Yes, totally agree. Definitely something to stick on the wall to remind me as I try to get ready for the bad winter we're predicted to be getting here in UK due to the cost of living crisis. Our energy bills are going up by 60% in October, and again in January, right smack bang in the middle of winter. It's going to be a tough ride, so this mantra is the perfect one to live by right now.
I just left a doctor’s visit with my dad who has no diabetes and isn’t pre-diabetic. His new doctor was amazed and he said this is rare. He hardly ever sees a patient who doesn’t either have diabetes or is pre-diabetic. My dad is on no medications. Discipline yourself and take control of your health early on. It will pay great dividends later.
To whoever is reading this Jesus loves you and he’s coming soon. All you need to do to be saved is believe that Jesus Christ died on the cross for your sins was buried and came back to life on the 3d day. Confess with your mouth Jesus is Lord and you’ll be saved! I hope to see you in the clouds! God bless!!lll
Everyday could be your last one, so don't be too harsh on yourself and have some fun first sometimes. There's no winner. We all have to die. You will be completely forgotten after two generations, so don't care that much about what others think. Balance is key.
Making a weekly menu. It’s easier to reuse leftovers. Keeps inventory to meals. The onions, peppers. It’s no more throwing out that veggie you didn’t see!!!
I do that every month when planning my meals. If I’m making lasagna then I make extra meat sauce for spaghetti the next week. I buy can goods that match my six month meal plans. I grow some veggies in season and freeze or can them. I eat a lot of salad so I grow it year round. I bought two boxes of toilet tissue with 96 rolls in each box in 2018. I just ran out today! It was $40 a box. I looked today those same boxes are $62! I was pissed lol 😂. I was concentrating on food stock but forgot about tissue and trash bags. It’s easy to shop with a meal plan! I usually add 3 new ideas a month so we want get bored. My husband and I built a seven foot pullout pantry last month. I love it! It’s nice to change my mind about a meal and have an almost fully stocked pantry. I don’t grocery shop with my family because things get off track quickly lol 😂. They do ride with me for pickups. There are so many ways to save money. I make 2 5 gallon buckets of washing powder but I buy 6 gallons of the store brand of dawn. I got to have my dawn. I made some before but I didn’t like it lol.
@@xiibu ahh, yeah, that's smart. Especially if you live alone or with one other person and cook lots of food that is good for freezing, and then freeze half of it.You save time, electric energy, it's convenient and could even mean buying kore in bulk, though that difference is probably small.
My number one tip when I go to the store is to pull out my calculator and put how much I want to spend then subtract every item I put in the cart. That way there is no guessing how much it's gonna be. The key is to leave about 2 bucks at the end to cover taxes and the 7 cent bags I always forget to bring back with me.
My advice is everything below eye height is usually the cheaper alternative. If you see branded cans of beans, at the bottom they'll have the cheap beans which are non branded and cheaper. It can make a huge difference.
@rambunctiousvegetable oh la la, Cannes may be not the only solution, having freezer space is. Frozen foods still contain a maximum of vitamins, so try to prefer them. Tin seem to have an impact on brain ( Alzheimers,...) Of course the plastic bags of frozengoods are also healthazard. Don't hesitate to try to get leftovers from shops, markets, farmers.Abit overripe or crunched produce you can still enjoy in many ways. Here organic shops always have a cardbox in the back car park with produce they judge not sellable anymore.Now I'm going to cut partly damaged overripe oranges for a snack. I got a 5 kg box for free!!! At Lidl's they make big boxes for a symbolicprice. Enjoy your meal
@rambunctiousvegetable just want to tack on to this in case people don’t get your meaning: of course fresh produce is best, IF you can get it when it really is fresh. Most grocery store produce has long ship times and by the time you buy it, it’s lost a lot of nutrients. Freezing produce preserves nutrients from their state when they get frozen, ie produce that’s picked and immediately frozen is much more nutritionally dense that what’s sitting out at most supermarkets! For freshest possible, grow your own or get it from roadside stands (they’re usually cheaper than farmers markets too!) (edited bc my first post sounded totally illiterate, I’d just woken up 😅)
Some other grocery saving tips: -order groceries through pickup/drive up so you are less tempted to pick up other random things not on the list and save time (target does this for free for example) -make a weekly menu so you can utilize all the groceries you buy and avoid things going to waste -buy pantry “staples” like onions, potatoes, tomatoes, salad mix, etc. (Just one onion can be added to 3-4 meals for two depending on what you make) -try frozen veggies or sides-last longer and are easier to make (use what you need and tie up the bag to save the rest) -be realistic: if you can afford it and like to eat out often (and find yourself wasting groceries) then buy groceries for 2-3 days out of the week instead of the full week (while groceries are cheaper than eating out..it’s no benefit to do both and waste groceries) -don’t go shopping hungry..you’re more likely to overspend -meat doesn’t have to be at the center of every meal! Meat is expensive it’s okay to not have it with every dinner (i.e. veggie stir fry, pasta) -make more frequent shopping trips..instead of big bulk shopping trips try weekly trips and get what you need. It’s much easier to estimate what you need for a week than for a month -utilize coupons, weekly deals, grocery store apps, etc. For example I use target circle and add coupons with my phone that are automatically added at checkout (I also don’t get stuff just because it’s on sale..I may just get a different brand of something I need or for example 3 toothpastes for a buy 2 get one free deal because it is something that will be used eventually) -don’t be afraid of leftovers..if you’re full you don’t have to eat all of your dinner. Put it up and save the rest for lunch or dinner one night when you’re home alone. -buy in bulk. If you use a lot of specific things consider getting them in bulk. For example a certain brand of snacks for kids, chips, veggies, etc. -look at the price per oz of an item rather than the total price especially for things with a long shelf life and ofc try to swap out for generic/store brand when you can -set a budget and play with the items you get for the week in your cart on a grocery app to get the most bang for your buck -before you leave to get groceries check to make sure that you’re really out of potatoes, that meat really went bad, etc. so you don’t buy the same thing twice -little controversial for some..but stick it in the freezer lol. If you bought something that is nearing its expiration date but you can’t cook it yet put it in the freezer and when you defrost it for use..use it that day and you should be fine (did this many times growing up when I didn’t have a choice and I’ve never gotten sick once..my SO did not grow up poor so he panics about me doing that so I try not to anymore lol) -if you’re really in need..try applying for food stamps. It’s not shameful to need help. You can also do it slickly now with a card they give you so most other people won’t notice. You might be surprised that you could qualify especially if you have kids. (Adding on to this..check your local pantries, churches, shelters etc. for groceries/canned goods) Hope these help!
“The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.” 2 Peter 3:9 NIV ROMANS 10:9-11 “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved. As Scripture says, “Anyone who believes in him will never be put to shame” Matthew 11:28-30 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.”” Luke 19:10 God wants us to believe in His One and Only Son, Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior, who died for our sins :D When we truly believe in our hearts that Jesus is the Son of God, who died for our sins so we could have eternal life with God, we are saved from the eternal fire and have eternal life in Christ Jesus!! 💖 May God bless you all! 🕊❤️
I've done the opposite of your tip to shop more frequently and try to shop only once-a-month! I buy fresh meat and veggies to use in the first 1-2 weeks then buy frozen (and I'm limited for freezer space with only a small fridge freezer) and canned items (canned beans, veggies, soups/broths, tuna, etc) for weeks 3-4 and rarely will go pick up a few items in the last couple weeks. Doing things this way forces me to use cheaper stuff and meat alternatives instead of always buying fresh meat and veggies weekly which is more expensive and it also takes away the option of buying splurge/impulse items for 3-4 shopping hauls and just having some of those kinds of things in ONE haul! It's probably been the biggest thing I've done to save money on groceries and it has been the difference of still being able to afford to eat decent food!
@@Bluestarrydreams I do a big haul at the beginning of each month too, it's nice to know that I have food for the entire month. I do shop things like dairy, some fresh vegetables and bread once a week but since I hate shopping for food I tend to have a list that I stick to and then I get out of there.
Ikr? I grew up doing this and the real problem is usually enough $$$ isn’t coming in if you have to spend an hour agonizing. I know rich ppl grow up with no food discipline though so maybe that’s why it’s hard 🤔
True spend less money but you have to plan it. You still have to eat, and eat to with health in mind. instant noodles with some vegetables and and egg is still cheap but at least it contains some goodness and filling. Potatoes are very good for you filling and cheaper than meat.
Great content. Love the first one.. get honest. One thing I've done with actual wonderful outcome.. I find when the grocery stores have the weekly sale, and I only spend cash, and only what I've budgeted for. I only buy what is on sale.. I've found my meals have more variety. It's working fit me.
@@angelofknowledge9389 No amount of "brainpower" and "discipline" can make up for stagnant wages. The ongoing self-flagellation of 'frugal' people is pathetic to see. Coupon clipping? Rarely see coupons for healthy foods... Weekly sales? So you can overpay for mid produce instead of just going to the discount grocer. Depending on where you're at and if you have a car or decent transit that can get tricky. Grocery apps? More data harvesting.
Another tip I do often: Try to use less meat. I try to bulk up my meals with other ingredients to make them filling with less meat. For example, every time I make something Mexican with ground beef, I only use 1/2 lb of ground beef and add in a can of black beans and some frozen corn and cook it all together with the taco seasoning. That way I can get 2 meals out of a pound of ground beef.
That's great. Adding beans is actually healthier. Lots of vitamins, fiber, minerals. Meat is not clean because of factory farming (chemical laden feed for pigs/cows etc). So by reducing it, you're doing a good thing.
I plan my weekly meals around what’s in my kitchen already, I actually learned this from her! I am always surprised I never did that sooner, it’s just so obvious! No more food waste for us :)
I do this as well and I rarely need to grocery shop every week. I went grocery shopping last weekend and only spent around $30 and only because I needed to stock up on general items like olive oil and bathroom tissue. This weekend, I don’t need to shop for anything.
This! I bought a box of macaroni noodles for one recipe one time… I used it up by using them in place of spaghetti noodles, In place of penne etc. I used to buy different noodles for so many different recipes
@Queenie Maja first I find it helpful if my pantry and fridge are organized. Keep the furthest expiration dates towards the back and also if you have multiple of an item, then use the one that will go bad first. Also if possible keep everything in eye sight. It’s easy to forget you have ingredients buried in the back of your cupboard. I try to do one pasta dish, one chicken dish, one ground beef/ground turkey dish, seafood/shrimp/fish dish, sausage/hotdog/pork dish, easy meal(frozen food, ramen, sandwiches, canned soup etc.) , one junk food meal, and one take out meal a week. Have a protein and green veggie and a carb with each meal… when planning meals or writing your weekly grocery list look in the fridge/pantry and see what you can use (sauces,noodles,rice,veggies etc.) Things that I buy weekly are meats and fresh produce. I keep my emergency food for when power goes out in a separate area than all my other staples
Discipline now or regret later also applies to health. Buying the basics will help your body too. You save money and cut out unnecessary food in your diet.
Except you miss the half price salmon,the 10lb bag of chicken leg quarters for .99,the ham for .49/lb. My little ruler store often has surprise veg markdowns. Have enjoyed getting only markdowns and building menu... usually goes way further than a week.
@@cherylcarlson3315 Those markdown and closeout stickers are gold. My favorite score was some fancy $10 pasta sauce they stuck in clearance for $1 a jar, still well in date. Bought the whole case and had truffle pasta for months.
My only issue with this is it limits me to a one hour shopping window. I have 5 kids and finding all the items I want can’t be done in one hour because I buy for 2 weeks at a time. Sometimes if it’s items that wont ruin I’ll buy up a months worth at a time to save my time having to pick up. After spending an hour putting things into my cart then having them tell me my time expired then they wiped my cart clean that was the last time I’ve done that. I can’t believe I wasted all that time! This was on Walmarts website so I don’t know if Kroger and others do this? But I’d love to know because I’d gladly use them if there isn’t a limit.
Always interesting to see the younger generations catch on to these "new" ideas. Y'all are getting there, keep trucking on.❤ Also look into 1940's cookbooks, and wartime cooking. They'll teach you and strengthen your knowledge of living with less.
1. Shop at the cheap grocery store if possible. 2. Buy in season and on-sale (don't need to look through tons of clippings for this - just be mindful when you are wandering around. Maybe swap out something comparable that's cheaper re: fruits and veggies). 3. Buy the generic or store brand version. 4. Buy in bulk when things are on-sale (like a bigger bag of frozen veggies).
This only applies if you have enough money that you *could* splurge. Being strict about what you buy can't solve the problem if you have zero dollars in your bank account
@@mermaidtingzzz op didn’t say anything about employment… 0 dollars in your bank account doesn’t imply you have no job, it just implies that your job doesn’t pay well enough to cover much more than your rent. Which is the case for a *lot* of people these days
For those with little money, I suggest quick oats oatmeal for breakfast. Inexpensive, healthy, fills you up and you aren't hungry for awhile. And bananas are inexpensive, healthy and already packaged and ready to go and ready to eat. ...Also, generic canned vegetables, instant mashed potatoes, and good old fashioned peanut butter sabdwiches.
