Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Wicked Wednesday

Well, the mail person is back to his or her ways,  no ads yet.  I checked coupon connections last week and found no update.  I googled coupon matchups, Seattle and got another matchup site.

When I make meal plans, I use a template or outline to insure variety in our meals.  Eating a variety of things gives us a balance of nutrition.

My outline or matrix is

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish or shellfish

I try to work in the fresh veggies and other perishable items that were on sale that week, finding the lowest prices in our area.  Every section of the country has different lowest prices.  If you live in a small town, supplementing your pantry with a trip to the larger town with cheaper prices if possible will help your situation.

Frittata ( vegetarian)

8 eggs, beaten
1 cup mushrooms, sliced
1 cup broccoli, chopped
1/2 cup shredded cheese
1/4 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup green pepper, chopped
1/4 cup Parmesan or other hard cheese, grated
Salt and pepper

Combine ingredients
Place in greased baking dish
Bake at 350 20-25 minutes or until ot tests done.  ( knife inserted in center comes out clean.  )

I also make impossible pie with cheese when I want an inexpensive dinner.  Add a field green and fruit salad with a fruit vinaigrette.

Mac and cheese is a hit at our house for vegetarian as well as a vegetable stir fry.

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Jane



Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Terrific Tuesday

This is the wonderful week that I don't have to cook for four days on a row!    Yeah.  I love cooking, but it's nice to have a break once on a while, and I love being out with friends and family.

I made two chickens , very large chickens on Sunday.  I don't think I would do it again in the small oven.  I needed to use two separate pans and leave a lot more air circulating around them.  I wound up microwaving them for another twenty minutes to get them done.  I have dinner premade for Wednesday and Thursday.    

There is something really comforting about chicken pot pie on a cold day.  We love buffalo chicken pizza.  When I shopped, I got a honey Dijon mustard pork tenderloin.  There are coupons out there for them.  

green bean salad 

2 cup fresh green beans, cut into two inch pieces, blanched crisp tender.  
1/2 cup cucumber, cut in half, seeded, and cut into semi rounds slices
1 small red pepper, cut into thin strips.  
Sliced red onion

Dressing 
2 T cream cheese! softened
1 T. Milk
1 T vinegar
2 tsp sugar
Salt and pepper.  

Mix salad ingredients.  Mix dressing ingredients.  Toss.  

Serves 2 


Raspberry salad 

Field  greens, or torn romaine 
Diced pear
Raspberries
Toasted pecans, optional
Dried cranberries

Raspberry vinaigrette

Notes: 
Designer lettuce is cheapest at Costco.  
Pears are a buck a pound these days
Raspberries were also on sale.  
I always keep dried cranberries, they are a special treat in my oatmeal, or on cookies instead of raisens.  Also, you can use them in stuffing or rice to go with poultry.  Yum! 



One of the ways that you can save money on the grocery bill is to make it a point mid week to survey the fridge and use up the little odds and ends hiding in there.  When the Dijon mustard jar is almost completely done, make a oil and vinegar dressing right in the jar. Cover the jar and shake it.  

That's all for today.  

The ads come out today, but I have a full day, probably Tommorrow.  

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Jane 














Monday, December 16, 2013

Trip to Fred Meyers and Rite Aid/ other stuff

We made the trek to the next town and went to Rite Aid and Fred Meyers.  I really scored at Rite Aid.
I usually don't buy soda except at holiday time.  We like root beer.  When I was a child, that's the only soda my dad would allow in the house.  A special treat was root beer float.  I got root beer for .10 a two liter bottle. With up rewards, four pair of panties were less than five bucks including tax.

On to Fred Meyers.  Christmas oranges were a good price, and flour was on sale.  Holidays are a good time to stock baking supplies.  I opened my last back up org flour, so I picked some more up.  Jello products were a buck.  lotts of bucks coffee makes a lemon pound cake.  The recipe for the wanta be is on the Internet.  My daughter and I made ot last year.  We figured we made about 212.00 an hour making it at home instead of. Using it at That other place.  Milk was 1.25 a half gallon.  Green beans  were .50.  Coffee pods were on sale and I had coupons.  I get two cups from a pod and it's really convenient for company.

Yesterday we went out to a house party.  We had a wonder dinner of a stuffed chicken breast with cheese and Canadian bacon,  rice, salad, and green beans with almonds and rolls.   Desert was yummy caramel flan, and a pistatisio desert.

You can have some convenience food when you budget and get most of what you buy for 1/2 price.  I am still running about sixty dollars a week, and.building  a stock for three adults.  I haven't checked the stats from the USDA lately, but considering the increased price of meat and vegetables I don't think we are far off.  

