finest... nose in the air with your hand out asking strangers for money
@@Blueeyedjenn14 Thank you for the kind words and sharing your personal experience. There will always be trolls no matter what is posted, I just do my best to ignore them.
This video caught my eye a few weeks back and today I decided to try and make it since I'm in university and on a budget and also have minimal cooking experience. I think the overall process took me 45 min but if you are better cook you can do it even quicker. Also I decided to half this recipe since I already have other food refrigerated already. I could have added more seasoning but I didn't want to over do it and next time around I'll get some sauce to put in it as well but it's still tasty plain. It is also filling as the wolfe pit says I had about 1 1/2 cup and felt like I couldn't eat more. Thank you @TheWolfePit for providing solutions on budget for those who need it💖
Haven't eaten in a while, nothing in the kitchen, depressed and hungry, but it's nice to know I can hop on here and find advice on meal options with basically no money. I'm incredibly thankful for these videos I've found. If anyone else out there is hungry and worried about the future, you should know that things come and go. Things get better, and then worse, and better again, life is always fluctuating, don't give up hope for improvement and keep trying your best. I know the poor where I'm from sort of just get left behind and disregarded, but I care about you, and I hope it gets better sooner than later.
I’m on the Dave Ramsey plan and came to RU-vid looking for inexpensive meals. This is my first time seeing you, and I just have to say I LOVE your intro to this video. Thank you for all of your respect to struggling families, and for all you do to help!!
I was poor growing up and though I make a good living I still feel the need to eat as cheaply as possible. Never know when the hard times might come back. Thanks Larry!
When you grow up struggling, its hard to get out of that mindset, even as you are a person of means later in life. Look at it as a positive outlook and character trait and use it to your advantage. Peace.
Same here. Now that I'm older my parents confessed that we were poor. Now that I'm starting my career and make over 2k a month, I still eat like I only have $100 to spend.
My country went bankrupt during my childhood and there was a salmonella craze raging as well, around the early-mid nineties, so prices for chicken dropped like a sack of potatoes (should be noted, potatoes usually don't drop in price... ever), I don't know if we were poor, at least I didn't notice (because my father is quite tight when it comes to money, and my mother grew up in a single parent family (her mother was widowed) so money was tight there), so homemade chips (french/freedom fries for you American lot) and boiled/oven roasted chicken was quite common. We also had chicken, ducks and geese running around outside, that were quite content with grass and left-overs (whatever that wasn't eaten after having been reheated once or had gone off went into the "duck bucket").
I used to ration rice and beans when I was struggling a lot financially. Definitely couldn’t afford to eat until I was full. It sucked but eventually I got through it. Please donate to your local food bank if you can!
Been doing this! Take-out level fried rice is super easy! things I have found: 1. rinse the rice well before cooking. i swear this helps make master level rice every time. 2. you have to let rice sit in fridge for up to 24 hours. 3. use half the salt you would and the other half use"accent" msg from the spice isle, then soy sauce. 4. very hot pan after the eggs! BAM
This is another great recipe that I'm going to send to my nephew. He's on unemployment, and still has to feed 5 people. I often send him a few dollars, and he's very greatfull. Merry Christmas and Happy new year.
If your nephew is in an area where there are smaller "ethnic" groceries, there are often excellent deals on rice, beans, and other staples. Plus, helping small businesses is always good!
@@lisaanderson8235 Thank you for your advice I buy from small businesses as often as possible. Unfortunately my nephew lives in a suburban area. There are not many ethnic stores near him.
@@debbiekerr3989 Hopefully your nephew finds a job soon. Encourage him to take civil service exams. State jobs offer full benefits (medical, dental, vision, prescription, pension, life insurance, etc) after 6 months, with lots of room for advancement. A college degree isn't necessary, but you can use your union benefits to get a free associate's degree. That benefit also extends to your spouse, children, and even parents. It takes a while to get in, but it's so worth it.
@@MaryTheresa1986 That's true I was a nurse for 25 years, and I worked for the state Hospital system. I get a pension, and social security. I was very fortunate. I've encouraged him to apply for a few state jobs, and he has put in an application. I hope he hears from someone soon.
My roommate and I are both struggling college students and this is one of our go to meals. It’s so easy and cheap to make and we always have left overs. The best part is that it’s good with or with out meat so if you can afford some at the time great and if not it’s still great!
"Rumfort"-Topf or Pfanne ... Meaning, all stuff that is laying around (rum) and has to be gone (fort) immediatly before it spoils is cooked in one pot (Topf) of pan (Pfanne). Also "Rumfort" sounds a little bit like french/bretone cuisine (considered exquisit and expensive) for a german listener, at first... which is funny. 😊😊😊😅😅😅😋😋😋
You're the best WolfePit. As a young adult trying to learn practical food prep skills, not only are you giving me ideas to save cash, but you're teaching me a lot about being resourceful with food and creating dishes. These videos are addicting. You probably will never know how impactful your work really is to the world.
