Posted on 01/18/2014 11:57:04 AM PST by nickcarraway
Possible garden ping list interest? I bought $.50 of turnip seed and $.75 of leaf lettuce at a nursery last year, gave some away and still have over half of the 1/4 cup left. I wanted to check for tomato seeds my last trip past there, but they were already closed for the day.
Potato egg hash. Lived on it at the frathouse in the early eighty’s.
Could eat for $5.00/wk. Still make it now and then cause it GOOD!
“I have about 10,000 squirrels in my neighborhood”
Ditto for us. And we have a Gamo varmiter. :-)
It’s not out of the question. Plenty of frozen pizzas and frozen entrees and cans of soup for example cost more per calorie than a lot of things off the “Dollar Menu”.
1. Sweet potatoes are much more nutritional that white ones. Fresh carrots last and they aren't expensive.
2. If you look, there are cheap ways to get canned tomatoes. Canned vegetables are cheaper than canned soups. Some stews etc have good nutrition for the price. Make your own soup.
3. Eggs, sardines (the cheapest, look for sales) are terrific protein. Chicken or turkey legs on sale are good protein sources... use them in that homemade soup.
4. Tea bags can be used for two or three cups of tea
5. Discount stores such as Job Lots and Dollar General often have quality, practical foods at excellent prices
6. Buy fruit juices and mix them 50% water instead of buying juice drinks. Applesauce is inexpensive.
7. Nothing is wasted. If you have any food at all that can go bad, make meals of it before buying any more food.
$30 a week was not difficult by following these rules.
Give me a break, averaging $4.50 per person a day for a family of four is nearly extravagant.. Shopping and buying food 3 times a week and meal planning should be both healthy and relatively simple..
One needs to cook at least 4 days a week, for enough delicious home-cooked meals for 6 days, is about all that is necessary..
I feed an average of 6 people a day, 6 days a week, on less than $150.00, Spending less than a hour in the kitchen 4 nights a week.. I serve a home-cooked meal each evening, including a soup or fresh salad, main course, with two fresh or frozen vegetables, and a starch at every meal..
With a minor alteration, 2 of the main courses can be transformed into the other 2 meals, taking less than a half hour to prepare..
Last week as an example;
Monday, I made a mixed green salad, Pot Roast, with 5 vegs, including diced potatoes in the gravy, over brown rice.. Total cost, under $25.00..
Tuesday; Being chilly, I made Kosher, Chicken Noodle Soup, including 4 vegs, with Home-made egg noodles, and Matzo Balls, with Caesar Salad.. Cost less than $15.00
Wednesday; I made Meatloaf, Green Beans, Kernel Corn, and Double Baked, Sour Cream, Garlic, Potatoes.. Fresh Cole Slaw, with raisins.. Cost less than $15.00
Thursday: I thicken the Chicken Soup, and made Dumplings, and served it in Sour Dough Bread Bowls, with fresh green salad, tomatoes, cucumbers.. Cost less than $12.00..
Friday; Pasta, with meatless gravy, and garlic bread (the center of the bread I removed from the bread bowls).. Cole slaw, lime jello for a starter.. Cost, less than $10.00
Saturday; I diced up the rest of the Pot Roast and thickened the gravy and made it a stew, served in a mashed potato boat.. Vinegar, and oil Chicken (from the soup), salad, appetizer, in stuffed Tomatoes.. Cost, under $8.00
We eat out on Sunday..
People drop by our church asking for help. Most of them smell of smoke, which costs over $5 per pack. And many of them have cell phones. They also have a particular dislike for work.
We are not poor, but we like good bread and love to save money ... plus milling your own flour is a workout; it is has a hand crank.
If those poor folks just made their own bread with store bought flour, they could save a ton. It is also easy to make flour torilllas and pasta and save bucks.
Good points; also, time is money. When you prepare a meal, it’s no extra work to make a really big meal then divide it into normal proportions in sealable Tupperware containers and frozen to be simply thawed and heated later. Many foods like soups, beans, chili, and etc. even taste better the second time around. I have found very few dishes that this method of saving preparation time doesn’t work well with.
I have seen the belief that fast food is cheaper than food you prepare yourself expressed many times. Usually, it is a lead-in to bash fast-food places and blaming McDonald's for obesity.
The assertion is ridiculous, IMO. You can spend a lot less on food by making it yourself. I made a pizza from scratch last night, it was delicious.
I suppose if I were using the examples of ready-to-eat stuff in the grocery stores....
I was thinking along the lines of produce, canned fruit and butcher, but I believe my thinking is off. A lot of folks on this thread talk about the kinds of food they see SNAP people are buying, and it ain’t produce. It’s frozen Pizza and Snackables.
One of the things I like about WIC is the purchase options are limited to economically priced items. Only a few items in the store qualify, no prime rib and lobster for the dog. Frozen pizza is not on the list either (store-brand might be).
“The big problem is that today few people know how to cook from scratch.”
That, I fear, is the sad truth. How to cook, prepare a weekly menu and shop accordingly is quickly becoming a thing of the past. There will be a whole generation of people that think gravy comes in a jar, lol.
Times change, I guess. It used to be a huge treat to go out to eat and prepared food at the grocery store was not the norm.
I found the list at the original post to be interesting. It included foods that were once staples.
“You can buy a whole rotisseried chicken at any Walmart for $5”
You can buy 10 pounds of chicken at any Walmart for $6.
Today i finished making a huge pot of chicken soup. 10 pounds of chicken quarters 9.00. bag of carrots .69. onion .75. spinach 1.00.
enough for lunch fam of 7. plan to
can abt 8 to 10 quarts.
Blueberry cobbler in oven
A caller on Chris Plante yesterday opined that by watching people in the grocery store you can learn a lot.
Say the person(A) that picks an item up, checks the price, weight etc, then sets it down and looks at the ‘generic brand’, compares price and weight and buys the cheaper item.
The other person(B) walks around, choosing the names he sees on TV, doesn’t check how much it costs or how much is in the can/package.
He surmised that Person A is spending THEIR OWN money while person B, in all likelihood, is spending OUR money.
That’s $21 A DAY for for 4 people?? Easily done unless you are buying fast food and expensive prepared meals.
I grew up eating pasta fazool, minestre, chicken soup made from the feet and gizzards, cabbage & noodles, etc.
I suppose a lot of people are allergic to peanut butter, but it belongs on a list of inexpensive foods. Eggs too.
I am sick to death of this 4.50 per day meme. Does it suck? Yup. Can it be done? Of course.
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