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Jane





Saturday, December 14, 2013

Rite aid and Fred Meyers for Sunday

It's Saturday.  I have the Sunday paper courtesy of my husband.  Rite aid had really good bargains using up rewards last week.  This week, flipping the up rewards is going to be a challenge.  They are advertising extended hours to closer to Christmas, but the bargains are not real prolific.

If you want to go online a listen to a video credit for a dollar and find the coupon in the Sunday paper for .55, paper towels are 4.44 a 8 pack.

No nonsense socks, tights, leggings Bogo1/2.  And a 2 dollar up reward.  Must buy 2, limit 3 up rewards per household.

Toothpaste products have decent up rewards, check coupon connections for matchups.

I'm not one to buy soda, but it is 4/4 with a 1.00 up reward for the 2 liter bottles.  ( net .75).

Quaker granola bats and cranberry juice 2/5 with a 1.00 up reward.

FRED MEYERS

New York Roast 3.47 a pound

Satsuma 4.88

Milk 4/5@@

Cheese 2/3 @@

Coffee, Yuban 5.49@@

Smoked sausage 2/5@@
Vegetables 2/1
Jello products 10/10
Flour 3/5 ( 5 lb bags)

Butter 2/4
Choc chips 2/4
Peanut butter 2/4
Celery .49

That's about all,  remember Fred Meyer ads go Sunday to Saturday.

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Jane




Friday, December 13, 2013

Finally Friday

Finally Friday! it's been a long week.  Both of our vehicles are sick and the repair shop is going to have a really good Christmas!?!!!   LOL.  We really can't complain.  Both of them are paid for, and have been cheap transportation.

I digress

On to food.

Christmas baking time. I got cookie mic cheaper than scratch.  I do t usually bake a lot.  Baking can cost a lot especially when your cookies take special ingredients.  Fortunately, baking ingredients are usually on sale this time of the year and if you bake all year, it would be a good time to stock up of you find a bargain.

Rite aid has some baking ingredients buy 15.00 with a five dollar reward.  That makes things 33 percent off.  Fred Meyer had some good sales too.  I have seen butter as low as 1.50.

Betty Crocker has a month long cookie series going on.  A cookie a day.  I had an aunt that used to bake oodles of cookies at Christmas, all nummy.  I don't think even she odd that many variety,

I like creme brûlée , brownies with ice cream and a little chopped peppermint candy is a good Christmas desert.  Peppermint ice cream and shortbread cookies is a favorite,  chocolate waffles are an inexpensive treat.

Dairy is cheapest at Costco.

I like to balance the heavy meal we all have at holiday time with an easy lighter soup meal.
My mother used to call that giving  your stomach a rest.  LOl

Guess that's all I have.

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Jane



Thursday, December 12, 2013

Terrific Thursday. : what to do with what you got

 SAFEWAYS has whole chickens for .79.  And ALBERTSONS has oranges for .88.  Sounds like a match made in heaven.  It would be my pick for my batch cook for the week.  In comparison, SAFEWAYS has a chicken in the deli department for five dollars.  It is 30 ounces that is less than two pounds.  If it was two pounds it would be 2.50 a pound.  or, in other words, you could buy two for ten dollars and have four pounds of chicken.  The place of origin is a mystery.  For ten dollars, you can have over twelve pounds of raw chicken that you know came from the NW.  You are saving over 66 percent.  NEVER buy a chicken under three pounds.  You are paying too much for bone , you don't eat bone!  

Clams are a buck at ALBERTSONS, and milk is 2.59.  It might be time for clam chowder.

Note: ALBERTSONS has Colgate toothpaste for .75.  I would check coupon connections for a coupon.

SAFEWAYS has sour cream and yogurt on sale.  I can usually find a coupon for yogurt.

SAFEWAYS has cream of mushroom soup for .89.  That is precisely why I stock.  I paid .30 cents last month at Fred Meyers.  That is a savings of 66 percent.  If you can get most of your food for 2/3 off, you can get three times the food for the same amount you are spending now. now, most of us don't need three times the food, but you can still double your food and save another 1/3 .

There are bargains if you look hard.  By taking advantage of the bargains and only buying real food, you can eat better for less.  You can't always get 66 percent, but you can average 1/2 if you take advantage of the specials and stock while the price is low.  This is not about hoarding, it is about buying low and eating high.  It's about being self sufficient.

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Jane


Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Wednesday, the ads

The ads already again.