@@colecoley3473 as in I have plenty of income where I do not need to make a monthly budget because my bills and cost of living is considerable less than what i make and as long as we dont buy something really dumb we still save money
@@HunteroftheNorth idk I still consider that a living on a budget. I dont look at prices at the grocery store but I cant say i have no budget because if I were truly on no budget I'd buy everyone's groceries 🤷♀️ mehhh I'm just talking in circles and not really making a point 🤣 nice video for sure!
Everyone gets some protein, veggies and carbohydrates with a little fat as well. Great stuff on a budget because it lets the tasty stuff go further. You're a food hero!
It's basically how I make my fried rice, only difference is I fry the rice in the oil first, add the soy sauce, and then add in the eggs and vegetables after. That way the eggs incorporate with the the rice. Learn to do it that way from a Thai restaurant I worked at
Tip: add the frozen veggies and cook them a bit first before adding the eggs. In fact, i usually add the eggs last to get everything including the rice coated with eggs
What you might wanna try: add egg in first, do not stir it until the bottom is browned, then stir and break up the egg. Then add spices and toast the spice, then add frozen veggies and fry them until tender, keep stirring in this process. Finally add the rice , mix well and pour soy sauce along the side of the pan to toast the sauce. Also make sure the green onion is finely chopped and garnish.
I love these. handy for my volunteer work. I cook for a feeding center sometimes. or our town community meals for the hungry. with limited funds we sometimes use our own money to buy food or ingredients. These recipes helping me in several ways.
I watched this 2 months ago and thought, "eh, interesting, but a little too frugal for my taste." Oh how times have changed, and how relevant this information has become! Thank you for this great vid.
I like that you emphasize that you don’t need to make it an Asian fried rice if you don’t have soy sauce/you don’t need to have specific condiments to make recipes work. Definitely appreciate what you’re doing here
Soy sauce isn't necessary for fried rice. The simplest form is rice + eggs + green onions + salt. Soy sauce should never be used for the salt content in this dish, only for its coloring properties.
@@justinb7229 The Chinese cook Martin Yan once said that lots of the chinese families fried rice was basically made from the left over white rice from rice they served the day before.
Wow! Thank you, so much! I am struggling, due to my auto immune issues, plus what’s occurring now, simply, thank you again! I sent it to my dad , who’s 80, my brothers! I’m sure you’ll have more followers! When raising my kiddos we were on a budget, this truly is incredible savings and love it can go along ways.
I've had meals like this back when we were struggling as kids. Those were actually really good times! Made me into the working man I am today! Those meals are still freaking great and they bring back memories of us having fun and forgetting we were having money troubles! Great video, it's awesome to see you doing these kinds of videos👍👍👌👌
This is great stuff! For my fellow keto peeps wondering how they can bring it to the keto side here's what I do: Cauliflower (you can even buy it pre riced!) The key to cauliflower rice is to chop it finely, COOK IT DOWN getting rid of the water maybe twice. What I do is cook it draining the water that comes out, then I put the rice in a strainer then squeeze it then fry it one more time in bacon grease. The bacon grease is magic and adds awesome flavor to the cauliflower rice. We also don't like the gluten in regular soy sauce so we use Bragg's aminos (which tastes just like regular soy sauce) And if you NEED sugar/sweet our go to sweetener is erythritol Hope that helps!
Worcestershire sauce instead of soy in my house. Just started experimenting with cauliflower recipes recently. Does it work well with this? The cauliflower/lime/cilantro mix did not go over well.
I live alone, but I've started keeping servings of cooked rice in the fridge so I can throw something like this together. Very satisfying to eat, and really versatile. I add some chicken and pineapple, or some sesame seeds, or bacon, whatever I have left over or near it's use by date.
I live alone too, and I cook big batches of things (including rice) and put them in little boxes in the freezer. It's a really efficient way to cook. Most of my meals consist of just heating up stuff in the microwave that I cooked earlier.
Yep, fried rice is a main course often in my house. Wolf Pit are you in my kitchen. I'm the queen of starting out with one dish and turning it in to another dish or changing the from the original dish. Generally fried rice only goes about a day and half because it grab and go dish. It microwaves quick and easily. Chop suey is another wonderful budget meal.
Good tip about using day old rice. I used to wonder why my fried rice always turned out gloopy. Then l learned to used day old rice. It makes all the difference in the world.
It's a dish designed to deal with the extra leftover rice you had from last night's dinner. Very common breakfast for Chinese families, especially since you can do the most simplest variant half awake - rice, eggs, green onion, salt.
