Dollar Store Dinners – Sausage and Rice

$8.75 recipe / $2.19 serving
by Beth Moncel
4.50 from 22 votes
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I hit the jackpot at the dollar store this week! They were more well-stocked than the last time I visited, so I was able to brainstorm several quick dollar store dinners to keep us going for the next few weeks. This week we made this super quick Sausage and Rice, which is a simplified version of my Cajun Sausage and Rice recipe. And the Cajun Sausage and Rice is a simplified version of jambalaya, so I guess you could say that this dollar store sausage and rice recipe is kind of like jambalaya’s third cousin, twice removed. 😆

Dollar Store Dinners

Welcome to the Dollar Store Dinners series on Budget Bytes. We’re making quick and simple meals using only ingredients found at the dollar store. While the availability of ingredients will vary from store to store, hopefully these easy recipes will give you some inspiration for when money is tight and access to groceries is limited!

Overhead view of a sausage and rice skillet with hot sauce on the side.

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What’s in This Meal?

This super simple meal is cooked all in one pot for maximum flavor and minimum cleanup. It starts with smoked sausage and a mix of frozen vegetables (onion, bell pepper, and celery), then we add rice, chicken broth, and a little creole seasoning. Everything is simmered together until the rice is tender, then topped it off with a couple of dashes of hot sauce, plus a little more creole seasoning to taste. Simple, yet good!

Here’s what we bought at the dollar store:

  • Smoked sausage $1.25
  • Frozen seasoning blend $1.25
  • Vegetable oil $1.25
  • Long grain white rice. $1.25
  • Chicken bouillon $1.25
  • Creole seasoning $1.25
  • Hot sauce $1.25

Total $8.75

And we have plenty of leftover oil, rice, bouillon, Creole seasoning, and hot sauce to use in other recipes!

Dollar store ingredients.

What Kind of Sausage To Use

Since we got all of the ingredients for this dish at the dollar store, there was no room to be choosy about what type of sausage to use. Luckily they had a package of “smoked sausage” that I snatched up immediately. This sausage looked exactly like the “hot dogs” on the shelf next to them, so I’m pretty sure the only difference was the addition of smoke flavoring. If all you had available was hot dogs, I’m sure this would still make a tasty meal!

But if you do have access to a variety of sausage, definitely go for a smoked pork or beef sausage, like andouille or kielbasa.

What Kind of Seasoning to Use

A lot of the flavor in this dish comes from the smoked sausage and chicken broth. I also added some creole seasoning, but if your dollar store doesn’t have that there are other options. Try adding some salt-free all-purpose seasoning (like Mrs. Dash), taco seasoning, or even steak seasoning. Just be aware of the salt content of your seasoning so you don’t over salt the dish.

What else can I add?

If you want to bump up this recipe a bit, try adding a drained can of kidney beans, or maybe a can of diced tomatoes (reduce the broth by the amount of liquid in the can of tomatoes). And I’m a “cheese makes everything better” type of person, so if I had some cheddar I’d throw that on top and let it melt, too. :P

See my full “grocery store” version of this recipe here: Cajun Sausage and Rice Skillet.

close up side view of a plate full of sausage and rice.
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Sausage and Rice

4.50 from 22 votes
This Sausage and Rice skillet is an easy and filling meal that you can make with ingredients found at the dollar store.
Author: Beth Moncel
Overhead view of sausage and rice in the skillet.
Servings 4 1.25 cup each
Prep 5 minutes
Cook 30 minutes
Total 35 minutes

Ingredients

  • 8 oz. smoked sausage ($1.25)
  • 2 Tbsp cooking oil ($1.25)
  • 10 oz. frozen seasoning mix (celery, onion, bell pepper, parsley) ($1.25)
  • 1 cup long grain white rice ($1.25)
  • 1.5 cups chicken broth (made with bouillon) ($1.25)
  • 1/2 tsp Creole seasoning ($1.25)
  • hot sauce to taste ($1.25)
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Instructions 