TOP

TILLOMOOK 2.99@@
beans 2/1 @@

QFC
SIRLOIN tip roast 3.25
Dreyers 2.99
Starbucks coffee 6.99$$
Nathan's 2/6

SAFEWAYS

Ham .99
Chicken .79
Oranges .99
Starbucks 6.99$$
Milk 2.59

5 dollar Friday
Family pack lunch meat
Shrimp
Urban coffee
Sugar
24 ounces Jiff
Berries 2/5

ALBERTSONS
Ham 1.47
Oranges .88
Salad .88
Cream cheese .88
Ice cream 2.99
Fran's bread 2.49
Apples 1.00
Tomatoes 1.00
Pears 1.00
Cucumbers 1.00
Organic carrots 1.00

Sale
Clams 1.00
Tomato sauce .25
Cranberry sauce .75
Potatoes in pouches .75

That's about all

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Jane



Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Terrific Tuesday/ bargain edition

It is  Tuesday.  Yesterday we braved the cold and went to riteaid and business Costco.  There are some things that you can't find at regular Costco.  I Scored big time at Rite Aid.  I needed two consumable gifts for a round about gift exchange.  I had some rite aid bucks .  I got fingernail polish for free, great stocking stuffers.  Also, when you buy 15.00 worth of baking items, you get five dollars rite aid  bucks.  I bought a 12.00 bag of m and m's and two cookie mixes that I had a coupon for.  I was four cents short,so I bought a bottle of vanilla.  The cookie mixes netted .62 each.  The whole bill was less than five bucks, including tax.

Peach and blueberry pie.
Peaches can be found on the frozen food case.  I found some at grocery outlet, cheaper than fresh last summer.

Crust for 2 crust pie.

Filling
2 T lemon juice
3 cups peaches,
1 cup blueberries
1 cup sugar
2 T tapioca
Pinch of salt
2 T butter
1 egg yolk

Mix together lemon juice and fruit.  Add sugar and salt and let stand while you roll out crusts, about
15 minutes.  Pour filling into pastry lined crust.  Dot with butter.  Cover pie with second crust.  Paint crust with egg yolk beaten with water.  Bake at 425 for 45-50 minutes.  NOTE: if peaches are wet, drain them in a colander fore mixing with blueberries.

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Jane





Monday, December 9, 2013

Monday Madness

Yesterday was go see Santa day.  Grandbaby was scared to death.  She just sat there with a blank stare!  ought to be a good picture.  I remember her income at that age screaming bloody murder!  
I was able to get a scaled down Christmas decor up and make an apple cake.  I have come to the conclusion that you can't use fake sugar for this cake.  It still didn't quite resemble grandmas cake.

I found a .25 coupon in Sundays paper for recipe starter.  It is .50 at the dollar store.  Also, coupons.com has a coupon for BBQ beef in a tub.  It os 3.99 ( about 1/2 price) at QFC and the dollar coupon makes it 2.99 -- cheaper than you can scratch cook it with the cost of beef these days.
The USDA predicted that that would happen.

Yesterday we had pork chops over the cranberry stuffing,  it was really good.

Rite aid says that they have over 300.00 in up rewards.  I was hard pressed to find much for things I would buy.  There is fingernail polish for free( a good stocking stuffer) .  The 3m temporary hook things are bog1/2 with a 3.00 up reward.  This might be a bargain, but can't tell until I get there.
There is a 5.00 up reward when you buy an old navy ,gap, or banana republic gift card.  Holiday fleece throws  are 2/5. And ice cream is a good buy.

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Jane




Sunday, December 8, 2013

Sunday Focus| rite aid and Fred meyers

The newspaper is out and rite ado and Fred Meyers ads, along woth zillions of ads vieing  for your Christmas money.

Rite Aid

Fingernail polish FREE with a up reward.  Great for stocking stuffer
Dryers 2/7 w a 2.00 up reward nets 2.50
Betty Crocker cookie mixes 1.49 - ck for coupons

Buy three AMX gift cards, get 10.00 off @@

Popcorn Tim's 2/10 with a 2.00 up reward.  Nets 4.00

Crest toothpaste 2/6 w 200 up reward.  -'check for coupons.

FRED MEYERS

APPLES .88
Potatoes 5 lbs/ .88
Ham 1.88
Vegetables 2/1 @@ canned
Country bread 3/4@@
Ocean spray juice 3/5@@
Beans or tomatoes 2/1@@
Tuna 10/10
Ice cream 2/4@@
Tomatoes, grape 2/4
Berries 2/5
Zucchini .99
Lemons 2/4. 2 pound bags
Cucumbers, green peppers. .58

That's about it

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Jane




Saturday, December 7, 2013

Suddenly Sarurday/ 1.50 a day

I read an interesting article on Facebook yesterday.  I shared it for those that are on my Facebook.  There is a study that says the difference between a middle class and a low income persons food budget os 1.50 a day.  I am assuming that is per person in the family.  That's six dollars a day for a family of four.  Or 42 dollars a week.  We save more than 42 dollars a week shopping wisely.

Yesterday we had French fries and BBQ beef sandwiches.  The BBQ beef was 3.99 on sale at QFC and I had a dollar coupon.  That makes a pound of BBQ beef 2.99--less than making it from scratch.