These are useful tips/habits I adopt for tight budget grocery & household items: 1. Monthly shopping & weekly shopping with list. Make readily monthly/weekly list and check what missing in the pantry/house - monthly shopping list, at big stores: for items with long shelf life; cooking oil, sauces, rice, flours, sugar, salt, other condiments, potato-onion-garlic-ginger (buy in bulks, it saves a lot) and; laundry detergent (use powdered coupled with liquid softener is cheaper & easier to adjust the budget), dishwasher, toothbrush, toothpaste, etc. - weekly list at local fresh market: items with short shelf life; vegetables, fruits, poultry/meat/seafood 2. Stick tightly to the list prepared before shopping. Be focus, only buy listed items as close as possible. Set the margin allowed for extras like chips or chocolate (e.g: + 10$ for extras). Never going shopping without a list 3. Monthly prepare freezer meal prep: I make my own chicken nuggets, breaded chicken, french fries, frozen carrot & cauliflower florets once every month. For when in rush, easy to prepare a proper meal 4. Monthly prepare snacks: I prepare snacks like cookies, snack bars, roasted nuts once every month for occasional snacking 5. Never buy fast food home. No pizzas, no KFC, no McDonalds. Except when going out occasionally. No delivery, no bringing home 6. Be firm to use only what is in the pantry until the next shopping trip, never going shopping in between scheduled trip. Be creative with pantry ingredients 7. 2 bin concept, first in first out; every item must have at least 2 packet; one for currently using, 1 for storage. Never let any items runs out. Especially the essentials. For 1 packet has finished, open the new one and replace the storage one. Repeat. It might sounds hard but once you get grasp of it, it is easier than you think. I start this spending habit once married (almost a year now) it really helps financially, and mentally. We can still eat healthily, save some and use some for other purposes like going out for movie or something. Hope this helps.
Thank you for these reasonable, common sense, and easy-to-understand tips. Budgeting is easy to learn but hard to master, and sometimes we get so lost that we lose sight of what we are doing and why we are doing it in the first place!
Buying foods on sale is good for learning how to cook new recipes. Most often the meat that’s on sale is for slow cooking and perfect for crock pot dishes. Great way to cook for busy people. Prep the night before, turn it on in the morning, and come home from work with food that’s ready. Excellent for busy stay-at-home moms too. Pork shoulder (Boston butt) is perfect for pulled pork and carnitas. Chuck roast is for stews and pot roast. Super easy and inexpensive way to make good hearty meals for the family.
One tip for me. Never have a packed fridge or pantry. I don’t have kids and I don’t overeat or snack so when I buy like a regular person a lot went to waste.
If you build and eat out of a pantry and just restock with sales you can save a TON. Our grocery bill has gone DOWN since doing this, even with food inflation. Most people in my area with a similar family makeup are spending $200/week on food and we're averaging $125 (bill this week was under $100). I have stuff in my house to make most everything I could want at all times. This is how our grandmothers and great grandmothers used to live, and it's only been recently that consumerism has tried to tell us otherwise.
My tip is to find balance between shopping too often or to little. The more visits the more likely you are to buy extras but too far the other way you end up with fresh foods going bad before you can use them. I try for 1 trip a week and then base my meal order by which dishes have the most perishable ingredients and make those meals first. Try to buy at least some canned or frozen fruit and veggies so you have options later
I don’t clip coupons as they rarely have any for the things I buy. I was a couponer in the past, however it was time consuming and I ended up with a lot of processed stuff that I wouldn’t have bought otherwise. Buuuuut I do shop sales. I do a quick look at the online sales paper every Tuesday and snap a screen shot of anything I’d like. I do it almost exclusively for meat sales because I can save a good chunk of money plus a few other pricier items that I buy on the regular. Produce and stuff like that I don’t bother with and just get it at my regular grocery store because the savings are usually negligible. I balance my time and money.
Meat is something I buy once a year or two. I save up and buy half a cow from a local farmer 😅. This year was a bit more expensive cause everything went up in price but it came out to 8$/lb for like 175 lbs I think. Of like all the cuts, good cuts. I had a lot of hamburger which is normal but ribs, tongue, steaks, liver, stew cuts, etc etc. Just like paying car insurance once a year is cheaper sometimes than monthly depending on your provider. Plus it was organic grass fed beef. So high quality and normal grocery stores are like 5$/lb for hamburger. So a little higher price in that part but you also cant find like steak for less than 10$ or the ribs for less than like 18$.
I have a friend who buys and sells cows for a living. He told me of a mom & pop shop one state over that sells exclusively meat from their own farm where they butcher it themselves. A few times per year they sell half & whole cows. He told me if I let them know ahead of time they can let me know if they have any customers who want just half and prefer the upper half of the cow as I prefer the back half. He also told me if I have any Jewish friends they usually prefer the front half and are great to split a cow with. I haven’t done this yet and thought of just buying the whole cow because my grandma left me a giant 1960’s Maytag deep freezer that runs great! But after looking I really just want the back half. So I’m hoping to be able to get 2 halves. Just getting the back halves. He sent me a diagram of a cow that showed it from a side view and had the cuts of meat drawn on it. You can find it on google but it was helpful in deciding what I really wanted.
If you shop at places like jewel or Mariano’s and clip digital coupons there are good deals and after you make purchases they send more relevant coupons and sometimes there are free items or ones you can get with rewards.
I enjoy baked goods and especially chocolate. I learned to make a delicious chocolate cake with frosting. The main ingredients last quite a while and less expensive then buying pre-made. I also don’t use hydrogenated oils, natural flavors, or preservatives. The cake is called chocolate to the max with homemade frosting that I found in a magazine. My children now prefer it over other deserts.
Weird that so many people find this helpful. "Buy necessities -like everything organic" "you spend less if you buy less" wow who would have thought 1 bunch organic bananas is cheaper than buying two, genius really...
Her advice is to budget the bulk for the important stuff. For example, organic meats and dairy. This can truly impact health and the environment. Then she goes cheap on the "filler" stuff and cuts back on the splurge stuff. Makes perfect sense, if like she said, a healthy diet is important.
@rambunctiousvegetable In what way are they taxing on the environment? They don't use toxic chemicals for pesticides or fertilizers, the soil is amended with natural materials and is far more nutrient dense, instead of stripped by conventional methods, the manure is typically composted and reused, instead of being stored in huge pools then trickled into waterways... they graze on grass, as nature intended, making their meat healthier, and saving open space from overdevelopment, the vegetables aren't contaminated with chemicals that get into our bloodstream, the list goes on and on and is backed by many studies. Could you be specific in what ways organic is BAD for the planet??
Some items are better organic and some don't matter to health as much. They say not to buy organic bananas if you are on a tight budget because non-organic bananas don't impact your health. However some things you should always try to get organic, like strawberries.
@rambunctiousvegetable oh, I saw that coming. I'll tell you the same thing I told my fanatical vegan step father. If the environment and animal welfare are truly important to you, take the victories as you can. Organic animal production is FAR better for both than factory farming. Don't poopoo on organic in an attempt to get people to go vegan, because you'll turn people off to both, instead of at least getting a partial win. They can always transition away from animal products bit by bit once they go organic, but it's a huge difficult leap from mainstream conventional consumer to vegan.
@rambunctiousvegetable The entire reason humans were able to evolve the way we did, was because we ate meat. Sure, back then everything was pretty much hunted and gathered. But something's dying to get fruit and vegetables, and food tasting good is something vegans want too. Rice and beans get flavor, the same way meat does, seasonings. All of which end something's life to obtain, well unless you want a diet of bugs with everything you eat. Those delicious fruits and veggies, are invaded by organisms, that must be stopped to actually get the end result of having said fruits and vegetables. Some groups who say they fight for animals, end up euthanizing 95% of them in shelters. How is that helpful?
One of the best things I’ve learned is to get the most important things into my cart first-- most important meaning highest nutritional value per dollar. For us that is meat, so I go thru and get all my meat for each meal. Whatever is left on my budget goes towards side dishes to go with the meat. To keep track of my budget as I go I keep my phone calculator open and subtract each item from my $100 weekly budget. We spend about half of that on meat each week, and I’m able to feed three of us somewhat healthy meals.
I don't live in the US but kinda agree on this. It took me great willpower to cut down eating outside and it had 2 big benefits. One, saved money. Secondly, i got healthier as outside food mostly has unhealthy stuff but tastes great (msg, taste enhancers, etc) so end up consuming big portions. Homemade food isn't as exciting but i eat good quality and in limited portions. Its actually win win if you can get past the cravings
As a uni student I save some money by going after 20 to shop in the nearby supermarket. By this time I can get the cooked leftovers, which will fill me for the next like 2 days + a discounted veggie or two for salad and a discounted fruit for dessert if I feel like it. 🥗 It is a nice way to eat cooked food for not too much money and 0 preparation time.
1. i use coupons and payback but only on items that i want to buy. 2. EAT SEASONAL AND REGIONAL FOODS. they are cheaper. 3. try to grow stuff. i grow my own chilis and herbs and aloe :) 4. eat less and less processed shit. if you are not underweight, chances are that you can eat a bit less and still feel good. 5. find a cheap source for your staples. i order cat food from amazon. i buy 10 kg bags of rice. i buy dried chickpeas instead of canned ones. i buy some frozen or canned veggies instead of fresh, they are often cheaper and don’t go bad as fast and are more nutritious. 6. find cheap meals and meals to incorporate leftovers and soggy veggies. oats, pasta with left over veggies, stir fries, fried rice, soups…
@Queenie Maja oh thank you 😊 sometimes the frozen version is just superior. broccoli and peas are my staples, the suck when bought fresh. and the vitamins are preserved better in the frozen version. i freeze some veggies on my own, too: cut onions, fresh garlic, celery, spinach (it goes bad so quickly), sometimes herbs. i also freeze fruit that will go bad otherwise. brown bananas, overripe kiwis. just throw them in a smoothie later. the only veggies i keep fresh are veggies for salads and starchy veggies. carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, leafy greens, onions for salads, spring onions, bell peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers. and my canned staples are: dices tomatoes, sweet corn, sundried tomatoes, jalapeños, beet root, sauerkraut, red cabbage, kimchi. my dried goods are lentils, chickpeas, grains,… i hope this helps anyone else ☺️
@Queenie Maja i live in the city too and i killed every plant i owned in the past lol. the easiest is aloe vera, you can utilize it and it hardly ever dies. i am just experimenting now. i got a bag of veggie soil for 10€ and some free pots from facebook market place. i just plant whatever i have on hand and see how it goes. i planted a used spring onion and it regrew! i just planted the base of a lettuce. i bought herbs from the supermarket, repotted them, trying to keep them alive and propagate basil. start small and cheap! 😊 youtube and google help a lot. just google one plant that you have and start from there, learn how to care for it, then go on to the next one. good luck!
Since I bake my own whole bread I order organic whole wheat berries in bulk and grind my own flour. That way I know my flour is at its peak nutrition. I store the loaves I'm not using immediately in my freezer.
I find it helps to look for multiple recipes that use the same couple vegetables or meats. The cooking and seasoning methods would be what changes what you eat. So like rather than just eat boring, like include cabbage in dinner for three days but cook three different dinners, find three different dinners to cook the same max pack of chicken thighs. Then buy stuff lowest price per lb/oz rather than the smaller packs. Because smaller packs with a higher price per oz just makes you want to come back for more, and then ultimately you pay extra unnecessarily
Right, we’re in a cost-of-living crisis. Tips from content creators about how to afford to EAT during a recession feel depressing and dystopian to me. 😅
@@priscilladeacon3503 There will Always be people who are better off or worse off than you. That's just the way it is. That doesn't mean it's not hard to tighten your belt!
Budget snack: Popcorn! You can dress it up different ways and it's Easy to keep your recipes pretty healthy! Little kids Love making popcorn balls( in art aprons, maybe in the garage so you can just hose down after) Long before they can cook and bake more complex items! So, now, it's a cheap and healthy snack AND a fun family project! Home made saves Big Bucks with Better food, too!
I do my grocery online it's simple to stick on my list this way and a see exactly how much I spend during the time I do it. Once I reach my budget I stop and verify I haven't take something I don't need and pay
For me I noticed as a family of 4 with my Mum living with us we can save groceries by getting it online. It’s quicker as well because the items bought before have already been saved. I find it cheaper online and get it delivered because every time we physically go to the grocery store when I’m about to pay I could see all the unnecessary stuff that my husband and toddler put in the cart which me ending up paying $300+ instead of $200+. We live in Sydney and cost of living here is so expensive.