  • Slice the smoked sausage into ½-inch thick rounds.
  • Add the cooking oil to a deep skillet and heat over medium. Once hot, add the smoked sausage and continue to cook until the sausage has browned (3-5 minutes).
  • Add the frozen seasoning mix to the skillet and continue to cook and stir over medium heat until the vegetables are heated through.
  • Add the rice, Creole seasoning, and chicken broth to the skillet, then stir until everything is combined.
  • Place a lid on the skillet, turn the heat up to medium-high, and let the broth come up to a boil. When it reaches a full boil, turn the heat down to medium-low, and let the skillet simmer for 15 minutes (do not lift the lid, do not stir).
  • After simmering for 15 minutes, turn off the heat and let the skillet rest with the lid in place for an additional five minutes.
  • Finally, lift the lid, fluff the rice, and add more Creole seasoing and hot sauce to taste. Serve and enjoy!

See how we calculate recipe costs here.


Notes

The prices listed for this recipe are the purchase price for the full container of the ingredients used.

Nutrition

Serving: 1.25cupsCalories: 436kcalCarbohydrates: 45gProtein: 12gFat: 23gSodium: 813mgFiber: 2g
Read our full nutrition disclaimer here.
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How to Make Sausage and Rice – Step by Step Photos

Dollar store ingredients.

Here are all of the ingredients we used: smoked sausage, frozen seasoning blend (onion, celery, bell pepper, parsley), vegetable oil, white rice, chicken bouillon, Creole seasoning, and hot sauce.

sliced sausage on a cutting board.

Slice 8 oz. of smoked sausage.

Browned sausage in a skillet.

Heat 2 Tbsp vegetable oil (or any cooking oil) in a deep skillet over medium heat. Once hot, add the sliced sausage and cook until browned.

seasoning mix added to the skillet with the sausage.

Add the frozen celery, bell pepper, onion, and parsley mix (called “seasoning mix) and sauté until heated through.

Rice, broth, and seasoning added to the skillet.

Add one cup of rice, ½ tsp of Creole seasoning, and 1.5 cups chicken broth (made with the bouillon). You don’t want to add too much Creole seasoning here because it contains salt and you don’t want to over-salt the dish.

Sausage and rice ready to be simmered.

Stir everything together until evenly combined. Place a lid on top, turn the heat up to medium-high, and allow the broth to come up to a boil.

Simmered sausage and rice.

When it reaches a boil, turn the heat down to medium-low and let the skillet simmer for 15 minutes (do not remove the lid or stir it). After simmering for 15 minutes, turn the heat off and let it rest with the lid in place for an additional five minutes.

Hot sauce being sprinkled over the sausage and rice.

Fluff the rice with a fork, then season to your liking with extra Creole seasoning and hot sauce.

Overhead view of a plate full of sausage and rice.
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  1. Family favorite! I love how super easy it is. I increase the sausage and the creole seasoning (because I love it). I also use parboiled rice instead of the regular rice. I’ve never had success with one pot rice dishes (user error), so now I always sub parboiled in any recipe like this I find. I’ve also used ground turkey (1 lb) instead of sausage a couple of times. Great recipe either way!

  2. I’ve made this recipe many times now. I never get a complaint and there are never leftovers!

  3. Fantastic and easy. I used Old Bay rather than a true creole seasoning, and I added some cayenne pepper in addition. The only issue was I ate more than I should have. Will absolutely make again.

  4. We love this recipe and eat it at least twice a month. Itโ€™s so nice to have something that my kids will eat without complaining, lol! We used to have green beans on the side, but I just added the green beans into the pot and we have this with cornbread. I eat mine with chipotle, hot sauce, and some of the chipotle Bi*chinโ€™ brand sauce, and itโ€™s DELICIOUS!

  5. This was easy and delicious. I didnโ€™t use the frozen veggies as we arenโ€™t onion fans so I chopped up a red and green pepper instead. Will definitely make this again.

  6. Can I make this with brown rice (all we use in our house)? How would I adjust the recipe? Thanks!

    1. Hi Mandy, you can make this with brown rice, but you would need to add more water and time. As we have not tested it with brown rice, we cannot give you specifics.