Today we are having pork chops and cranberry stuffing.  Pork chops were BOGO.  Four pork chops were 2.61.  Well within my five  dollar range and I can use the leftover croutons and cranberries from thanksgiving.
Fruits were really reasonable at QFC and a good way to pump up our immune systems with antioxidants and vitamin c.

This is the first time in a week I have had to work on Christmas.  We have had a sick baby on the house and my daughter had to go to work.  My husband had to cover my shifts.  So, I'm going to try to get caught up with Christmas chores .  We have December birthdays, so I try to get Christmas pretty well organized by mid  month.  I have scaled down over the years, but I will probably ramp up next year for our grandbaby.

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Jane

Friday, December 6, 2013

Finally Friday/ recipe edition

It's finally Friday and I have a sick baby again.  Pork chops are a pleasant contrast to the turkey we all ate last week.

Pork chops with cranberry stuffing

1/3 cup cranberries, chopped
1 T sugar
4 pork chops, 1-1/4 inches thick
1T butter
1/3 cup celery
1/4 cup onion
2 T. Orange juice
1 tsp orange rind
1/2 tsp sage
1 cup dried bread cubes
Salt and pepper


oven to 375

1) In small bowl, combine sugar and cranberries.  Set aside

2) in skillet, sauté the celery and onion until wilted. Add remaining ingredients except pork chops.

3) place stuffing in a well greased  baking pan.  Place pork chops that have been salt and peppered on top of stuffing.

4) bake 35-40 minutes or until the pork tests done and is no longer pink in the middle.

Pork chops and oranges are on sale.  Bread cubes and cranberries are probably still leftover from last week.

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Jane



Thursday, December 5, 2013

Terrific Thursday/ what to do with what you got

Ok, this week has been a bust.  I have had a sick grandchild all week, and I am so far behind on my regular schedule.  We have several birthdays in December too, so I usually have everything done by mid December for Christmas except the last minute cooking.  I digress

Ok.  I see pork roast for pulled pork sandwiches or tacos for .99.  I also see ham.  Ham is rich and salty, so a little bit goes a long  ways.  We use it in eggs, quiche, pizza, soups, scalloped potatoes, grind it for sandwich spread.

QFC has really good prices on produce, watch them, sometimes they don't pick it as well as it should be.  Apples are .99. Time to make grandmas apple cake.   Oranges are a good buy and good for you.
Berries are not bad priced.  Rich in antioxidants.  I see breakfast for dinner.

After a week of turkey, chicken is probably not probably what we want for a week or so.

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish

My matrix for meal planning.  Pizza is a good non meat, as is breakfast for dinner.  Burritos or tacos work with rice and beans.  Mac and cheese is always a winner here.

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Jane

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

The ads ,finally on time LOL

QFC

Pears, apples .99
Oranges .68
Ham .99
Freshetta pizza 3.99
Dreyers. 2.99
Natural choices drinks, B6G6 nets .67
Tuna 10/10
Bread 10/10

TOP

cheese 4.99
Milk 2.49@@
Cornflakes.99@@
Tuna .88
Nalley chili 1.00

Buy4, save 2
Cookie mix 1.99
Cake mix .99
HORMEL pork loin 8.99@@$$

ALBERTSONS

Milk 2.29@@oscar Mayer lunch meat 1.99@
Coffee 6.49@@
Ice cream 2.39@@
Berries 3/10
Cucumbers 3/2

SAFEWAYS

pork shoulder .99
Pork loin chops 1.99
Salad BOGO

5 dollar Friday
Alaska cod
Dreyers 2/5
Cheese 5.00
Boston cream cake

That's about it. Don't  forget to cross off anything more expensive , and check coupon connections for matchups.

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Jane



Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Terrific Tuesday, recipe edition

It's Tiesday.  I haven't seen grocery ads for two weeks.  I expect that they will be holiday themed and not much for stocking.

My friend found grandmas recipe for apple cake. It's a lot richer on vegetable oil, which probably is why the other recipes were too dry..

Grandmas Apple Cake

Combine

1-1/2 cups vegetable oil
2 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla
3 cups chopped apple

Combine

1 tsp soda
3 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon

1/2 cup nuts, optional

Combine the wet and dry ingredients by hand.  Batter will be stiff.
Put in greased 9X 13 pan and bake at 340 for 45 minutes or until tests done.

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Jane


Monday, December 2, 2013

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Rite aid and Fred meyers

I did get the newspaper today.  There were a lot of buy me flyers, but only one insert that was P&G.

