The best meal a host cooks for a crowd is rarely the most expensive one. Knowing what to do with an inexpensive cut, a bag of dried beans or whatever the farmers market has left at the end of the day is a skill, not a consolation prize for a tight budget. With farm-level cattle prices expected to increase by 11.2% this year, hosts leaning on affordable proteins and seasonal produce this summer are making a smart call.

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The timing has never been better to get serious about what affordable proteins can actually do. Beef and veal prices are predicted to rise 12.1% this year, while poultry is projected to increase 0.5%, which widens the gap at the butcher counter. For hosts willing to adapt, that switch often leads to better cooking, with more technique, more flavor and more interesting food than a premium cut tossed on a hot grill.
The backyard cookout: Chicken thighs done right
Bone-in chicken thighs earn their place on a summer grill for reasons that go well beyond price. They cost less than breasts, hold up better under high heat and, with the right preparation, taste better than either.
The technique that separates a good cookout from a great one is simple: apply the dry rub the night before, not the morning of. That extra time lets the seasoning become part of the meat rather than a crust on top. Cook the thighs over a two-zone fire and pull them at 175 degrees Fahrenheit.
The United States Department of Agriculture recommends cooking poultry to a minimum internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit, but thighs benefit from the higher temperature because it helps break down collagen and connective tissue, resulting in a more tender texture. That’s what makes them juicy rather than simply cooked through.
The rest of the table leans into what July and August do best. Corn reaches peak sweetness and sits near its lowest price point of the year. Charred on the grill and finished with cotija and lime, it needs nothing else. A coleslaw made from store-bought mix but dressed at home with apple cider vinegar, celery seed and just enough mayonnaise to bind it tastes sharply different from anything pre-made and takes four minutes. Warm tortillas on the side turn the whole spread into something that feeds eight generously.
The casual dinner party: The braise that fools everyone
White beans and Italian sausage make a compelling dinner party centerpiece because nobody at the table is likely to guess the per-head cost. One sausage link per person is enough, with the beans absorbing the cooking fat and tomato base while doing much of the work of filling the bowl.
The depth comes from a step many home cooks skip: rendering the sausage slowly and using that fat to build the soffritto before any liquid goes in. That foundation gives the finished braise a richness that reads as hours of work rather than 45 minutes on a weeknight stove.
Canned San Marzanos pair naturally with late-summer tomatoes halved and salted on the side, alongside crusty bread and a green salad dressed with shaved Parmesan and a sharp lemon vinaigrette. None of it is expensive, and none of it needs to be. A meal built this way feels generous without being showy, which is exactly what a good dinner party should be.
The outdoor brunch: The frittata as statement piece
A crowd-sized frittata earns its place at an outdoor brunch because it costs very little, scales easily and arrives at the table looking like more effort than it took. The protein is eggs, loaded with whatever vegetables are cheapest and at their peak right now, including zucchini, corn cut off the cob and roasted red peppers.
Success depends on a step many home cooks skip: sautéing the vegetables first to drive off their moisture before the eggs go in. That one step determines whether a frittata holds its shape or falls apart. Finished under the broiler for color, it looks like it came out of a restaurant kitchen because the technique is identical.
A fruit salad torn with fresh mint pairs naturally alongside it, as does whole-milk yogurt served in a nice bowl with a drizzle of honey. The yogurt becomes part of the spread rather than an afterthought when it is plated properly. A real pot of coffee rounds everything out, creating a brunch for eight built almost entirely from what is in season and what is on sale.
Smart cooking beats bigger budgets
A recent survey found that 84% of Americans have pulled back on restaurant spending, with 39% eating out less altogether. That means more gatherings at home, more opportunities to cook well and more reason to build the kind of skills that get more out of what costs less.
Those skills tend to reward attention more than spending. A chicken thigh handled right can outperform a carelessly cooked ribeye, while a braise built on patience needs no apology. The difference between an impressive brunch and an ordinary one is often just a broiler and two minutes. The ingredient list is the starting point, not the ceiling, and this summer, that turns out to be a genuinely good place to start.
Mandy Applegate is the creator behind Splash of Taste and seven other high-profile food and travel blogs. She’s also the co-founder of Food Drink Life Inc., a unique and highly rewarding collaborative blogger project. Her articles appear frequently on major online news sites, and she always has her eyes open to spot the next big trend.