  7. Oops I added already cooked short grain rice, but it still tasted good! I also made my own creole seasoning since I didnโ€™t have any on hand. Iโ€™d make this again.

  8. This was great! I used โ€œboil in a bagโ€ rice which has a shorter cooking time than normal rice. It worked and I did not adjust the cooking time. I will be making this again!

  9. Hmm. I did everything exactly as the recipe is written. But the rice came out crunchy. So I added a bit more broth and repeated the process for 10 more minutes and it still was crunchy! Not sure what happened. Iโ€™ll try it again and cook longer. Flavor was amazing! Thank you ๐Ÿ˜˜

    1. Was the liquid simmering the whole time? If it drops below a simmer the starches in the rice will not hydrate.

  10. This was DELISH!! I made a few changes, but nothing significant โ€” definitely a keeper.

    The changes I made were adding a can of drained kidney beans (I think itโ€™s in one of the recipeโ€™s suggested add-ons), and because of the additional volume, I upped the chicken broth to 2 cups and let the rice mixture cook for 20 mins instead of 15. Also I didnโ€™t have Creole seasoning, so I used 1/2 tsp of Dan-oโ€™s seasoning and 1/2 tsp of Slap Your Mama Cajun seasoning. The flavors were really good with just a bit of a kick which was perfect for my kiddos.

  11. I have made almost every one of the one pot dishes you have listed .. everything I make is absolutely amazing so easy and actually really really good . About people complaining over the pricing get a grip stuff changes daily in the current economy .. I work my ass off every day digging ditches and let me say I have never tried one of the dishes on this site because of the money .. I personally buy the most expensive ingredients I can find to feed my family the best I can .. I really enjoy this site and just canโ€™t get over some of the comments. get a life take some personal responsibility if you canโ€™t say anything positive go somewhere else โ€ฆ

  12. I’m going to make this using vegie hot dogs (what I have in freezer). What can I use to amp the smoky flavor? Thanks.

  13. Sooooo Goooood! Used brown rice rather than pasta – great weeknight dish with amazing flavor.

  14. Here you go, the same brand as she has pictured in this post, but this link is for Walmart. This is a 2.5 lb package, and it is $4.98 as of this post ($2 per pound, or $1 for 8 oz.). Given that her prices are all $1.25, I am going to assume that she is shopping at Dollar Tree. They may have special packaging from that brand to allow them to sell that product at their standard $1.25 pricing.

    1. Sorry this was supposed to be in reply to someone, but I put it in the wrong spot.

  15. This recipe is delicious! My kitchen smelled amazing while the dish was cooking on the stove. Very easy to make, and very simple with minimal ingredients. My sister and I are looking forward to having leftovers for lunch tomorrow if there is any LOL. Thank you for sharing, Miss Beth!

  16. Where the hell are you buying an 8 oz package of smoked sausage for $1.25?! Even if you’re doing the disingenuous thing of breaking that price down from a larger package, no store (in the United States at least) sells smoked sausage at $2.50 per pound (at least not in the last 30+ years). At least be honest with people on your pricing here.

    1. HAHAHA!!! I promise you we arenโ€™t trying to put anything over on you. If youโ€™d like I can ask Beth to find the receipt and we can post a picture of it. XOXO -Monti

    2. Here you go, the same brand as she has pictured in this post, but this link is for Walmart. This is a 2.5 lb package, and it is $4.98 as of this post ($2 per pound, or $1 for 8 oz.). Given that her prices are all $1.25, I am going to assume that she is shopping at Dollar Tree. They may have special packaging from that brand to allow them to sell that product at their standard $1.25 pricing.

      Bar-S Smoked Polish Sausage, High Protein, 14 Links Per Package, 2.5 Pound Family Pack https://www.walmart.com/ip/17247533

    3. Erin – For this Dollar Store Dinner series everything is purchased at the dollar store (Dollar Tree specifically for this one), where everything is $1.25.