Rite Aid

Peanuts BOGO
Coffee cups 5.99 $$
Cookie mix 1.99$$
Candy canes .50 net
Co air scrunchies, brushes, combs, spend 10, get 5 up rewards
Nail polish 2/5 and a 1.00 up
L'eggs underwear, sox, pantyhose, tights. B1 Get second one 1/2, plus 3.00 up reward.

Revlon.  B1 Get 1/2 off the second.  , then get a 5.00 up reward of you spend 15.00
Paperback books, B2 G1


Fred Meyers

Tillamook cheese 4.99@@
Whip cream 3/5
Butter 1.79@@$$
Dryers 2.99

That's about all I see.

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Jane



The basics, part 3: Cooking From Scratch

Ah, the dreaded word...cooking from scratch!   It's not as overwhelming as it might sound to you,  if your kitchen is organized! it can be as simple as using that can or box.  Keep like things on the same place.  Baking powder and salt, and soda should be on the same cupboard.  Flour and sugar together in the same set of canisters,  it's not efficient of you are running around the kitchen to get your ingredients together.  Another trick is to get a tray, or a baking sheet and gather all your ingredients.  That way, you know if you use an ingredient and out the can etc aside, it is on the recipe.  No forgetting to put the sugar in the pumpkin pie!   We have all done similar things in our time.LOL
You also don't get on the middle of cooking and discover you don't have an ingredient.

Having a substitute book is another cooking tool that is really useful.  You can probably google ot and find the same information,  if a recipe calls for some exotic thing that is too expensive for your budget, don't throw out the recipe quite yet, look for a substitution.  In regular cooking, you can substitute anything that you think would taste good.  I often substitute celery for mushrooms,  my hubby doesn't like mushrooms,  think same texture and bulk.  In baking some things have to be the same ingredient,  it's more precise to make things rise etc.  you can, however substitute craisens for raisens or walnuts for pecans or some things like that.

There are a few things that are cheaper to buy premade than scratch. Or, they are too time consuming to make scratch worth your while.  Refried beans, pasta, pasta sauce ( when you get hunts in a can ) and tortillas come to mind.  I buy canned beans because I like to cook ahead.  Rice and beans have a short fridge life.  They go bad fast.  Cooking and holding the beans means I can't have leftovers and still feel comfortable about the dishes freshness.

Some things are just plain stupid to buy.  Bread crumbs is one.  You are paying for someone else's dead bread and throwing your own away.  Put the heels of your bread or the leftover baguettes in the oven to dry.  I use a cold oven.  Of the oven is still warm from cooking, even better.  When enough bread is there and it is dry.  Process in the food processor or grate on the largest side of a box grater.

A French bread on the largest box grater gives you a more designer breadcrumb.  Croutons are also overpriced for their lot in life.

My daughter and I dissected a hamburger meal box.  The results were amazing.  See precious blog.
There are alternatives that are better, cheaper, faster.  My nephew coined it no Brainer pasta.  LOL

Some things like pudding in a box that you cook is just as easily done from scratch than it is from a box.  Ditto oatmeal in the microwave.  You are already measuring your water, just add measuring oatmeal and the savings are amazing.  One cup water, 1/2 cup oatmeal, 1-1/2 minutes.  If your oatmeal boiles over.  Cook 1 min, stir on craisens or anything you want, and cook 1/2 minute.  If you want it more thick, add an additional 30 seconds.  Watch it, now would be when it boils over!

Precooking meat when you are more relaxed is another scratch way of doing things.  We already talked about buying the so called loss leader and cookin a months worth, rotating with the sales.
Hamburger we all know is just as versatile as chicken in making different dinner dishes.  Defating your ground meats lowers the fat content to less than a boneless, skinless chicken breast.  Remember, when you take out the fat, you need to replace it with flavor.

Hamburger crumbles can be added to a pizza, or pasta sauce or a cassarole.  Meat balls can be added to cream sauce, or a gravy over mashed potatoes, noodles, or rice.  Meatball subs, anyone?  

Chicken can be a chicken dinner, chicken pot pie, chicken soup, chicken stir fry, buffalo,chicken pizza, BBQd legs and thighs.  Wings.  Cooking a whole chicken is easy and a lot less expensive than deli,chicken.  ( see earlier posts) .
Also, see earlier posts on almost free pizza complete with easy crust recipe and secrets your grocer doesn't want you to know!  

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Jane







.






Saturday, November 30, 2013

Part 2: shopping

Every month I write the same blog; every month  I write off the top of my head.  Please feel free to read back blogs, some are better than others.

