Monday, December 12, 2016

Monday madness

Monday is our day to do kitchen management.   It sets us up for a week of pretty much stress less meals.   I have been watching some grocery hauls  and meal plan videos.   It gives me perspective of what other people eat and what prices are in other parts of the country,   Many parts of the country are  represented on U tube,   Almost all of them manage to find a store where prices are low and there is markdown bins.  I don't find many markdown bins, when I do, the markdown is still too high.   I'm still not going to pay five dollars for a  small piece  meat. Don't look at the price per  pound,  look at the volume of meat 🍖 and calculate on your head how many meals you can make.  Portion control.   If you out out five servings for four people, someone  will eat the second portion.   If you don't, they just might eat their vegetables. LOL.  That extra pork chop can be in a stir fry essentially the start of a  new meal.

Food cannot do anyone good if you are feeding it to the garbage disposal.   

Planning meals and taking a fridge inventory a couple times a week greatly helps the garbage demons.    
Make soup. Make salad, stumped?   Go into Betty Crocker on line cook book or another source  and google the ingredient.   Be flexible.   You need a meal plan. Or you plan to fail.   But that doesn't mean you can't improvise if necessary.  I make meal plans, but don't necessarily eat Mondays dinner  on Monday.   

I guess the bottom line is anyone can feed their family on four dollars  a day per person if they put forth the effort.   

Almost every metropolitan area has a Costco or a Sams club.   If you don't have a membership, you can almost always get someone to take you in.   Our membership is free because we get a percentage back on the things we buy.   If you only have one store in town, consider carpooling with a friend or other family member to another bigger town.   Get the ads off the Internet for those stores or get them to mail you a flyer.  Go when it's a good sale week to make the trip worth your while.  Buy quantities of the food  you will use that doesn't  expire soon.  

When we lived out on the country and it was eight miles to the nearest real chain store, I would shop on the way home from work. Or go in on a Saturday and combine errands.   I got my meat from the little store that was closer because they had cheap meat in a freezer.   There are bargains  if you  look for them.  It's a state of mind.  







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