Same, there are 7 people in my family so we have a shopping list on the fridge so if anyone notices that something ran out or they want something they'll write it down and my mum will add it to the list online if it's reasonable and that way we don't get extra things and only buy what we need. I also live in Sydney
I don't take any one shopping with me. It makes it much easier and faster. No grown man throwing adult tantrum in the store because I tell him we already have that at home nobody has time to make that or it costs too much. Or it's not in the budget. He's the kind of guy that would be happy eating fruit lips frozen pizza tacos and hamburger helper every night with ice cream for dessert. Problem is he plows through a large family size of fruit loops in 3 days 2 half gallon cartons of ice cream in about 5 days. It would be ok if we didn't survive on stamps but come the middle of the month he's ate everything up the sweets and crap junk food. Then expects me to come up with something out of thin air
I will say another tip is to not cook too much at a time. Cook only what will be eaten by looking in your pantry to see what u already have. My budget for a month and half for my hubby and I is $380 this includes all non food items for our baby and the home as well. That way you're spending less.
I forget where I heard this but I heard somebody say one time everything you need at the grocery store is on the outside isles everything in the middle is all processed, not so good for you food.
@@TheKeeperMadzwell you had better work on changing that. Buy an extra can of SOMETHING every time you go to the store. Get stocked. Go to a food pantry if you have to. Relying on our "just in time" delivery system for grocery stores is a disaster waiting to happen.
I like this video. It's simple and straight to the point. I think that the current high prices of food in the grocery stores make A LOT of people save more money by NOT buying unnecessary foods that aren't really must haves if they reeeeally think about it and NOT buying junk food. By doing all of that not only do you save money but you can also become healthier and lose weight (IF that's been a long struggling goal). High priced food items are kinda like a blessing in disguise if you flip it in a positive way. Thanks to stores like Dollar Tree you can make some good, cheap and tasty meals on a budget. Blessings to EVERYONE on this planet.
tip 1. shop at Aldi.... it's so cheap! (my weekly total for food was $25, now 30ish with inflation) tip 2. really meal plan, figure out multiple meals where you can use the same ingredients. Making a big meal that you can reheat for multiple servings saves time and money! tip 3. eat a lot of salads! it's good for you, and the largest container at aldi is under $5. that giant thing of greens lasts me and my partner a weeks worth of salads, if we include it as a meal everyday. 4. reduce the amount of meat in your diet. cutting or reducing the amount of meat will really reduce your bill. I only buy 1 or 2 meat items per week.
I absolutely love Aldi. We have a family of 8 and several freezers. I will buy their mark-down or sale meat and freeze to eat over several weeks, so I rarely pay full price for meat.
I lost money at Aldi when their produce can't even last a couple days. Every time I go there, my produce goes bad the next day. And their brand new stuff is way more expensive than at another store
@@rosegroshek1218 Yeah,where I live Aldi isn't a deal at all. The big chain grocery store near me have permanent BOGOs on meat,chicken and other foods and that saves money. Aldi can also be more chaotic in store with their advertising as "cheaper"
My grocery budget hack is called intermittent fasting, shop at aldi and use eggs for every meal possible because we already have chickens. Cloud bread erry day 🥴
I shop at multiple stores and avoid the ‘regular’ supermarkets. It can be upwards of 5 stores sometimes but worth it. My budget hasn’t gone up in a very long time. Store brands are just as good. Plan your week of meals. Buy in bulk, even if you live in an apt, it’s worth it. Make your own sweets/treats/snacks. Your budget and waist will thank you.
Yh I was just sat here thinking "yeah my brain is NOT going to listen to me, I have tried. Getting strict means don't buy that applies to everything for my dumbass neurodivergent brain". Like seriously, it's why when I go grocery shopping I either end up overspending or not spending at all (thank the lord I don't do the absolute 'need to live' essentials organising or I'd literally die) 🤦♀️
Planning ahead is everything. A lot of people cant be bothered to sit down and plan the next week of breakfast, lunch, dinners and holiday snacks for the kids. Its boring and time consuming and its realistic so its not that fun. But doing this saves me quite a bit of money buying groceries for my family of 6.
Very true - and definitely agree with the being realistic part! I think some other extra tips should also be taking into account which expensive groceries to discontinue buying and which expensive groceries to invest in, depending on if you don't live alone and live in a household/family where people have some food allergies/intolerances, or their food/health beliefs require buying the more expensive food (I have elderly family members that are into eating a lot of organic food, and would discard eating any other kind of they can help it - though they also tend to be picky about organic food, in case some of them aren't healthy too, so my family budgets to keep organic food in mind and often read food labels). Would also recommend people keep a notebook/journal to help with everything, including food/groceries/health-related things - my family always documents anything during doctors' visits, grocery lists, budgets, etc.
If you REALLY want to save, you can try and grow your own food. Seeds cost like $3 a pack for tons of seeds and you can save seeds too. You can find a community garden and find resources to help with gardening - they might have tools there that the community can use. Or get to know your local farm and buy direct at a farmer’s market or from them at the farm. Usually better produce than at the grocery store and you build a relationship with the farmer, plus it cuts out the middle man!
Some of my cheap eats for this week: whole wheat spaghetti with marinara and steamed broccoli (sale for 99¢ lb), bean and rice power bowl (add whatever veggies we have), cheese and veggie Pannis with a cold pasta/veg salad, cheese enchiladas with a side of black beans and a little pico salad, frozen pizza (sale for $4) w/ cut up cucumber and free carrots (from Randall's coupon app), tortellini (HEB had buy one get one free) with Kirkland pesto sauce (freezer) and steamed broccoli and one night of leftovers. This week we are moving my oldest into her college dorm so meals are very basic and we are vegetarian so not buying meat makes for cheap eats.
Curry, with potatoes, chickpeas (canned) and vegetables, Hard boiled eggs (sliced) with a mustard bechamel sauce and mashed potatoes. You need about 2 eggs per head. Creamy pumpkin soup Onion pie. All those are vegetarian options, but you can make them omnivore by adding bacon cubes. Savoury German pancakes (with bacon) with some sour cream with herbs smeared on when the pancakes are cooled - and then rolled up and wrapped for your lunch. If you want fancy, take salmon and some cream cheese with dill. If you want meat - go for minced meat - that is cheaper and you can either make meatballs with some in season veggies aside - or you can make a meatloaf (particularly moist with a layer of bacon outside). A small amount of minced meat and some zucchinis/courgettes cut into bite sized pieces - start with an onion and accompany with cooked rice and there you go. Rice in Asia shops is cheaper. Pasta. Pasta sauces need not be expensive: An Onion, a carrot, a tin/can of tomatoes, some dried thyme and rosemary ... salt and pepper. And pasta can be found cheap, too, or you make your own. Want something less tomato? Whip up a simple cacio e pepe. With four simple ingredients - spaghetti, pepper, parmesan and butter - this is a storecupboard favourite
Not sure, but I think this meal is pretty cheap and very filling: "Bretonia-style / Breton beans", or "fasolka po bretońsku". It's a Polish traditional dish (most of Polish traditional dishes use names from other parts of the world, those places usually don't eat that dish). It's for 4 people, or 2 if you leave half for tge next day (it's better the next day). Two cans of red beans, one can of tomatoes (in pieces, or whole, or similar). We would add ~25cm of sausage and maybe 200g block of bacon (roughly the same amount as sausage) cut in pieces. You also need 1-2 onions, a tooth or two of garlic, maybe 8 tiny balls of allspice, a bit of black pepper and 2 bay leaves (European, not Asian! They should be ~5cm, not 12cm). No salt, sausage and bacon will make it salty enough. It's super filling and usually you'd need a bread roll or something with it. If your budget is very tight, you could cut down on meat, use only one type, cut out garlic, or maybe use this dish as a side dish: add potatoes (cheap and nutrients-dense, much better than noodles or rice in that regard; you could survive for quite sone tike just on potatoes) and something salad-like (could be pickles instead, or nothing). Please calculate your own prices to see if it's a good addition to your diet/budget.
Chili! I really like the smitten kitchen three bean chili recipe (if you don’t like spicy stuff - replace chili powder with paprika or smoked paprika) and you can make it with canned beans or dried beans (the recipe offers both options) and I add ground meat by cooking that up first in the pot, then removing it and starting the recipe - no need to clean the pot. Another great option is home made ground meat tacos. I like to use ground Turkey since the meat is lighter than beef but still has good fat content. And you can either make your own taco seasoning with your own spices or buy the taco seasoning packets at the market. Buy tortillas (I heat them up on the stove) and make homemade salsa [4 tomatoes, one white onion, cilantro (or dried oregano if you don’t like cilantro), jalapeño (optional), and lemon juice from one lemon, season with salt and pepper to taste], grate some cheese, and serve with favorite hot sauce (optional) and sour cream. You can make this however fancy or simple as you want. And I set up as a taco bar so ppl can choose how to make their tacos themselves. Stir fry. I like onion, bok choy, broccoli as my veg. You can change it to whatever veg you like - carrots, bell peppers, etc. You can add tofu or meat (just cook meat first and then set aside to not overcook or undercook meat - remember to season with salt and pepper when cooking). I add garlic, small amounts of ginger, and some hot peppers (optional) after sautéing some onions. Just make sure to cut/prep everything up beforehand so that you can add everything quickly since stir fry is about keeping the crunch in the veggies while just mildly heating them up to meld the flavors together. Add harder veggies first (carrots, broccoli) and softer veggies last (bok choy) to ensure crunch on the softer veg. These 3 dishes kept me going on a limited budget when I was in my 20s cooking for my husband and I. We always had enough for leftovers - the chili lasted for days. Just serve with rice for the chili and the stir fry. Cooking from home is healthier and cheaper. And you can make in bulk. Just freeze whatever you don’t eat and reheat later (stews, soups, and chilis are perfect for this).
These are great tips for self-discipline, but I think there could be far more quality advice given.... Here are some other tips for curious readers. Food waste: if you find yourself with spoiled leftovers, figure out why that's happening. For me, it was cuz i was cooking food i didn't enjoy eating. I got better at cooking real quick when I realized the issue, for some reason? lol Bulk meals: My favorite for these is soups. I'll share some favorites in a reply of this comment. Soups really save me on prep time. Choices: I have noticed certain vegetables are almost always cheaper/expensive. I have been on rotation of four cheap vegetables for years, and when I do see a vegetable that I can afford I might get it to treat myself. Damn that sounds sad lmfao but yea. i recommend cabbages and "brassica", which are like broccoli or chinese gailan. Munchies: Sober or not, we all get cravings.. Figure out what cravings you regularly have, and figure out the best way for you to obtain that craving. This isn't always simple.. Maybe you crave a fried flatbread... or maybe you crave sushi.... I personally have had a difficult relation to food and being able to have some flexibility really really improved my relationship to food and my own body.
Minestrone ::::: cook the veggie-tomato soup ahead of time, and cook pasta to-order, like when packing the kid's meals in the morning. This way we can minimize pasta-sogginess that may occur, as fresh soup is very hot and will remain hot for quite a while. This is a recipe that can be adjusted in any number of ways! Miso soup:::: see if you can get salmon scraps for this one. The head and belly give the most oils. First put the salmon scraps in a pot and let it boil-simmer for an hr or two. Then put a second pot on and in that one you'll put your other ingredients. This way, you save on prep time. Because the salmon needs an hour or two to cook. it VERY well, and then use that broth to make miso soup. It's often far more affordable and far more fats- omega 3 or whatever. Seaweed and tofu are both very healthy for you too. This one is delicious, please note that some seaweed is already a little salty, so taste/season for salt AFTER adding seaweed! Furikake is not seaweed!!!! Konbu will not work here either!!! oh god not konbu Tomato soup and grilled cheese:::::: IT'S A CLASSIC. IF YOU HAVEN'T TRIED IT, TRY IT. Though I feel this is weirdly more of a dinner soup than anything. ... hmmm... well you can eat it whenever you want lol Reader's Very Own Chicken Soup::::: chicken is still the cheapest meat available where I live. get yourself a whole chicken, skin and bones included, and your aromatics of choice. I do not recommend skimming the fat but I do recommend skimming the foam. I have this soup with bok choi and rice with salt and sesame oil usually. This is my favorite during the winter, when I need help staying warm. You stay warm too okay? Keep those energy bills low if you can. If you are teaching a child to cook, consider including them on this one. It's a very simple recipe and if you wish, your child can even have some agency in choosing the recipe! Sloppy Mush::::: This one isn't exactly a soup but you do need a spoon to eat it. It's more of a concept than a dish. It has a few basic components. Ground meat: i recommend something close to 25% fat, it'll actually help you stay full. My ma used turkey, i prefer pork. Diced veggies: This can be cauliflower leaves, broccoli stalks (shave the tough skin to reveal the edible pith), green beans, minced cabbage, just cut it small. This is a great task to entrust to a teen. (I'm assuming you're competent and confident with first aid here, you're the adult remember!) Aromatic: My favorite options for this are onions/shallots, shiitake mushroom, root veggies like radish or carrot, tomato paste (Watch the price per oz of tomato pastes!) Cut all ingredients real small, and put it into the pot to cook together. If you have a food processor, the prep time can go real fast! Cook this low and slow, so for those living in your vehicles and cooking out of an instant pot, I recommend you give this one a try. You add more liquid if you want it like a soup, you can add less if you want it spooned over rice. Get a friend to steal you a pair of boiled eggs from the Sprouts down the street and that's a rich man's meal... Your friend gets a bowl of soup and rice to go with his egg and you get an egg to go with your soup and rice! The rich man's meal is friendship.... Filler/Variety: Extra firm tofu/tofu gan, beans, or dried soy protein isolate, they are all great ways to stretch your budget and hopefully give your family some variety in the meals.