    4. Erin… the recipe is called Dollar Store Dinners – Sausage and Rice. Hmmmm….. Dollar Store Dinners might you think that the ingredients were purchased at…. DOLLAR STORE? Yes, dollar store has increased their prices from $1 to $1.25 making this jump from a $7 meal to an $8.75 meal but it feeds 4 people so that is $2.19 a serving. If your feeding children or toddlers you might get another meal or two out of it making the serving cost less. Not sure why you think that just because you are hiding behind a keyboard and monitor that you have the right to be rude. Might I suggest if you don’t agree with something that you ignore it an move on? I’ve only been on this site today and I’ve seen nothing but honesty and goodness in the posts – it’s the comments that get me – what a rude society we’re turning out to be…

  17. This meal was delicious! Everyone ate every bit of it and wanted more. We’re in our RV at the moment and it was an easy meal to make in a small space. Thank you!

  18. The SAUSAGE was really good enough. The rice was also good enough, the receipe was really good and the food is delicious.

  19. Maybe somebody, not gonna mention names doesn’t know what luisanna cooking is. This is a classic recipe used with easily attainable ingredients. It’s basically new Orleans, dirty rice. The creole seasoning matched with the trinity mix sounds delicious. Thank you for the recipe. I will male this for sure, just gonna add a bit of ground beef.

  20. I’m going through a nasty Child Support and Divorce case and I could use all the help that I could get with the recipes. Thank You Very Much

  21. The racists posting rude comments about the color of other people are absolutely disgusting. Somebody โ€œsounds whiteโ€? If you canโ€™t behave in a civilized manner like a mature adult, then go back to Twitter where you and others who canโ€™t do so belong. This is a recipe site.

  22. This made a quick and easy meal prep recipe for lunches this week! Very flavorful, and I love that it’s a one pot recipe. And I think it looks pretty delicious, too. :) As always, thank you for offering delicious meal inspiration for us non-professional chefs on a budget!

  23. This recipe came at just the right time. Had most of the ingredients (or vegan alternatives, as I had some Field Roast Smoked Apple + Sage plant-based sausages and Edward & Son’s Not-Chik’n Bouillon Cubes) on hand, so the only active cost was the seasoning and some frozen veggies. A simple, but good “Getting to the penny pinching part of the month” recipe. If I can track down some of Field Roast’s smoked frankfurters, bet they would work well too.

  24. Loving the new look of the website! Keep up the great job. You’re helping so many people.

  25. The dollar store has really helped me keep in budget lately. A bag of bagels and the can of deviled ham is 4-8 servings of breakfast for $2.50. Love it! Yes some things are cheaper elsewhere but sometimes dollar stores are all you have! And Iโ€™m so happy to see itโ€™s not just junk food anymore.

    1. Hmm funny but I thought it looked quite tasty. I donโ€™t know you so maybe itโ€™s the difference in struggle versus not. But this looks like a somewhat healthy meal that will feed a family very well for very little money. And it wonโ€™t be bland.

      1. the struggle? maโ€™am you sound painfully white and have probably never had to count food stamps before, donโ€™t proselytize to me.

        it looks and sounds bland as all get out, which is my complaint. there are dollar tree dinners, and then thereโ€™s whatever this is. maybe reconsider your approach to comments on a BUDGET. RECIPE. BLOG. before throwing around words like โ€œthe struggleโ€ which out you as middle class white. thank yew

      2. No need to jump to racism. People all around the world of all colors and classes go through difficult times.

        Did you try the recipe? It sounds like your 1-star rating is based on appearance alone. Please consider attempting a recipe before leaving a rating.

      3. Actually I have prayed for food stamps, living in a car with my parents praying for a meal to pass my lips, and when that STRUGGLE is your life, a bit of boiled potato with salt is a delicious gourmet meal. I worked an illegal 40 hour a week job, that paid under the table, at 12 years old to make sure that me and my parents never had to โ€œcampโ€ in the car again. So yes that meal looked dang tasty. When you have little and can make something out of nothing itโ€™s a success and that inexpensive meal would easily and deliciously fill the bellies of struggling parents with children. Again if you were offended by my comment thatโ€™s your problem not mine. Have a great life and I sure hope you have reinforced windows in that glass house youโ€™re throwing stones in.