We have talked about identifying the foods that we use often to cook our meals and finding the RBP for them.  Basically, we might buy six cans of pasta sauce this week, because we don't have to buy the pasta that we bought last week.  The difference is that instead of paying 2.19 for pasta, we have paid fifty cents.  You actually have a stock of food, and have paid less than you paid before.m

I would be remiss if I didn't address the issue of not buying boxes and premades .  When you buy ready made and mixes, you are paying for someone else's labor and feeding your family a bunch of chemicals they don't need to eat.  If you are on a very limited budget, you just can't afford it.  There are ways to cook just as fast from scratch.  There Re a few things that are cheaper to buy in a can or box than to make  from scratch, especially of you match a sale with a coupon.

Let's talk about prepping for your shopping trip.  When buying 1/2 price groceries, you are spending more time shopping, and less time cooking.  You get paid for shopping.  When you figure your savings over going to the nearest store and buying food, sometimes the savings divided by the amount of extra time is like earning 75.00 an hour.  LOL.

Prepping.
When you get the ads , take a piece of computer paper and divide it into quarters.  Top each section with the name of a store.  Now go through the ads and write down anything on your stock list that is a RBP.  Write down any produce and dairy that is a good price.  Look for the meat item that is the lowest price that is on your list.  Every week, the stores pick a meat that is their featured  item and give it a RBP.  If you pick one a week, buy enough to cover that meat for a month and rotate the meats, you virtually buy your meat at the lowest price, portion control it for no waste, and cook once, eat many times.

Let me rephrase that to make more sense.  When I plan meals, I use a outline or matrix.

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2 vegetarian
1 fish or shellfish
Your matrix may be different. This one os what works for us.
One week, if whole chicken is a buck or less a pound, I will buy enough for us to have 2 chicken Meals a week for two weeks.  I usually cut up a chicken into  2 breast portions. dark meat, and soup.
I usually buy ham cubes or a pork loin roast.  You can slice off pork chops from the pork loin and freeze.  We can still get it for 1.79 sometimes.  When good ground beef is under three dollars a pound, I get it and marathon cook crumbles, taco meat, and meatballs enough for the 8 beef meals.  We used to have roast and roast beef a jus sandwiches before beef took a double hike.
Bulk cooking is a way to cook once, divide the meat into meal sized portions with no waste and clean up once.  The meat takes the most time to cook, so precooked meat means that your mealtime os less hectic.

After you have your list of things that are on sale , cross off anything that is more expensive elsewhere, and anything you don't need .  Now pick the TWO best stores.  Check the coupon matching sites on your area for coupons.  I buy ONE paper a week for a buck at the dollar store.  I save the coupon inserts in a binder clip by month.  Coupons.com is a good web site to get printable coupons.  There are a lot of premades to weed through, but you can still find coupons for dairy and other necessities.

Plan your trip, bring the ads, your list, your coupons.  Plan your trip to maximize gas.  Of the stores are far apart, break it down to two trips that tag along with other errands.  Maybe one store is near your mother that you visit with every week, the gym, the doctor??? Whatever works.  If you have no big grocery stores on your town. Consider  arranging a carpool with neighbors or family and go once a month, or twice a month.

You don't have to buy your food just at the chain stores.  You so have to avoid the specialty big bucks stores.  If you are on a rock bottom thrifty budget, sorry, there os no room for ready mades unless they are cheaper than scratch, and there is no room for special fancy stores.  You are paying for that fancy store every time   you walk onto it.  LOL.

There are alternative stores to the chain stores.  Warehouse stores like Costco and Winco sell so,e things cheaper.  Over stock s gores like grocery outlet and big lots sell select merchandise cheaper.
The bakery outlet is cheaper on some things unless you happen onto a real sale.  We go every six to eight weeks.  Sometimes  the drug stores have food a lot cheaper.

The biggest thing to remember is to know your prices.  My mother used to have the expression,
Some people could have a bargain get up and bite them in the butt and they wouldn't see it!

It's all about knowing the best prices and. Uh ing on moderation, just enough to last you until the next sale.  It won't happen overnight.  It happens one can at a time.

Thanks for stopping by
Please share

Next time cooking

Jane






Friday, November 29, 2013

The basics, part one.

Groceries on the cheap takes a three pronged approach at putting food on the table at 1/2 price of retail.

I started this blog when it was brought to my attention that people on snap were running out of money before they ran out of month.  Now, snap has been  cut five percent.  Add the fact that meat pretty much has gone up 30 percent, it is harder to make both ends meet.   I actually found that many people not on snap read my blog.  Some people either want or need to economize on food, some like a way to get out of the kitchen faster, or be more efficient, and some just like trying new recipes.

Groceries on the cheap takes a three pronged approach at cheap grocery shopping.


  • Planning and organizing
  • Savy shopping 
  • Cooking from scratch

Like about anything we do, it's always less stressful of we have a plan.  If you hate to grocery shop, it's  probably because you are short on money, you are bringing two toddlers with you, or you are a indecisive personality.  Break down the problems,and  life will be less stressful.  