It's so f'in bonkers to me that people have to REDUCE WHAT THEY EAT and force themselves not to buy 'frivolous' foods just because they don't have enough money to buy them (both grocery stores, especially ones in food deserts, who charge too much and businesses who do not pay a Thriving wage are a HUGE issue). Kinda surprised they didn't mention how store-brand items are way cheaper than name-brand and are basically the same thing. Also there is a book called How to Eat Well on $4 and I believe there is a free pdf version if you don't care for the physical book. 👍😋
The biggest thing I've done to save money that has been the difference of being able to still afford to eat decent food has been to try to shop only once-a-month! I buy fresh meat and veggies to use in the first 1-2 weeks (eat things like lettuce and tomatoes first and cabbage and zucchini later as it lasts longer then buy frozen (and I'm limited for freezer space with only a small fridge freezer) and canned/cupboard items (canned beans, veggies, soups/broths, tuna, etc) for weeks 3-4 and rarely I'll go pick up a few fresh items items, usually just bread, milk and romaine, in the last couple weeks. Doing things this way forces me to use cheaper stuff and meat alternatives instead of always buying fresh meat and veggies weekly which is more expensive and it also takes away the option of buying splurge/impulse items for 3-4 shopping hauls and just having some of those kinds of things in ONE haul! If I shopped more often, I'd also be able to refill my freezer each trip but doing it once-a-month helps to limit me because of the lack of space so I have to make sure to use the freezer space wisely and not waste it for convenience foods or other indulgences!
So true! 😄 I feel guilty when i somehow forgot something at the shop and I have to send my husband to get it. 🙈 he always buys some sweets, even though we always have some home made deserts at home. Come on!... 😄
I needed this! I was looking at my food budget for this month and I’m like, “where’s my money going?” In my stomach, that’s where. I am working on simplifying my meals. Thank you!
We still spend more than I'd like but it's worth it if good food. Ruling out most processed foods is the primary way we save money. There's a LOT of food with nasty additives that claim to be healthy but are terrible for you. It's been easier to start losing weight by eating healthy because it's expensive and hard to find easy healthy foods...even organic fruits and veg can be hard to find unspoiled in my city. I stopped settling on things I don't like to compensate, and stopped settling on buying almost bad fruit etc...if it's not good quality I save my money and appetite.
@@minic578 Same. We try not to buy snacks. For my dad and I, we enjoy snacking, so we try to satisfy that with things like fruit (whether fresh, frozen, or dried), nuts, etc. Stuff that's both healthy and relatively inexpensive
Our nearest grocery store doesn't sell generic brands, and my husband and I were spending close to $200 a week for both of us. We did have a few splurge items, but even then, getting a few things could run us up $50. We found another store a little further from us, and got the same amount of groceries (minus meats) for half the price of our normal groceries, mainly because it was all comparable generic brands. Sometimes it also helps to shop around!
I know not everyone can do this, took wife and I awhile to save up to do it but we are now seeing the savings. Bought several large freezers, then paid $1600 for a bison, $600 for a side of beef, and $350 for a whole hog off area farmers. Already get eggs from lady at work, like I said not everyone can do it do to upfront costs and take strict savings into sinking fund but the ability to work with butchers on what and how the meat is cut and the quality and freshness of the meat even a year later is amazing
If you arent looking at weekly ads and using at least the store coupons , let alone manufacturers , you are really missing out!! I save 35 to 55 percent doing it.
Yes! Plan around what you already have. If you have time, shop around. I have a few “go-to” stores in my area, all relatively close to one another (factoring in gas prices), and I know what items are least expensive at what stores. Here in Utah I typically go to Trader Joe’s for great value “upscale foodie” items, Sprouts Market for the best deals on produce, and Walmart for generic pantry staples. Also a Costco membership goes a long way on items you use frequently or a lot of, like toilet paper or laundry detergent. Most stores will have a discount section of things close to their “sell by date” which is also a good way to find bargains and boost your grocery haul.
I was searching through the comments in the hopes that someone would have mentioned the wonderful clearance sections! There are typically several in some grocery store chains, usually divided into categories (meat, freezer items, shelf stable, home goods, etc.). I always check them first for items on my list, and I don’t usually buy meat unless it’s on sale/put on clearance. These sections allow me to save on typical staples, and occasionally splurge on trying something new that normally would have been way out of budget. Thank you for mentioning those money-saving nooks!
#1 make a meal plan #2 make a list #3 start with nutrient rich items (meat/eggs/cheese/nuts) then go to produce and lastly canned goods #4 count as you go and #5 reassess your cart and put things back you can part with
I used to way overspend on food. Now I actually stick to my grocery list and make simple meals. I eat healthy, vegan, with plenty of protein, stay full, and I spend on average $20 a week on groceries. This is just for me, it’s just me and the cat in my place. I probably spend more on his food than mine, because he has dietary issues 😂
@@carochan86 It might be, yes! I do that too, since I have two small convenience stores right at the foot of my building, I can go and get snacks until they close, at midnight. The psychiatrist who diagnosed my ADHD explained that it is due to the brain seeking a quick shot of dopamine, especially with sweet snacks (hence why I'm addicted to Krispy Kreme doughnuts that I can get at one of the previously mentioned stores almost anytime I want 😂). The cravings are much less intense on days I take my medication, though!
I have found if I order my groceries through my store's app (i.e. Meijer), I spent waaaay less money because I could see everything I was spending and could easily delete items from my cart. But it does take away the fun of grocery shopping lol
Thank you so much, I will forward these tips to my butler and house managers for when they’ll do my grocery shopping. Financials have been really tight lately, already had to sell my chopper and my 5th car. Perhaps I still get to keep my Yacht with these tips.🙌 The struggle is real 😌
Make dinner, freeze the left overs that night for fast food to eat instead of eating out. Don’t shop at Walmart, shop at the restaurant supply, buy in bulk and break it down into your food storage or share with elderly neighbors. Buy your spices in bulk like through azure. Take pot pour a gallon of milk heat it and turn off, let it cool to hot where you can stick your finger in and not burn it. Take a room temperature plain single serve plain yogurt, Trader Joe’s is decent, dump it in wrap the pot in 2 towels leave it on the counter over night til the morning. In the morning put your pot of yogurt in the fridge. Make breakfast yogurt with honey pecans and banana or lassi.
For me it's 1. start cooking from your pantry, then do the list. 2. Shop from the bottom, the expensive brands are at your sight height. 3. Have 10 variable staple meals like e.g. pasta marinara, pancakes, bolognese, salad. By limiting your staple meals you can cook in bulk, avoid spending all over the place, and you will buy ingredients like pasta in bulk when on sale. 4. If you get overwhelmed in the store, order.
Just sign up for a rewards card, don't eat at restaurants often, and consider going to a discount grocery store like Aldi or a local outlet grocery store. Trader Joe's offers affordable food, too. Usually that's all you need in order to save. Anything more could be stressful and nobody wants to feel deprived.
By bulk if you have a Costco and sams membership, order for pickup as you spend less time looking around the store and are less likely to splurge, make a list otherwise to keep you on track and yes use coupons
Good advice, and also helpful for reducing waste. It just sucks that we have to limit things just to survive because our wages don’t keep up with rising cost of everything else. It’s good for the environment if we limit spending, but some people were already maxed out, especially seniors and disabled people.
Buy from the top and bottom shelf... always cheaper. Buy generic. Decide if the instant rice is cheaper to reheat than scratch due to fuel coat of boiling. (I do mine in the oven on a different night when oven is on cooking something else. ).Buy frozen fruits/veg. Buy pre sliced onions and peppers (frozen) Buy ready minced garlic/chlli/ ginger in jars. Use the pil to flavour food. Lasts ages in the fridge
Food is so expensive now everywhere. I live in Australia and my grocery bill was blowing out the budget. So yes it was a necessity. Check out specials . Work out your meals before shopping and stick to it. Buy in season fruit and vegetables only and only what you need, store it all correctly so there is no waste. Make snacks for the kids. A batch of oatmeal cookies and mini muffins or cheap to make. Limit junk food to occasional treats, hide them so they last. Take a calculator and stick to your budget. Use cash, paying by card is too tempting. Make 2 non meat meals a week. Meat has doubled in price. Have a week of no shopping, except for fresh foods. Get creative and only use what you already have in fridge and pantry. Its surprising how often we go shopping while there is still lots of good food still there. I have also planted herbs, tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots spring onion and spinach. Simple garden. Overload of tomatoes i made sauce. Spring onions and spinach keep giving, just cut off at bottom and it grows again. My next thing is to get 2 dwarf fruit trees. Plus expand my vegetable garden. Id like to get chickens but my dog may find that a step too far🤣🤣
No need to steal, go to a food pantry. Nothing fun about mom/dad in jail and children are in foster care for Christmas. No children, feel free to steal, the consequences are 3 free squares in jail/prison. Free food!
Love it. Not a lot of people are ready to be honest with themselves and would rather have those splurge items but feel that regret later in their bank accounts. I admit I give in with my sugar cravings sometimes, but it just takes discipline if you have a goal in mind. Just do it and and you’ll be glad you did later.
“Discipline now or regret later” that needs to be applied in so many aspects of my life.
Thank you
Yes, totally agree. Definitely something to stick on the wall to remind me as I try to get ready for the bad winter we're predicted to be getting here in UK due to the cost of living crisis. Our energy bills are going up by 60% in October, and again in January, right smack bang in the middle of winter. It's going to be a tough ride, so this mantra is the perfect one to live by right now.
I just left a doctor’s visit with my dad who has no diabetes and isn’t pre-diabetic. His new doctor was amazed and he said this is rare. He hardly ever sees a patient who doesn’t either have diabetes or is pre-diabetic. My dad is on no medications. Discipline yourself and take control of your health early on. It will pay great dividends later.
So true 👌
To whoever is reading this Jesus loves you and he’s coming soon. All you need to do to be saved is believe that Jesus Christ died on the cross for your sins was buried and came back to life on the 3d day. Confess with your mouth Jesus is Lord and you’ll be saved! I hope to see you in the clouds! God bless!!lll
Everyday could be your last one, so don't be too harsh on yourself and have some fun first sometimes. There's no winner. We all have to die. You will be completely forgotten after two generations, so don't care that much about what others think. Balance is key.
This was no-nonsense advice that people who are becoming adults like myself need to hear. Thank you.
Making a weekly menu. It’s easier to reuse leftovers. Keeps inventory to meals. The onions, peppers. It’s no more throwing out that veggie you didn’t see!!!
Yes, and freezer meals.
I do that every month when planning my meals. If I’m making lasagna then I make extra meat sauce for spaghetti the next week. I buy can goods that match my six month meal plans. I grow some veggies in season and freeze or can them. I eat a lot of salad so I grow it year round. I bought two boxes of toilet tissue with 96 rolls in each box in 2018. I just ran out today! It was $40 a box. I looked today those same boxes are $62! I was pissed lol 😂. I was concentrating on food stock but forgot about tissue and trash bags. It’s easy to shop with a meal plan! I usually add 3 new ideas a month so we want get bored. My husband and I built a seven foot pullout pantry last month. I love it! It’s nice to change my mind about a meal and have an almost fully stocked pantry. I don’t grocery shop with my family because things get off track quickly lol 😂. They do ride with me for pickups. There are so many ways to save money. I make 2 5 gallon buckets of washing powder but I buy 6 gallons of the store brand of dawn. I got to have my dawn. I made some before but I didn’t like it lol.
@@TheNinnyfee aren't they more expensive? Maybe depends on the meal...
@@tymondabrowski12 I think they meant freezing leftover meals. I do that too
@@xiibu ahh, yeah, that's smart. Especially if you live alone or with one other person and cook lots of food that is good for freezing, and then freeze half of it.You save time, electric energy, it's convenient and could even mean buying kore in bulk, though that difference is probably small.
Also, go shopping on a full stomach. Keeps you from overspending, needless spending, and buying extra snacks.
for sureee. unhealthy stuff just looks.. gross when you're full. it looks like a whole feast when you're hungry
Was looking for this comment. That’s the #1 way to avoid overspending.
*Do NOT* go shopping on a full stomach
Seven super girls taught me never to go shopping on an empty stomach when I was 11. I miss that channel. Lol
Yup❤ this 💯 trueeeee 😅
My number one tip when I go to the store is to pull out my calculator and put how much I want to spend then subtract every item I put in the cart. That way there is no guessing how much it's gonna be. The key is to leave about 2 bucks at the end to cover taxes and the 7 cent bags I always forget to bring back with me.
Great idea❤❤❤
Thanks
Utilize your crockpots/slow cookers people!
