I started this because I was hearing that people on snap were having a hard time making it to the end of the month: running out of money before they ran out of month. I am finding that that isn't necessarily who is reading my blog.
I'm trying to out in efficient kitchen management tips, recipe remakes that are healthier or more tasty, the best prices on good food any particular week, even though I have come to realize my blog reaches far behind the PNW and ways to cut your food costs.
Why! Because I have discovered that I have a talent. Ha ha. I learned thrift from my mother and when the going got tough, I got going on learning all I could learn to stretch the food dollar. There are people that need to know this information. Social security has had no raises in two years, last year it was .3 Tenths of a percent and they took it back for Medicare. That doesn't mean that food orices didn't go up, or insurance and taxes didn't go up. Food is probably the most expensive discretionary budget item in a seniors budget. Food stamps are on the chopping block as well as school lunches since the republicans think that adding to their already rich pocketbooks is more important than feeding the less fortunate. It will be even more imparative to know how to stretch the food dollars.
- Ibotta is a rebate site that gives you money back on your purchases. If you are in food stamps, it is a way to pay for the oaoer products that food stamps don't pay for. Hey, we all need toilet paper. Lol if you aren't on food stamps, it a way to get something your budget doesn't allow for. Bottom line, it cuts your food costs. There are a few more sites that do the same thing,
- Coupons cut costs. Many are for things that you can supply cheaper by making yourself, but there are still real food coupons that help reduce costs. Things like butter, pasta sauce, pasta, laundry detergent, mayonnaise.
- Efficient scratch cooking. Not many of us have all day to spend in the kitchen.
- Plan. Plan, plan. It's the easiest way to stay in track and keep costs low.
- RBP! Rock bottom prices. Few things in the grocery store never go on sale. Watch for the lowest price and buy as much as you will need for the next month to six weeks. You can do this becaise you are laying 1/2 price often and you are rotating the things you buy. If I buy two packages of mega pack chicken this week, I can buy two packs of Pork loin the next week, You have a variety of food, but you have laid 1/2 price for it.
- Be your own butcher. A pork loin can be as low as 1.49 a pound. Cut your own pork chops and roasts. If the loin tapers down, cut stew meat. De-boning your split chicken breast saves about 7 dollars a pound. That's not a bad return on ten minutes worth of work.
- Portion control. Obesity is a problem in the US so I'm told. Portion control is good for the budget and the waistline. Buying bulk meat and dividing it into meal sized portions is a way to get the meat cheaper and is more efficient.
- Eat vegetarian one or two days a week.
- Use less meat and augment your meals with another protein. - add beans to your taco meat. Use less meat in a cassarole that can have a cheese topping. Have breakfast for dinner. An impossible pie can have cheese, eggs, and a vegetable. Low cost and really good.
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