"Have a Leftover" option is gone.

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ZephyrZodiac:
It's cheaper to replace the cheap fridge than to get groceries delivered, though I think getting them from the shops works out around the same, but obviously more bother, but I'm pretty sure that replacing the expensive fridge is not cost-effective - but if you're playing the Goths, what's a couple of hundred simoleons?

I think you'd probably like some of Sandy's stuff for your sims - she has a dog-kennel and dog bowl for the down-and-out dog, plus old shoes instead of rubber bones, and a dogsonly bathtub that is cheap and works well (sims can't use it, so I always stick it outside).  The Indus Bedroom is great for that loft you're trying to refurbish (Indus = Industrial (not River Indus).  And the Nightlife fridges come in some cheerful colours, and cost about the same as the expensive fridge.  Around The Sims 2 is definitely one of my favourite sites.  

The only problem I have with custom kitchens is that Numenor's SlotEnabler doesn't work for them, so you can't stick a mixer on the corner unit.  

jolrei:
All my 'hoods have been custom jobs, so I've never played the Goths.  Mind you, what with trying to keep sims busy and out of the way, they skill a lot as kids and teens.  By the time they get to adult, they usually rocket to the top of whatever career they have, so money is not a problem.  In fact, they need places to spend it.  Consequently, buying fridges, expensive groceries, or replacing all the furniture every couple of weeks seems to work.

For nurseries, I generally just put a cheap maxis fridge in with garbage can and highchairs so that spawn can be fed and the debris disposed of with minimum fuss.

Kyna:
Curse you ZZ, I am trying not to have downloaded objects in my game, at least not until I get some more RAM (hint to Faizah, if you're reading this: your mother's birthday is this month).

I went and drooled over many of the objects at Around The Sims, but stubbornly refused to download any CC.

Until I saw their teapots.  If I ever decided to be a collector of fragile dust-gathering objects, my choice of collectable object would be teapots (another hint to Faizah: Christmas is next month).  I have a sim that I want to put in a business, but hadn't yet decided what she'd sell in her store, these teapots will be perfect for her business.

Jelenedra:
I don't bother with high chairs unless the adults spin a want for them. It's a pain to try and rangle a toddler into one of those, to have them throw a fit until they get their food, and then throw a fit until your sim stops dancing in place to take them out.

It's sooo much easier just to have them drag a bottle out, take it to the toddler, put it on the floor and walk away. Then when they're done eating, the sprog can go back to skilling. Best time to get charisma up is as a toddler, because then it's fun.

J. M. Pescado:
The high chairs are useless. Why add no less than THREE additional handshake procedures needed to feed the baby? I don't even know who invented the stupid things, I certainly never had one. In my family, a kid old enough to even be put in a high chair is old enough to just be tossed a hunk of meat to gnaw on.

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