My advice is everything below eye height is usually the cheaper alternative. If you see branded cans of beans, at the bottom they'll have the cheap beans which are non branded and cheaper. It can make a huge difference.
@rambunctiousvegetable oh la la, Cannes may be not the only solution, having freezer space is. Frozen foods still contain a maximum of vitamins, so try to prefer them. Tin seem to have an impact on brain ( Alzheimers,...) Of course the plastic bags of frozengoods are also healthazard.
Don't hesitate to try to get leftovers from shops, markets, farmers.Abit overripe or crunched produce you can still enjoy in many ways.
Here organic shops always have a cardbox in the back car park with produce they judge not sellable anymore.Now I'm going to cut partly damaged overripe oranges for a snack. I got a 5 kg box for free!!!
At Lidl's they make big boxes for a symbolicprice. Enjoy your meal
@rambunctiousvegetable just want to tack on to this in case people don’t get your meaning: of course fresh produce is best, IF you can get it when it really is fresh. Most grocery store produce has long ship times and by the time you buy it, it’s lost a lot of nutrients. Freezing produce preserves nutrients from their state when they get frozen, ie produce that’s picked and immediately frozen is much more nutritionally dense that what’s sitting out at most supermarkets!
For freshest possible, grow your own or get it from roadside stands (they’re usually cheaper than farmers markets too!)
(edited bc my first post sounded totally illiterate, I’d just woken up 😅)
Some other grocery saving tips:
-order groceries through pickup/drive up so you are less tempted to pick up other random things not on the list and save time (target does this for free for example)
-make a weekly menu so you can utilize all the groceries you buy and avoid things going to waste
-buy pantry “staples” like onions, potatoes, tomatoes, salad mix, etc. (Just one onion can be added to 3-4 meals for two depending on what you make)
-try frozen veggies or sides-last longer and are easier to make (use what you need and tie up the bag to save the rest)
-be realistic: if you can afford it and like to eat out often (and find yourself wasting groceries) then buy groceries for 2-3 days out of the week instead of the full week (while groceries are cheaper than eating out..it’s no benefit to do both and waste groceries)
-don’t go shopping hungry..you’re more likely to overspend
-meat doesn’t have to be at the center of every meal! Meat is expensive it’s okay to not have it with every dinner (i.e. veggie stir fry, pasta)
-make more frequent shopping trips..instead of big bulk shopping trips try weekly trips and get what you need. It’s much easier to estimate what you need for a week than for a month
-utilize coupons, weekly deals, grocery store apps, etc. For example I use target circle and add coupons with my phone that are automatically added at checkout (I also don’t get stuff just because it’s on sale..I may just get a different brand of something I need or for example 3 toothpastes for a buy 2 get one free deal because it is something that will be used eventually)
-don’t be afraid of leftovers..if you’re full you don’t have to eat all of your dinner. Put it up and save the rest for lunch or dinner one night when you’re home alone.
-buy in bulk. If you use a lot of specific things consider getting them in bulk. For example a certain brand of snacks for kids, chips, veggies, etc.
-look at the price per oz of an item rather than the total price especially for things with a long shelf life and ofc try to swap out for generic/store brand when you can
-set a budget and play with the items you get for the week in your cart on a grocery app to get the most bang for your buck
-before you leave to get groceries check to make sure that you’re really out of potatoes, that meat really went bad, etc. so you don’t buy the same thing twice
-little controversial for some..but stick it in the freezer lol. If you bought something that is nearing its expiration date but you can’t cook it yet put it in the freezer and when you defrost it for use..use it that day and you should be fine (did this many times growing up when I didn’t have a choice and I’ve never gotten sick once..my SO did not grow up poor so he panics about me doing that so I try not to anymore lol)
-if you’re really in need..try applying for food stamps. It’s not shameful to need help. You can also do it slickly now with a card they give you so most other people won’t notice. You might be surprised that you could qualify especially if you have kids. (Adding on to this..check your local pantries, churches, shelters etc. for groceries/canned goods)
Hope these help!
These are so much more helpful than the the actual video, thanks!
“The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance.”
2 Peter 3:9 NIV
ROMANS 10:9-11 “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved. As Scripture says, “Anyone who believes in him will never be put to shame”
Matthew 11:28-30 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”
“For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.””
Luke 19:10
God wants us to believe in His One and Only Son, Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior, who died for our sins :D When we truly believe in our hearts that Jesus is the Son of God, who died for our sins so we could have eternal life with God, we are saved from the eternal fire and have eternal life in Christ Jesus!! 💖 May God bless you all! 🕊❤️
I've done the opposite of your tip to shop more frequently and try to shop only once-a-month! I buy fresh meat and veggies to use in the first 1-2 weeks then buy frozen (and I'm limited for freezer space with only a small fridge freezer) and canned items (canned beans, veggies, soups/broths, tuna, etc) for weeks 3-4 and rarely will go pick up a few items in the last couple weeks. Doing things this way forces me to use cheaper stuff and meat alternatives instead of always buying fresh meat and veggies weekly which is more expensive and it also takes away the option of buying splurge/impulse items for 3-4 shopping hauls and just having some of those kinds of things in ONE haul! It's probably been the biggest thing I've done to save money on groceries and it has been the difference of still being able to afford to eat decent food!
@@Bluestarrydreams I do a big haul at the beginning of each month too, it's nice to know that I have food for the entire month. I do shop things like dairy, some fresh vegetables and bread once a week but since I hate shopping for food I tend to have a list that I stick to and then I get out of there.
Wow that was very helpful thank you
“How to save on groceries- spend less money.”
Ikr? I grew up doing this and the real problem is usually enough $$$ isn’t coming in if you have to spend an hour agonizing.
I know rich ppl grow up with no food discipline though so maybe that’s why it’s hard 🤔
Right? Tip 1: Spend less money. Tip 2: Buy less food.
This isn’t helpful…
True spend less money but you have to plan it. You still have to eat, and eat to with health in mind. instant noodles with some vegetables and and egg is still cheap but at least it contains some goodness and filling. Potatoes are very good for you filling and cheaper than meat.
All she said is be smarter about it.
Don’t eat lol you’ll save a lot
Great content. Love the first one.. get honest. One thing I've done with actual wonderful outcome.. I find when the grocery stores have the weekly sale, and I only spend cash, and only what I've budgeted for. I only buy what is on sale.. I've found my meals have more variety. It's working fit me.
Prices are high and the companies are cutting the ounces and charging more for less product. It's horrible let's be realistic about that.
A firm budget runs a tough line of defense.
I agree. It's so expensive
Complaining isn't a solution 😂 One can get around many high prices by using their brain
@@angelofknowledge9389 No amount of "brainpower" and "discipline" can make up for stagnant wages. The ongoing self-flagellation of 'frugal' people is pathetic to see.
Coupon clipping? Rarely see coupons for healthy foods...
Weekly sales? So you can overpay for mid produce instead of just going to the discount grocer. Depending on where you're at and if you have a car or decent transit that can get tricky.
Grocery apps? More data harvesting.
Another tip I do often: Try to use less meat. I try to bulk up my meals with other ingredients to make them filling with less meat. For example, every time I make something Mexican with ground beef, I only use 1/2 lb of ground beef and add in a can of black beans and some frozen corn and cook it all together with the taco seasoning. That way I can get 2 meals out of a pound of ground beef.
That's great. Adding beans is actually healthier. Lots of vitamins, fiber, minerals. Meat is not clean because of factory farming (chemical laden feed for pigs/cows etc). So by reducing it, you're doing a good thing.
I plan my weekly meals around what’s in my kitchen already, I actually learned this from her! I am always surprised I never did that sooner, it’s just so obvious! No more food waste for us :)
I do this as well and I rarely need to grocery shop every week. I went grocery shopping last weekend and only spent around $30 and only because I needed to stock up on general items like olive oil and bathroom tissue. This weekend, I don’t need to shop for anything.
This! I bought a box of macaroni noodles for one recipe one time… I used it up by using them in place of spaghetti noodles, In place of penne etc. I used to buy different noodles for so many different recipes
Actually that's a pretty damn good idea. Thank you for sharing. Isn't it funny how we can sometimes overlook such a simple solution? 😁👍
@Queenie Maja first I find it helpful if my pantry and fridge are organized. Keep the furthest expiration dates towards the back and also if you have multiple of an item, then use the one that will go bad first. Also if possible keep everything in eye sight. It’s easy to forget you have ingredients buried in the back of your cupboard. I try to do one pasta dish, one chicken dish, one ground beef/ground turkey dish, seafood/shrimp/fish dish, sausage/hotdog/pork dish, easy meal(frozen food, ramen, sandwiches, canned soup etc.) , one junk food meal, and one take out meal a week. Have a protein and green veggie and a carb with each meal… when planning meals or writing your weekly grocery list look in the fridge/pantry and see what you can use (sauces,noodles,rice,veggies etc.) Things that I buy weekly are meats and fresh produce. I keep my emergency food for when power goes out in a separate area than all my other staples
Discipline now or regret later also applies to health. Buying the basics will help your body too. You save money and cut out unnecessary food in your diet.
Doing a grocery pick-up saves me a LOT of money. I only get my listed items without getting distracted to buy impulsively.
Same here! I'm honestly surprised how much money this has saved my family in the past two years. (and the extra time saved is priceless) 😄
I will literally shop the same way I do in store, see how much it is, put half the goodies I don’t need back lol.
Except you miss the half price salmon,the 10lb bag of chicken leg quarters for .99,the ham for .49/lb. My little ruler store often has surprise veg markdowns. Have enjoyed getting only markdowns and building menu... usually goes way further than a week.
@@cherylcarlson3315 Those markdown and closeout stickers are gold. My favorite score was some fancy $10 pasta sauce they stuck in clearance for $1 a jar, still well in date. Bought the whole case and had truffle pasta for months.
My only issue with this is it limits me to a one hour shopping window. I have 5 kids and finding all the items I want can’t be done in one hour because I buy for 2 weeks at a time. Sometimes if it’s items that wont ruin I’ll buy up a months worth at a time to save my time having to pick up. After spending an hour putting things into my cart then having them tell me my time expired then they wiped my cart clean that was the last time I’ve done that. I can’t believe I wasted all that time! This was on Walmarts website so I don’t know if Kroger and others do this? But I’d love to know because I’d gladly use them if there isn’t a limit.
another tip is to look for the in house brands. they're almost always cheaper.
Always interesting to see the younger generations catch on to these "new" ideas. Y'all are getting there, keep trucking on.❤
Also look into 1940's cookbooks, and wartime cooking. They'll teach you and strengthen your knowledge of living with less.
1. Shop at the cheap grocery store if possible.
2. Buy in season and on-sale (don't need to look through tons of clippings for this - just be mindful when you are wandering around. Maybe swap out something comparable that's cheaper re: fruits and veggies).
3. Buy the generic or store brand version.
4. Buy in bulk when things are on-sale (like a bigger bag of frozen veggies).
This only applies if you have enough money that you *could* splurge. Being strict about what you buy can't solve the problem if you have zero dollars in your bank account
She's talking about saving , not surviving without money.
Yes obviously budgeting only works for people who actually have an income to budget
The problem this intends to solve is overspending on groceries and sticking to a budget…not finding employment.
@@mermaidtingzzz op didn’t say anything about employment… 0 dollars in your bank account doesn’t imply you have no job, it just implies that your job doesn’t pay well enough to cover much more than your rent. Which is the case for a *lot* of people these days
For those with little money, I suggest quick oats oatmeal for breakfast. Inexpensive, healthy, fills you up and you aren't hungry for awhile. And bananas are inexpensive, healthy and already packaged and ready to go and ready to eat. ...Also, generic canned vegetables, instant mashed potatoes, and good old fashioned peanut butter sabdwiches.
These are useful tips/habits I adopt for tight budget grocery & household items:
1. Monthly shopping & weekly shopping with list. Make readily monthly/weekly list and check what missing in the pantry/house
- monthly shopping list, at big stores: for items with long shelf life; cooking oil, sauces, rice, flours, sugar, salt, other condiments, potato-onion-garlic-ginger (buy in bulks, it saves a lot) and; laundry detergent (use powdered coupled with liquid softener is cheaper & easier to adjust the budget), dishwasher, toothbrush, toothpaste, etc.
- weekly list at local fresh market: items with short shelf life; vegetables, fruits, poultry/meat/seafood
2. Stick tightly to the list prepared before shopping. Be focus, only buy listed items as close as possible. Set the margin allowed for extras like chips or chocolate (e.g: + 10$ for extras). Never going shopping without a list
3. Monthly prepare freezer meal prep: I make my own chicken nuggets, breaded chicken, french fries, frozen carrot & cauliflower florets once every month. For when in rush, easy to prepare a proper meal
4. Monthly prepare snacks: I prepare snacks like cookies, snack bars, roasted nuts once every month for occasional snacking
5. Never buy fast food home. No pizzas, no KFC, no McDonalds. Except when going out occasionally. No delivery, no bringing home
6. Be firm to use only what is in the pantry until the next shopping trip, never going shopping in between scheduled trip. Be creative with pantry ingredients
7. 2 bin concept, first in first out; every item must have at least 2 packet; one for currently using, 1 for storage. Never let any items runs out. Especially the essentials. For 1 packet has finished, open the new one and replace the storage one. Repeat.