      4. tf, you sound white as hell, get out of here with this “im too good for this” bs, your granny aint never made you somethin on the cheap? probably not, guessing she woulda smacked some sense into you

      5. Hi, white person with an invisible illness here. Typically eat 1-2 meals a day in order to make sure I have money for rent. I would absolutely eat this. No, it’s not gourmet, but it’s better than plain white rice, and better than the peanut butter sandwiches that I live on when I can’t find anything else.

        Financial struggle and poverty do not have a set race or culture. If all you can say to people you disagree with is “you sound white”, re-evaluate how you’re spending your time.

      6. Beth, when you post a rice recipe could you please also post how to make it using far healthier brown rice?

      7. Sorry, we can’t. Using brown rice would completely change the recipe’s cooking times, liquid ratios, textures etc. But we do have a couple brown rice recipes. Just search brown rice in the recipe index. XOXO -Monti

      8. You sound like an ass…this meal is simple but appetizing. It’s basic rice pilaf with sausage and the trinity. It’s not going to be very ‘photogenic’ but I don’t care. I’d add a Tablespoon or two of tomato paste with the broth, or before, to be sauteed a bit.

      9. you literally sound indistinguishable from 1000 (annoying) white liberals i know, Mr. “Bland As All Get Out”. btw i have suffered harder and know more struggle by age 30 than you ever will in your life, Rowan.

    2. Make it before you rate it. For the love of all things internet. It like someone who rates a 1 on Amazon because the delivery person dropped it at the wrong house. This rating helps no one.

      1. ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘ XOXO -Monti

    3. You sound like an ass, keep your nonsense to yourself. If you actually knew how to cook, you would understand how these flavors meld together to create something tasty. Go let mommy cook your dinner. Lol

    4. sometimes unappetizing meals are some of the best you’ll ever eat. Get out from behind your keyboard and get a life. You don’t like a recipe you can behave like an adult and scroll by. No need to comment – the exchanges I’ve read make you sound like an ass – whether black, white, brown or green. Very sad life you must live.

  26. That works!!!
    When I worked at a 7-11 30 years ago I used to help the bachelors figure out meals from stuff in a convenience store .

    I have to say your Dollar store is much better stocked then mine. lol
    Love this new “theme” .

  27. I like the simplicity of this recipe but I don’t understand why everything costs $1.25?

    1. Dollar Stores here aren’t just $1. Items start at $1.25. Such are the times we’re living through. XOXO -Monti

  28. Perfect meal for this house, as we recover from illness. Our fridge is pretty bare and Iโ€™m not feeling well enough to remember to defrost meat, and these were all very attainable staples for us.

    Changes I made:

    Used 2 regular hot dogs, finely diced in place of smoked hot dogs.
    Diced up celery, green onion, carrot and tomato (leftover dying vegetable selection) in place of frozen veggies.
    No creole seasoning on hand and too blah to make any, so used 1/2 tsp cajun seasoning.

    Happily filled the bellies of adults and kids. Served with corn and fresh fruit.

    1. Hope you all feel better very soon! So hard when the whole household is sick. Take care.
      Sounds like great substitute ingredients btw.

  29. can you sub something else for the rice? or use riced veggies? I’m low carb and all that rice will mess me up

    1. i mean like yeah probably if you want to sap the last bit out joy out of your life

    2. Riced veggies are a great sub. Just make sure to cook everything well before adding the veggies, so they don’t get mushy. XOXO -Monti

  30. Like Sarah, I love this new series. And it’s a great lesson on how to build a pantry on a budget. While the first time I make this recipe, it costs $8.75–only $2.20 per serving. The second time, it’s only going to cost $2.50, or $.65 per serving because I have left over ingredients for everything in the recipe except the sausage and veggies. I would definitely add a can of tomatoes.

  31. This is so classic Budget Bytes in the best way – I’m really excited that you have added this series!

    1. I agree, Sarah! Thanks for doing this, Beth. You create such flexible recipes that they inspire and teach us how to experiment in the kitchen while saving our pennies. Love this!

      1. I agree Katie. We are ALL thinking how to cut back and still be inspired. Thanks Beth!