  • Planning your trip and maximizing your snap money will make you have food left over at the end of the month.  
  • Leaving the kids at home is a good move.  Of you don't have anyone at home to take care of them,  try to leave them with family, or trade babysitting with a friend.  
  • Having a list, and having guidelines of what to buy, takes the decision making part out of the grocery store, and into the home where you are comfortable and the "rules" make the process easy.  
Everything starts with a plan.  This is only time consuming at first,  some of it is  done once and then you are set.  Some of ot you probably have already done unconsciously.  
  • List the inexpensive sources of protein that your family will eat.  
  • List the main dishes that use these ingredients. 
  • List the food items that you use on a weekly basis to cook these foods.  no boxes or bags of stuff here.  Just scratch food.  ( your stock list) 
For example:  our family likes chicken, pork, some beef, cheese, rice, beans and refried beans and some fish and shellfish.  

We have tacos and burritos often.  Chicken dishes , Mac and cheese, pork roast, sloppy joes, soups .....

Our stock list is beans, refried beans, diced tomatoes, tuna, pasta sauce, pasta, green beans and corn, cheese, some chili and cream of mushroom soup.  

After you have assessed the shelf ready items that you use on a regular basis, you need to track these items for a while and fond the rock bottom price for them on your area.  A rock bottom price is the lowest price you can find.  Stores operate on a 8-12 week cycle.  Maybe beans will be less than .69 once every three months.  Maybe once every four or five months , they will be .50.  You want to assess how often you use them, and how many you need to last you until they go on sale again.  The object is to never pay that nasty f word.  ( full price) .  If we use something once a week, I keep 24.  If I use it once a month, I keep 6.  Things like catsup, mustard, mayo etc, I keep one ahead.  When I open my back up, I start looking for a sale.  Thos is a out buying low and eating when the price is high.  It's stocking, not hoarding.  It's more about being prepared and being self sufficient.  If you have a stock of food and are sick, you don't have to go to the store.  

Not paying full price on your key purchases is the trick to stretching your food dollar.  
Having a personal cookbook of dishes you cook for dinner is good,  7 is nice, 14 is better.  
Planning a weeks worth of meals ahead is a good tool to stay out of the drive  through or off the phone ordering pizza.   You don't have to get real specific, the main dish is fine.  You can deviate from the plan, just have a plan.  

Next time| : Savy shopping

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane 






Thursday, November 28, 2013

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Wicked Wednesday/ recipe addition

It's Wednesday.  I have no ads yet.  I am not sure there are any ads today.

I found a crock pot recipe for chicken thighs.

Mix together

1.5 cups chicken broth
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1T orange zest
Pepper

Brown 2 lbs skinned chicken thighs  in oil. 5 minutes per side.
Place in crockpot.

Add 1/2 onion chopped in skillet and sauté until limp.
Add salt and pepper and 2 t flour.  Stir.
Pour in broth mixture and bring to a boil.

Pour over meat on crockpot.

Cover and cook on low for 6 hours.

Serve over polenta or rice.
Garnish with blue cheese

That's all for today.

I think that it is interesting that there is a lot of pizza buys in the ads lately.  I think because we are prepping thanksgiving for days and dinner still has to happen.  LOL.  It os a lot easier of we can delegate   dinner to several people/ families and minimize the stress at the last minute.

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Jane





Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Is it turkey day yet!?!!!

I can't believe the hype about Christmas spending.  Stores are open on thanksgiving and they are already advertising Black Friday.  I, for one, don't think we need to gloss over thanksgiving.  I couldn't even find a thanksgiving sticker anywhere.  It's all Christmas.

I have already got my store books done this morning, and I am about to undertake making a turkey.
We are going out to family for Thanksgiving, but I like leftovers!   The best part of thanksgiving.  At eight dollars for turkey, we can eat a long time.

Yesterday,  I made snowman soup packets for my daughters class at school. They are a packet sorta like a matchbox that I embossed with snowflakes with a poem.  I filled a bag to go in it with candy cane, hot chocolate packet, and marshmallows.  I also had the pleasure?!??? Of going to the physical therapist.  LOL.  

I digress

Sweet Potato  and apple dish

Olive oil
1/4 cup chopped onion
1 tsp minced onion
1/2 cup rice, raw

1 cup water
2/3 cup sweet potato, peeled and diced
1 cup cubed Granny Smith apple

1/4 cup frozen peas
2 t raisins
Salt and pepper

Sauté the onion and garlic in olive oil.  Add the rice and toast lightly.  Add water and sweet potato and bring to boil, reduce heat and cook until sweet potato is tender.  Add apple , peas and raisens.  Continue cooking about three or four minutes.

Serves two.