It might sounds hard but once you get grasp of it, it is easier than you think. I start this spending habit once married (almost a year now) it really helps financially, and mentally. We can still eat healthily, save some and use some for other purposes like going out for movie or something. Hope this helps.
Thank you for sharing!
Thank you for these reasonable, common sense, and easy-to-understand tips. Budgeting is easy to learn but hard to master, and sometimes we get so lost that we lose sight of what we are doing and why we are doing it in the first place!
Thank you fort this mind numbing "stating the obvious" video
Shop items per lb/ounce/etc
So they have the price but then the price per weight unit is listed too. So I always go for the cheapest price by weight.
Buying foods on sale is good for learning how to cook new recipes. Most often the meat that’s on sale is for slow cooking and perfect for crock pot dishes.
Great way to cook for busy people. Prep the night before, turn it on in the morning, and come home from work with food that’s ready. Excellent for busy stay-at-home moms too.
Pork shoulder (Boston butt) is perfect for pulled pork and carnitas. Chuck roast is for stews and pot roast. Super easy and inexpensive way to make good hearty meals for the family.
One tip for me. Never have a packed fridge or pantry. I don’t have kids and I don’t overeat or snack so when I buy like a regular person a lot went to waste.
If you build and eat out of a pantry and just restock with sales you can save a TON. Our grocery bill has gone DOWN since doing this, even with food inflation. Most people in my area with a similar family makeup are spending $200/week on food and we're averaging $125 (bill this week was under $100). I have stuff in my house to make most everything I could want at all times.
This is how our grandmothers and great grandmothers used to live, and it's only been recently that consumerism has tried to tell us otherwise.
No more processed high carb garbage from the middle aisles has helped me save beau coup bucks at the grocery store.
A bag a week or so is def in my musts
Amen to this, Sis!
I avoid those aisles on purpose at the supermarket but then regret it at night when I want to snack 😬 but it does save a lot of money and calories lol
@@hadilayyad6147 Make a mug cake! (;
@@MaynardsSpaceship I tried it once but it turned out too eggy for my tastes lol
My tip is to find balance between shopping too often or to little. The more visits the more likely you are to buy extras but too far the other way you end up with fresh foods going bad before you can use them. I try for 1 trip a week and then base my meal order by which dishes have the most perishable ingredients and make those meals first. Try to buy at least some canned or frozen fruit and veggies so you have options later
I don’t clip coupons as they rarely have any for the things I buy. I was a couponer in the past, however it was time consuming and I ended up with a lot of processed stuff that I wouldn’t have bought otherwise. Buuuuut I do shop sales. I do a quick look at the online sales paper every Tuesday and snap a screen shot of anything I’d like. I do it almost exclusively for meat sales because I can save a good chunk of money plus a few other pricier items that I buy on the regular. Produce and stuff like that I don’t bother with and just get it at my regular grocery store because the savings are usually negligible. I balance my time and money.
Meat is something I buy once a year or two.
I save up and buy half a cow from a local farmer 😅. This year was a bit more expensive cause everything went up in price but it came out to 8$/lb for like 175 lbs I think. Of like all the cuts, good cuts. I had a lot of hamburger which is normal but ribs, tongue, steaks, liver, stew cuts, etc etc. Just like paying car insurance once a year is cheaper sometimes than monthly depending on your provider. Plus it was organic grass fed beef. So high quality and normal grocery stores are like 5$/lb for hamburger. So a little higher price in that part but you also cant find like steak for less than 10$ or the ribs for less than like 18$.
I have a friend who buys and sells cows for a living. He told me of a mom & pop shop one state over that sells exclusively meat from their own farm where they butcher it themselves. A few times per year they sell half & whole cows. He told me if I let them know ahead of time they can let me know if they have any customers who want just half and prefer the upper half of the cow as I prefer the back half. He also told me if I have any Jewish friends they usually prefer the front half and are great to split a cow with. I haven’t done this yet and thought of just buying the whole cow because my grandma left me a giant 1960’s Maytag deep freezer that runs great! But after looking I really just want the back half. So I’m hoping to be able to get 2 halves. Just getting the back halves. He sent me a diagram of a cow that showed it from a side view and had the cuts of meat drawn on it. You can find it on google but it was helpful in deciding what I really wanted.
I used to be a serial couponer, now I just do rebates and sales. Still save a ton of money and I get the healthier choices I want in my house
If you shop at places like jewel or Mariano’s and clip digital coupons there are good deals and after you make purchases they send more relevant coupons and sometimes there are free items or ones you can get with rewards.
I enjoy baked goods and especially chocolate. I learned to make a delicious chocolate cake with frosting. The main ingredients last quite a while and less expensive then buying pre-made. I also don’t use hydrogenated oils, natural flavors, or preservatives. The cake is called chocolate to the max with homemade frosting that I found in a magazine. My children now prefer it over other deserts.
Weird that so many people find this helpful. "Buy necessities -like everything organic" "you spend less if you buy less" wow who would have thought 1 bunch organic bananas is cheaper than buying two, genius really...
Her advice is to budget the bulk for the important stuff. For example, organic meats and dairy. This can truly impact health and the environment. Then she goes cheap on the "filler" stuff and cuts back on the splurge stuff. Makes perfect sense, if like she said, a healthy diet is important.
@rambunctiousvegetable In what way are they taxing on the environment? They don't use toxic chemicals for pesticides or fertilizers, the soil is amended with natural materials and is far more nutrient dense, instead of stripped by conventional methods, the manure is typically composted and reused, instead of being stored in huge pools then trickled into waterways... they graze on grass, as nature intended, making their meat healthier, and saving open space from overdevelopment, the vegetables aren't contaminated with chemicals that get into our bloodstream, the list goes on and on and is backed by many studies. Could you be specific in what ways organic is BAD for the planet??
Some items are better organic and some don't matter to health as much. They say not to buy organic bananas if you are on a tight budget because non-organic bananas don't impact your health. However some things you should always try to get organic, like strawberries.
@rambunctiousvegetable oh, I saw that coming. I'll tell you the same thing I told my fanatical vegan step father. If the environment and animal welfare are truly important to you, take the victories as you can. Organic animal production is FAR better for both than factory farming. Don't poopoo on organic in an attempt to get people to go vegan, because you'll turn people off to both, instead of at least getting a partial win. They can always transition away from animal products bit by bit once they go organic, but it's a huge difficult leap from mainstream conventional consumer to vegan.
@rambunctiousvegetable The entire reason humans were able to evolve the way we did, was because we ate meat. Sure, back then everything was pretty much hunted and gathered. But something's dying to get fruit and vegetables, and food tasting good is something vegans want too. Rice and beans get flavor, the same way meat does, seasonings. All of which end something's life to obtain, well unless you want a diet of bugs with everything you eat. Those delicious fruits and veggies, are invaded by organisms, that must be stopped to actually get the end result of having said fruits and vegetables. Some groups who say they fight for animals, end up euthanizing 95% of them in shelters. How is that helpful?
It's really good seeing the younger generation trying to budget. Good job 👍🏻
One of the best things I’ve learned is to get the most important things into my cart first-- most important meaning highest nutritional value per dollar. For us that is meat, so I go thru and get all my meat for each meal. Whatever is left on my budget goes towards side dishes to go with the meat.
To keep track of my budget as I go I keep my phone calculator open and subtract each item from my $100 weekly budget. We spend about half of that on meat each week, and I’m able to feed three of us somewhat healthy meals.
I don't live in the US but kinda agree on this. It took me great willpower to cut down eating outside and it had 2 big benefits. One, saved money. Secondly, i got healthier as outside food mostly has unhealthy stuff but tastes great (msg, taste enhancers, etc) so end up consuming big portions.
Homemade food isn't as exciting but i eat good quality and in limited portions. Its actually win win if you can get past the cravings
Love the " Discipline now or regret later" statement. That's a keeper for me. Where did you get your bag? I want one.
As a uni student I save some money by going after 20 to shop in the nearby supermarket. By this time I can get the cooked leftovers, which will fill me for the next like 2 days + a discounted veggie or two for salad and a discounted fruit for dessert if I feel like it. 🥗 It is a nice way to eat cooked food for not too much money and 0 preparation time.
1. i use coupons and payback but only on items that i want to buy.
2. EAT SEASONAL AND REGIONAL FOODS. they are cheaper.
3. try to grow stuff. i grow my own chilis and herbs and aloe :)
4. eat less and less processed shit. if you are not underweight, chances are that you can eat a bit less and still feel good.
5. find a cheap source for your staples. i order cat food from amazon. i buy 10 kg bags of rice. i buy dried chickpeas instead of canned ones. i buy some frozen or canned veggies instead of fresh, they are often cheaper and don’t go bad as fast and are more nutritious.
6. find cheap meals and meals to incorporate leftovers and soggy veggies. oats, pasta with left over veggies, stir fries, fried rice, soups…
@Queenie Maja oh thank you 😊
sometimes the frozen version is just superior. broccoli and peas are my staples, the suck when bought fresh. and the vitamins are preserved better in the frozen version. i freeze some veggies on my own, too: cut onions, fresh garlic, celery, spinach (it goes bad so quickly), sometimes herbs. i also freeze fruit that will go bad otherwise. brown bananas, overripe kiwis. just throw them in a smoothie later.
the only veggies i keep fresh are veggies for salads and starchy veggies. carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, leafy greens, onions for salads, spring onions, bell peppers, tomatoes, cucumbers.
and my canned staples are: dices tomatoes, sweet corn, sundried tomatoes, jalapeños, beet root, sauerkraut, red cabbage, kimchi. my dried goods are lentils, chickpeas, grains,…
i hope this helps anyone else ☺️
@Queenie Maja i live in the city too and i killed every plant i owned in the past lol. the easiest is aloe vera, you can utilize it and it hardly ever dies. i am just experimenting now. i got a bag of veggie soil for 10€ and some free pots from facebook market place. i just plant whatever i have on hand and see how it goes. i planted a used spring onion and it regrew! i just planted the base of a lettuce. i bought herbs from the supermarket, repotted them, trying to keep them alive and propagate basil. start small and cheap! 😊 youtube and google help a lot. just google one plant that you have and start from there, learn how to care for it, then go on to the next one. good luck!
Since I bake my own whole bread I order organic whole wheat berries in bulk and grind my own flour. That way I know my flour is at its peak nutrition. I store the loaves I'm not using immediately in my freezer.
Awesome advice!
I find it helps to look for multiple recipes that use the same couple vegetables or meats. The cooking and seasoning methods would be what changes what you eat. So like rather than just eat boring, like include cabbage in dinner for three days but cook three different dinners, find three different dinners to cook the same max pack of chicken thighs. Then buy stuff lowest price per lb/oz rather than the smaller packs. Because smaller packs with a higher price per oz just makes you want to come back for more, and then ultimately you pay extra unnecessarily
So, basically, you are buying less and can no longer splurge on your favorite treats? Yes, we all are. Why? We haven't any choice.
i’m sorry and i hope you can afford the things you love soon 💜
That's life, some people can't even buy groceries.
Right, we’re in a cost-of-living crisis. Tips from content creators about how to afford to EAT during a recession feel depressing and dystopian to me. 😅
@@claire1kam Tell that to a homeless person.
@@priscilladeacon3503 There will Always be people who are better off or worse off than you. That's just the way it is.
That doesn't mean it's not hard to tighten your belt!
Ahh I've been trying to really lower my budget for our groceries, but it's hard. This video is timely and encourages me to try harder!!!
Budget snack: Popcorn!
You can dress it up different ways and it's Easy to keep your recipes pretty healthy!
Little kids Love making popcorn balls( in art aprons, maybe in the garage so you can just hose down after) Long before they can cook and bake more complex items!
So, now, it's a cheap and healthy snack AND a fun family project! Home made saves Big Bucks with Better food, too!
I actually air pop my popcorn instead of buying chips. Cheaper and healthier and my kids love to eat it as a snack with lunch.
A bag of kernels is 1.25 at Dollar Tree. Not always in stock though.
I do my grocery online it's simple to stick on my list this way and a see exactly how much I spend during the time I do it. Once I reach my budget I stop and verify I haven't take something I don't need and pay
Three years ago $80 got us a full cart of groceries. Now it’s half a cart and $210 for the same stuff..,
One thing I've been doing lately is doing a lot of crock pot meals that last on average 2 days. So I've been saving that way too.
For me I noticed as a family of 4 with my Mum living with us we can save groceries by getting it online. It’s quicker as well because the items bought before have already been saved. I find it cheaper online and get it delivered because every time we physically go to the grocery store when I’m about to pay I could see all the unnecessary stuff that my husband and toddler put in the cart which me ending up paying $300+ instead of $200+. We live in Sydney and cost of living here is so expensive.