This is the first budget meal I'd call bullshit on those people. No normal sized adult should be eating an entire skillet full of fries rice - poor or rich. Lol
That looks good, Mr. Pit. I used to do something like that with raamen to feed our 7 kiddos. I used the noodles instead of rice, but everything else that you did. I also grated a little cheese over it all. Thanks for the great ideas. Those 1 pan altogether meals are the best!
My dad used to cook almost this exact thing for us when we were little. He called it Egg Foo Yung or The Signature Bob. Thank you for the nostalgia trip sir, and thank you for showing this recipe so I can make it myself.
Thank you brother, sometimes good people go through hard times. Your time and effort are greatly appreciated. God bless you and yours, and anyone else who sees this.
As a "inexpensive eater," I find that almost _any time_ I'm boiling something, add a Bay leaf, and nearly all proteins, add a little Schriacha sauce. More flavors = more satisfying (me thinks).
This was a blast from the past for me. This was a meal I used to serve our household in the 70's. A little bit of bacon for flavor if available. Tofu for protein if there were too few eggs. And I used to sprout various beans and seeds for the veg. A bag of mung beans cost under 40 cents and would last for a couple weeks. I still make it for myself.
Those cringing at the amount of oil are forgetting. This is depression era style cooking where you need to add something to the meal to help add fat building. struggling folks will burn off majority of this in their daily life. Ive been saving these as its always good to know quick simple affordable meal ideas. Never know when it will be needed.
I'm a chef and I still watched this video. I appreciate your humor and willingness to help others you are right about being only limited by your imagination. I find people don't want to screw up so they dont even try to step out of their comfort zone. Keep up the good work
The only addition I would recommend wild be a cube of bullion while moving the rice after cooking. Otherwise, my brother and I lived off this as bachelors. Also makes a great camp meal
This recipe makes for a pretty nice meal. I've occasionally had it with some cubed ham and beansprouts added to it as well, for some added protein and some crunch. Nowadays my go-to meal is just pasta with sauce and some sort of meat (sausage, ground beef , or chicken). You can have a bit of variety by just switching out the type of pasta or sauce and you get at least 5 or 6 large portions out of a single 12 oz box of pasta for like $4.
Wolfe pit, I just stopped by to say, I love ya bro. I’ve been watching your channel for years, your meat loaf recipe is still one of my go tos. I noticed you been doing this series for people having a hard time, affordable recipes etc. much respect man and keep doing what you’re doing. This is hands down one of the best channels on RU-vid.
As a high school junior who is a panicked about college and taking care of his gf, seeing stuff like this reassures me so much. This looks absolutely delicious!
@@xplodax didn’t end up going to college but I am doing well for myself and don’t have to worry about money as much as I thought I would, so I consider that a win?
thank you for sharing this. we skipped the eggs and enjoyed the rice. times are tough n 4 children n one salary makes it so difficult, but we paid rent this month and ate tonight so its not that bad .:)
These really are great and your style and demeanor make them super approachable. I'm a kitchen kid but I never bothered to learn some techniques and recipes from my cook / chef parents and I think a lot of people like me just lack confidence in their decision making. You really do help spell out the "If it looks good throw it in!" which dovetails so nicely with the fundamentals you bring. I'm embarrassed to say that I can't make rice for nothing even with a rice cooker so I really appreciate this one. I work with a lot of younger adults and teenagers that are almost adults and if door dash ever goes away I'm not sure how they're going to survive lol.
@@afiqasyrafx as far as I know, bodybuilders don't usually avoid calories. They just aggressively beat those f..ers into submission lol. Except when it's time to prepare for a competition. Then it's an all out hunger for weeks.
I grew up poor, and finding a way to make the best of Canned Chicken, Ramen, canned foods, white rice, etc was something we had to learn the hard way. Because of you, I'm sure a lot of families are eating better tonight. I'll add, a go-to for me (and I still make it today, although I'm blessed enough to have a solid occupation and savings), Aldi brand beef stew + 2.5 cups of cooked white rice, seasoned white your preference (Mine being Cayenne, black pepper, and salt) was a great way to feed us.
This is what people don't understand about 'Western poverty' - cheap food frequently lacks nutrition. If you want to eat cheap and healthy think differently. For example a carrot top kept in a dish of water will sprout, the carrot greens are great in salads, they have a mild carrot flavour. Beetroots can also be used similarly. Windowsill salad, from offcuts. Nutrition rich.
As a kid when I was hungry I would cook fried rice with whatever we had in the house. Over thirty years later I still make it the same way. Great video!
I think this series is absolutely wonderful. Like you say, a lot of the stuff you make in this series looks delicious if you are on a budget or not. Thanks for doing this, Larry. You're a peach! ❤🍑❤