Same, there are 7 people in my family so we have a shopping list on the fridge so if anyone notices that something ran out or they want something they'll write it down and my mum will add it to the list online if it's reasonable and that way we don't get extra things and only buy what we need. I also live in Sydney
I don't take any one shopping with me. It makes it much easier and faster. No grown man throwing adult tantrum in the store because I tell him we already have that at home nobody has time to make that or it costs too much. Or it's not in the budget.
He's the kind of guy that would be happy eating fruit lips frozen pizza tacos and hamburger helper every night with ice cream for dessert.
Problem is he plows through a large family size of fruit loops in 3 days 2 half gallon cartons of ice cream in about 5 days.
It would be ok if we didn't survive on stamps but come the middle of the month he's ate everything up the sweets and crap junk food.
Then expects me to come up with something out of thin air
I will say another tip is to not cook too much at a time. Cook only what will be eaten by looking in your pantry to see what u already have. My budget for a month and half for my hubby and I is $380 this includes all non food items for our baby and the home as well.
That way you're spending less.
I noticed that whenever I clip coupons it’s for brand name products that I don’t need anyway 😆 lol
And the things you might use is $0.25 cents
I forget where I heard this but I heard somebody say one time everything you need at the grocery store is on the outside isles everything in the middle is all processed, not so good for you food.
Four: take inventory of your pantry. You don't want to buy items you already have.
What you have things in your pantry all we have is a cup of flour, a bottle of vinegar, peri peri spice and a jar of peanut butter.
@@TheKeeperMadzwell you had better work on changing that. Buy an extra can of SOMETHING every time you go to the store. Get stocked. Go to a food pantry if you have to. Relying on our "just in time" delivery system for grocery stores is a disaster waiting to happen.
I like this video. It's simple and straight to the point. I think that the current high prices of food in the grocery stores make A LOT of people save more money by NOT buying unnecessary foods that aren't really must haves if they reeeeally think about it and NOT buying junk food. By doing all of that not only do you save money but you can also become healthier and lose weight (IF that's been a long struggling goal). High priced food items are kinda like a blessing in disguise if you flip it in a positive way. Thanks to stores like Dollar Tree you can make some good, cheap and tasty meals on a budget. Blessings to EVERYONE on this planet.
tip 1. shop at Aldi.... it's so cheap! (my weekly total for food was $25, now 30ish with inflation)
tip 2. really meal plan, figure out multiple meals where you can use the same ingredients. Making a big meal that you can reheat for multiple servings saves time and money!
tip 3. eat a lot of salads! it's good for you, and the largest container at aldi is under $5. that giant thing of greens lasts me and my partner a weeks worth of salads, if we include it as a meal everyday.
4. reduce the amount of meat in your diet. cutting or reducing the amount of meat will really reduce your bill. I only buy 1 or 2 meat items per week.
We don’t have Aldi in Washington state
I absolutely love Aldi. We have a family of 8 and several freezers. I will buy their mark-down or sale meat and freeze to eat over several weeks, so I rarely pay full price for meat.
I lost money at Aldi when their produce can't even last a couple days. Every time I go there, my produce goes bad the next day. And their brand new stuff is way more expensive than at another store
@@rosegroshek1218 Yeah,where I live Aldi isn't a deal at all. The big chain grocery store near me have permanent BOGOs on meat,chicken and other foods and that saves money. Aldi can also be more chaotic in store with their advertising as "cheaper"
My grocery budget hack is called intermittent fasting, shop at aldi and use eggs for every meal possible because we already have chickens. Cloud bread erry day 🥴
Plan your meals for the week and shop from a list. Reduce food waste.
I shop at multiple stores and avoid the ‘regular’ supermarkets. It can be upwards of 5 stores sometimes but worth it. My budget hasn’t gone up in a very long time.
Store brands are just as good.
Plan your week of meals.
Buy in bulk, even if you live in an apt, it’s worth it.
Make your own sweets/treats/snacks. Your budget and waist will thank you.
No tips at all- just patronising comments
You get offended easily
@@bodyofhope or maybe you do? Since they were just giving their take on what they just consumed… (?) you’re weird
Yh I was just sat here thinking "yeah my brain is NOT going to listen to me, I have tried. Getting strict means don't buy that applies to everything for my dumbass neurodivergent brain". Like seriously, it's why when I go grocery shopping I either end up overspending or not spending at all (thank the lord I don't do the absolute 'need to live' essentials organising or I'd literally die) 🤦♀️
I thought they were helpful. How was it patronizing?
I found it helpful. There’s no magic pill that makes you wake up overnight and have a bunch of money saved up
Planning ahead is everything. A lot of people cant be bothered to sit down and plan the next week of breakfast, lunch, dinners and holiday snacks for the kids. Its boring and time consuming and its realistic so its not that fun. But doing this saves me quite a bit of money buying groceries for my family of 6.
Whenever we eat out all fancy the following evening is cereal night. 😆
Very true - and definitely agree with the being realistic part! I think some other extra tips should also be taking into account which expensive groceries to discontinue buying and which expensive groceries to invest in, depending on if you don't live alone and live in a household/family where people have some food allergies/intolerances, or their food/health beliefs require buying the more expensive food (I have elderly family members that are into eating a lot of organic food, and would discard eating any other kind of they can help it - though they also tend to be picky about organic food, in case some of them aren't healthy too, so my family budgets to keep organic food in mind and often read food labels).
Would also recommend people keep a notebook/journal to help with everything, including food/groceries/health-related things - my family always documents anything during doctors' visits, grocery lists, budgets, etc.
I go in with a list, with solid recipes to work with what's on sale, and what looks good. I have trimmed down on a lot, but I like my food 😊
Love this comment🤍
If you REALLY want to save, you can try and grow your own food. Seeds cost like $3 a pack for tons of seeds and you can save seeds too. You can find a community garden and find resources to help with gardening - they might have tools there that the community can use.
Or get to know your local farm and buy direct at a farmer’s market or from them at the farm. Usually better produce than at the grocery store and you build a relationship with the farmer, plus it cuts out the middle man!
Can you do a little run down of meals you tend to lean on with a budget friendly shopping list?
I'd love this too!
Some of my cheap eats for this week: whole wheat spaghetti with marinara and steamed broccoli (sale for 99¢ lb), bean and rice power bowl (add whatever veggies we have), cheese and veggie Pannis with a cold pasta/veg salad, cheese enchiladas with a side of black beans and a little pico salad, frozen pizza (sale for $4) w/ cut up cucumber and free carrots (from Randall's coupon app), tortellini (HEB had buy one get one free) with Kirkland pesto sauce (freezer) and steamed broccoli and one night of leftovers. This week we are moving my oldest into her college dorm so meals are very basic and we are vegetarian so not buying meat makes for cheap eats.
Curry, with potatoes, chickpeas (canned) and vegetables,
Hard boiled eggs (sliced) with a mustard bechamel sauce and mashed potatoes. You need about 2 eggs per head.
Creamy pumpkin soup
Onion pie.
All those are vegetarian options, but you can make them omnivore by adding bacon cubes.
Savoury German pancakes (with bacon) with some sour cream with herbs smeared on when the pancakes are cooled - and then rolled up and wrapped for your lunch. If you want fancy, take salmon and some cream cheese with dill.
If you want meat - go for minced meat - that is cheaper and you can either make meatballs with some in season veggies aside - or you can make a meatloaf (particularly moist with a layer of bacon outside).
A small amount of minced meat and some zucchinis/courgettes cut into bite sized pieces - start with an onion and accompany with cooked rice and there you go. Rice in Asia shops is cheaper.
Pasta. Pasta sauces need not be expensive: An Onion, a carrot, a tin/can of tomatoes, some dried thyme and rosemary ... salt and pepper. And pasta can be found cheap, too, or you make your own.
Want something less tomato? Whip up a simple cacio e pepe. With four simple ingredients - spaghetti, pepper, parmesan and butter - this is a storecupboard favourite
Not sure, but I think this meal is pretty cheap and very filling: "Bretonia-style / Breton beans", or "fasolka po bretońsku". It's a Polish traditional dish (most of Polish traditional dishes use names from other parts of the world, those places usually don't eat that dish). It's for 4 people, or 2 if you leave half for tge next day (it's better the next day).
Two cans of red beans, one can of tomatoes (in pieces, or whole, or similar). We would add ~25cm of sausage and maybe 200g block of bacon (roughly the same amount as sausage) cut in pieces. You also need 1-2 onions, a tooth or two of garlic, maybe 8 tiny balls of allspice, a bit of black pepper and 2 bay leaves (European, not Asian! They should be ~5cm, not 12cm). No salt, sausage and bacon will make it salty enough.
It's super filling and usually you'd need a bread roll or something with it. If your budget is very tight, you could cut down on meat, use only one type, cut out garlic, or maybe use this dish as a side dish: add potatoes (cheap and nutrients-dense, much better than noodles or rice in that regard; you could survive for quite sone tike just on potatoes) and something salad-like (could be pickles instead, or nothing).
Please calculate your own prices to see if it's a good addition to your diet/budget.
Chili! I really like the smitten kitchen three bean chili recipe (if you don’t like spicy stuff - replace chili powder with paprika or smoked paprika) and you can make it with canned beans or dried beans (the recipe offers both options) and I add ground meat by cooking that up first in the pot, then removing it and starting the recipe - no need to clean the pot.
Another great option is home made ground meat tacos. I like to use ground Turkey since the meat is lighter than beef but still has good fat content. And you can either make your own taco seasoning with your own spices or buy the taco seasoning packets at the market. Buy tortillas (I heat them up on the stove) and make homemade salsa [4 tomatoes, one white onion, cilantro (or dried oregano if you don’t like cilantro), jalapeño (optional), and lemon juice from one lemon, season with salt and pepper to taste], grate some cheese, and serve with favorite hot sauce (optional) and sour cream. You can make this however fancy or simple as you want. And I set up as a taco bar so ppl can choose how to make their tacos themselves.
Stir fry. I like onion, bok choy, broccoli as my veg. You can change it to whatever veg you like - carrots, bell peppers, etc. You can add tofu or meat (just cook meat first and then set aside to not overcook or undercook meat - remember to season with salt and pepper when cooking). I add garlic, small amounts of ginger, and some hot peppers (optional) after sautéing some onions. Just make sure to cut/prep everything up beforehand so that you can add everything quickly since stir fry is about keeping the crunch in the veggies while just mildly heating them up to meld the flavors together. Add harder veggies first (carrots, broccoli) and softer veggies last (bok choy) to ensure crunch on the softer veg.
These 3 dishes kept me going on a limited budget when I was in my 20s cooking for my husband and I. We always had enough for leftovers - the chili lasted for days. Just serve with rice for the chili and the stir fry.
Cooking from home is healthier and cheaper. And you can make in bulk. Just freeze whatever you don’t eat and reheat later (stews, soups, and chilis are perfect for this).
These are great tips for self-discipline, but I think there could be far more quality advice given.... Here are some other tips for curious readers.
Food waste: if you find yourself with spoiled leftovers, figure out why that's happening. For me, it was cuz i was cooking food i didn't enjoy eating. I got better at cooking real quick when I realized the issue, for some reason? lol
Bulk meals: My favorite for these is soups. I'll share some favorites in a reply of this comment. Soups really save me on prep time.
Choices: I have noticed certain vegetables are almost always cheaper/expensive. I have been on rotation of four cheap vegetables for years, and when I do see a vegetable that I can afford I might get it to treat myself. Damn that sounds sad lmfao but yea. i recommend cabbages and "brassica", which are like broccoli or chinese gailan.
Munchies: Sober or not, we all get cravings.. Figure out what cravings you regularly have, and figure out the best way for you to obtain that craving. This isn't always simple.. Maybe you crave a fried flatbread... or maybe you crave sushi....
I personally have had a difficult relation to food and being able to have some flexibility really really improved my relationship to food and my own body.
Minestrone ::::: cook the veggie-tomato soup ahead of time, and cook pasta to-order, like when packing the kid's meals in the morning. This way we can minimize pasta-sogginess that may occur, as fresh soup is very hot and will remain hot for quite a while. This is a recipe that can be adjusted in any number of ways!
Miso soup:::: see if you can get salmon scraps for this one. The head and belly give the most oils. First put the salmon scraps in a pot and let it boil-simmer for an hr or two. Then put a second pot on and in that one you'll put your other ingredients. This way, you save on prep time. Because the salmon needs an hour or two to cook. it VERY well, and then use that broth to make miso soup. It's often far more affordable and far more fats- omega 3 or whatever. Seaweed and tofu are both very healthy for you too. This one is delicious, please note that some seaweed is already a little salty, so taste/season for salt AFTER adding seaweed! Furikake is not seaweed!!!! Konbu will not work here either!!! oh god not konbu
Tomato soup and grilled cheese::::::
IT'S A CLASSIC. IF YOU HAVEN'T TRIED IT, TRY IT. Though I feel this is weirdly more of a dinner soup than anything. ... hmmm... well you can eat it whenever you want lol
Reader's Very Own Chicken Soup::::: chicken is still the cheapest meat available where I live. get yourself a whole chicken, skin and bones included, and your aromatics of choice. I do not recommend skimming the fat but I do recommend skimming the foam. I have this soup with bok choi and rice with salt and sesame oil usually. This is my favorite during the winter, when I need help staying warm. You stay warm too okay? Keep those energy bills low if you can.
If you are teaching a child to cook, consider including them on this one. It's a very simple recipe and if you wish, your child can even have some agency in choosing the recipe!
Sloppy Mush:::::
This one isn't exactly a soup but you do need a spoon to eat it. It's more of a concept than a dish. It has a few basic components.
Ground meat: i recommend something close to 25% fat, it'll actually help you stay full. My ma used turkey, i prefer pork.
Diced veggies: This can be cauliflower leaves, broccoli stalks (shave the tough skin to reveal the edible pith), green beans, minced cabbage, just cut it small. This is a great task to entrust to a teen. (I'm assuming you're competent and confident with first aid here, you're the adult remember!)
Aromatic: My favorite options for this are onions/shallots, shiitake mushroom, root veggies like radish or carrot, tomato paste (Watch the price per oz of tomato pastes!)
Cut all ingredients real small, and put it into the pot to cook together. If you have a food processor, the prep time can go real fast!
Cook this low and slow, so for those living in your vehicles and cooking out of an instant pot, I recommend you give this one a try. You add more liquid if you want it like a soup, you can add less if you want it spooned over rice. Get a friend to steal you a pair of boiled eggs from the Sprouts down the street and that's a rich man's meal... Your friend gets a bowl of soup and rice to go with his egg and you get an egg to go with your soup and rice! The rich man's meal is friendship....
Filler/Variety: Extra firm tofu/tofu gan, beans, or dried soy protein isolate, they are all great ways to stretch your budget and hopefully give your family some variety in the meals.
Daal recipes are awesome. Indian/Pakistani daal recipes on TH-cam can be applied to beans and oatmeal.
Ordering online for delivery helps me save $. Less impulse stuff
It's so f'in bonkers to me that people have to REDUCE WHAT THEY EAT and force themselves not to buy 'frivolous' foods just because they don't have enough money to buy them (both grocery stores, especially ones in food deserts, who charge too much and businesses who do not pay a Thriving wage are a HUGE issue).
Kinda surprised they didn't mention how store-brand items are way cheaper than name-brand and are basically the same thing. Also there is a book called How to Eat Well on $4 and I believe there is a free pdf version if you don't care for the physical book. 👍😋
and by the off brand items if they taste the exact same and u don’t care
The biggest thing I've done to save money that has been the difference of being able to still afford to eat decent food has been to try to shop only once-a-month! I buy fresh meat and veggies to use in the first 1-2 weeks (eat things like lettuce and tomatoes first and cabbage and zucchini later as it lasts longer then buy frozen (and I'm limited for freezer space with only a small fridge freezer) and canned/cupboard items (canned beans, veggies, soups/broths, tuna, etc) for weeks 3-4 and rarely I'll go pick up a few fresh items items, usually just bread, milk and romaine, in the last couple weeks. Doing things this way forces me to use cheaper stuff and meat alternatives instead of always buying fresh meat and veggies weekly which is more expensive and it also takes away the option of buying splurge/impulse items for 3-4 shopping hauls and just having some of those kinds of things in ONE haul! If I shopped more often, I'd also be able to refill my freezer each trip but doing it once-a-month helps to limit me because of the lack of space so I have to make sure to use the freezer space wisely and not waste it for convenience foods or other indulgences!
👍 Dont let your husband shop! (junk food magically appears) lol
So true! 😄 I feel guilty when i somehow forgot something at the shop and I have to send my husband to get it. 🙈 he always buys some sweets, even though we always have some home made deserts at home. Come on!... 😄
If you are struggling here's something to cheer you up. Once you start budgeting it becomes a game You will enjoy.
I needed this! I was looking at my food budget for this month and I’m like, “where’s my money going?” In my stomach, that’s where. I am working on simplifying my meals. Thank you!
@Birb Enthusiast it’s been outrageous. I can totally relate.
We still spend more than I'd like but it's worth it if good food. Ruling out most processed foods is the primary way we save money. There's a LOT of food with nasty additives that claim to be healthy but are terrible for you.
It's been easier to start losing weight by eating healthy because it's expensive and hard to find easy healthy foods...even organic fruits and veg can be hard to find unspoiled in my city. I stopped settling on things I don't like to compensate, and stopped settling on buying almost bad fruit etc...if it's not good quality I save my money and appetite.
My must haves are something for breakfast, lunch, & dinner. I don’t worry about snacks. Thanks for the reminder!
Absolutely bang on. Snacks tend to up the expenses quite high. And good healthy 3 meals reduce snack cravings drastically.
@@minic578 True.
@@minic578 Same. We try not to buy snacks. For my dad and I, we enjoy snacking, so we try to satisfy that with things like fruit (whether fresh, frozen, or dried), nuts, etc. Stuff that's both healthy and relatively inexpensive
Buy dried herbs and spices!! They go a long way and dress up that bland food with flavor. We cut out spending a lot on boxed sides doing this.
Great advice.
I try to shop seasonal and meal plan around sales and what is in the pantry.
This is the opposite of great advice
Spices make a world of difference in food... Simple foods taste so much better with spices and reduce monotony in food
Our nearest grocery store doesn't sell generic brands, and my husband and I were spending close to $200 a week for both of us. We did have a few splurge items, but even then, getting a few things could run us up $50.
We found another store a little further from us, and got the same amount of groceries (minus meats) for half the price of our normal groceries, mainly because it was all comparable generic brands. Sometimes it also helps to shop around!
This is why I love Aldis.
I know not everyone can do this, took wife and I awhile to save up to do it but we are now seeing the savings.
Bought several large freezers, then paid $1600 for a bison, $600 for a side of beef, and $350 for a whole hog off area farmers. Already get eggs from lady at work, like I said not everyone can do it do to upfront costs and take strict savings into sinking fund but the ability to work with butchers on what and how the meat is cut and the quality and freshness of the meat even a year later is amazing
A tip I use every time : making a shopping/groceries list and sticking to it.
That's it.
If you arent looking at weekly ads and using at least the store coupons , let alone manufacturers , you are really missing out!! I save 35 to 55 percent doing it.
Or go to something like Aldi
Add : give yourself a break once a week or a month. Too strick can break You & make You spend even more
Find direct source of produce instead this will also cut down some cost which we pay in grocery stores
Yes!
Plan around what you already have. If you have time, shop around. I have a few “go-to” stores in my area, all relatively close to one another (factoring in gas prices), and I know what items are least expensive at what stores. Here in Utah I typically go to Trader Joe’s for great value “upscale foodie” items, Sprouts Market for the best deals on produce, and Walmart for generic pantry staples. Also a Costco membership goes a long way on items you use frequently or a lot of, like toilet paper or laundry detergent.
Most stores will have a discount section of things close to their “sell by date” which is also a good way to find bargains and boost your grocery haul.
I was searching through the comments in the hopes that someone would have mentioned the wonderful clearance sections! There are typically several in some grocery store chains, usually divided into categories (meat, freezer items, shelf stable, home goods, etc.). I always check them first for items on my list, and I don’t usually buy meat unless it’s on sale/put on clearance. These sections allow me to save on typical staples, and occasionally splurge on trying something new that normally would have been way out of budget.
Thank you for mentioning those money-saving nooks!
Discipline now, or regret later. Love that 😍
#1 make a meal plan #2 make a list #3 start with nutrient rich items (meat/eggs/cheese/nuts) then go to produce and lastly canned goods #4 count as you go and #5 reassess your cart and put things back you can part with
I used to way overspend on food. Now I actually stick to my grocery list and make simple meals. I eat healthy, vegan, with plenty of protein, stay full, and I spend on average $20 a week on groceries. This is just for me, it’s just me and the cat in my place. I probably spend more on his food than mine, because he has dietary issues 😂
"Discipline now or regret later"
"later" is a concept that does not exist in the world of ADHD 😂
^^^^This! 😅😭
Is that why I go to the store just for a snack run ?
@@carochan86 It might be, yes! I do that too, since I have two small convenience stores right at the foot of my building, I can go and get snacks until they close, at midnight.
The psychiatrist who diagnosed my ADHD explained that it is due to the brain seeking a quick shot of dopamine, especially with sweet snacks (hence why I'm addicted to Krispy Kreme doughnuts that I can get at one of the previously mentioned stores almost anytime I want 😂).
The cravings are much less intense on days I take my medication, though!
Yup lol
For real
I have found if I order my groceries through my store's app (i.e. Meijer), I spent waaaay less money because I could see everything I was spending and could easily delete items from my cart. But it does take away the fun of grocery shopping lol
Thank you so much, I will forward these tips to my butler and house managers for when they’ll do my grocery shopping. Financials have been really tight lately, already had to sell my chopper and my 5th car. Perhaps I still get to keep my Yacht with these tips.🙌 The struggle is real 😌
@@abjg6446 😂 😂 Will do!
Make dinner, freeze the left overs that night for fast food to eat instead of eating out.
Don’t shop at Walmart, shop at the restaurant supply, buy in bulk and break it down into your food storage or share with elderly neighbors.
Buy your spices in bulk like through azure.
Take pot pour a gallon of milk heat it and turn off, let it cool to hot where you can stick your finger in and not burn it. Take a room temperature plain single serve plain yogurt, Trader Joe’s is decent, dump it in wrap the pot in 2 towels leave it on the counter over night til the morning. In the morning put your pot of yogurt in the fridge. Make breakfast yogurt with honey pecans and banana or lassi.
step 3 will getcha, my biggest project is self-discipline :')
For me it's 1. start cooking from your pantry, then do the list. 2. Shop from the bottom, the expensive brands are at your sight height. 3. Have 10 variable staple meals like e.g. pasta marinara, pancakes, bolognese, salad. By limiting your staple meals you can cook in bulk, avoid spending all over the place, and you will buy ingredients like pasta in bulk when on sale. 4. If you get overwhelmed in the store, order.
Just sign up for a rewards card, don't eat at restaurants often, and consider going to a discount grocery store like Aldi or a local outlet grocery store. Trader Joe's offers affordable food, too. Usually that's all you need in order to save. Anything more could be stressful and nobody wants to feel deprived.
By bulk if you have a Costco and sams membership, order for pickup as you spend less time looking around the store and are less likely to splurge, make a list otherwise to keep you on track and yes use coupons
Yep. No more "TIDE or fancy orange juice.
Good advice, and also helpful for reducing waste. It just sucks that we have to limit things just to survive because our wages don’t keep up with rising cost of everything else. It’s good for the environment if we limit spending, but some people were already maxed out, especially seniors and disabled people.
Buy from the top and bottom shelf... always cheaper. Buy generic. Decide if the instant rice is cheaper to reheat than scratch due to fuel coat of boiling. (I do mine in the oven on a different night when oven is on cooking something else. ).Buy frozen fruits/veg. Buy pre sliced onions and peppers (frozen) Buy ready minced garlic/chlli/ ginger in jars. Use the pil to flavour food. Lasts ages in the fridge
Food is so expensive now everywhere. I live in Australia and my grocery bill was blowing out the budget. So yes it was a necessity. Check out specials .
Work out your meals before shopping and stick to it.
Buy in season fruit and vegetables only and only what you need, store it all correctly so there is no waste.
Make snacks for the kids. A batch of oatmeal cookies and mini muffins or cheap to make.
Limit junk food to occasional treats, hide them so they last.
Take a calculator and stick to your budget.
Use cash, paying by card is too tempting.
Make 2 non meat meals a week. Meat has doubled in price.
Have a week of no shopping, except for fresh foods. Get creative and only use what you already have in fridge and pantry. Its surprising how often we go shopping while there is still lots of good food still there.
I have also planted herbs, tomatoes, cucumbers, carrots spring onion and spinach. Simple garden. Overload of tomatoes i made sauce. Spring onions and spinach keep giving, just cut off at bottom and it grows again. My next thing is to get 2 dwarf fruit trees. Plus expand my vegetable garden. Id like to get chickens but my dog may find that a step too far🤣🤣
I steal my groceries now I don’t buy groceries anymore
Remember, kids. If you see someone stealing groceries, snitches get stitches.
No need to steal, go to a food pantry. Nothing fun about mom/dad in jail and children are in foster care for Christmas. No children, feel free to steal, the consequences are 3 free squares in jail/prison. Free food!
Love it. Not a lot of people are ready to be honest with themselves and would rather have those splurge items but feel that regret later in their bank accounts. I admit I give in with my sugar cravings sometimes, but it just takes discipline if you have a goal in mind. Just do it and and you’ll be glad you did later.
Thank you Biden
Yes being honest is key! Great video 😊
Not really news here just reenforces what I already have been doing for years