Notes, Costco sometimes has sweet potato already cubed.  I made sweet potato soup one time.  Peeling and curbing sweet potato or squash is a royal pain!  

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Jane








Monday, November 25, 2013

Let's try FM and rite aid again.

After my husband went and got the real newspaper , here are the rote ado and Fred Meyers ads

Rite aid.  Score!    Toothpaste, Colgate 3.50 with a 3.00 up reward.  .50 coupon in Sundays paper!  Limit 2......

Colgate toothbrush 2.99 less coupon .50. Less up reward, makes .50.  Great stocking stuffer!

Oatmeal cups 2/3, 3.00 up reward.  FREE.  Backpacks?.......

That's about it.

Fred Meyers

Celery .38
5 lbs clementines 4.88 ( when we went Sunday to 185th, they were soggy soft,  )
Cranberry sauce 1.00
Pumpkin 2/3$$
Black olives .99@@
Sweet potatoes .79
Tillamook ice cream, 2/5@@$$
Butter  1.79@@
Country bread 3/4@@

That's about all.

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Answer to Susan

I can't seem to make the reply button work in the comment section.  This info is probably good for others too.

Susan, 
My sister was married to a type 1, and she could probably answer you better. But,here goes...
I went to diabetes school and it was probably the smartest thing I have done.  I would recommend it to anyone that is diabetic and their mates if they cook for them.  Insurance paid for it.  

First, find out from the doc or nutritionist, how many carbs he should be eating.  Get a carb book.  I got one from school, but they are on paperback everywhere.  It is better to eat your carbs with protein.  It slows the time stiff gets into your bloodstream.  That bag of potato chips is the worst snack you can have, both for your pocketbook and your A1C.  Learn to read boxes.  Lots of hidden sugar and salt.  I avoid lots of per packaged, but check the carbs on the side of the carton. Subtract the dietary fiber and any sugar alcohol.  What's left is your carbs.  There are really good Russell stover chocolates out there that are free of carbs.  You, however, just don't want to eat more than two at a time even though they say that three is a serving!    There are ways to trick yourself into believing you have had a good treat.  I use a little sugar free syrup in my one cup of coffee in the morning.  The second cup is black.  I am supposed to drink four, but I haven't got that far yet.  I had reduced myself to one, but other health issues suggest four is better for me.  

Some vegetables are high on carbs too.  Lettuce, celery, cucumbers, cabbage are really low.  Most of this   you probably already know from weight watchers.  

I bake myself.  Flour has a little more than 10 carbs per cup.  It's easier to figure carbs.  

The best thing to do is to go together to diabetic school.  You only have one life and taking care of your diabetes can mean you have a more comfortable life.  

Thanks for stopping by and commenting .

Please share

Jane 

Bogus post : dollar tree sold me the wrong newspaper. None of these are true!

Hands down, Fred Meyer has the best prices on Thanksgiving food around, especially of you didn't wait until the last minute to buy your staples.

Turkey is free if you spend 150.00.  It is better than the if you spend at other stores because Gred Meyer has more than food and you can also get a head start on Christmas or get the other things that you may be missing! like a roasting pan etc.  bakeware is buy one! get one 1/2.

Apples are .98
Canned veggies are 2/1.00@@
Triscuits are 3/5@@@
Truffles 2/5
Cranberries 2/4
Berries 2/5
Ice cream 2/4@@
M And ms 2/5@@$$
Coffee 5.99
Potatoes(boxed) 1.00$$
Yams 2/3@@
Pumpkin 2/4@@$$
Cranberry sauce 1.00

@@ means in ad coupon
$$ means there is a manufacturers coupon also check coupon connections.

Rite Aid



Colgate toothpaste .99 net after up reward and there is a dollar coupon .  I love FREE, it's even better if they pay you a penny to take it out of the store!
Zantac 8.99 less 5.00 coupon in the Sunday paper. ( if you don't get the Sunday paper it's a buck at the dollar store all week and you will still be momey ahead!

Be sure to check coupon commectioms.  Remember a bargain isn't a bargain if it's something you don't use.!   I only take stiff even of ot is free unless I can ise ot or know someone that can.  I don't need 24 tubes of free toothpaste, but the women's shelter or food bank can use it.  It is an easy, inexpensive way to help someone.

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Jane


Saturday, November 23, 2013

Suddenly Saturday,

My sister reminded me that Betty Crocker has a series to sign up for e mails that are for 25 days of Christmas cookies.  Christmas cookies don't get eaten on thos family, so I'm not buying into it.  Other families, I suspect would enjoy them.

No bake chocolate cookies.

1 cup chocolate chips
5 T butter
14 Large marshmallows
1 tsp vanilla
2 cups Quaker Oat meal
2/3 cup  any combination nuts, raisins, craisens, any dried fruit.

1) melt butter, chocolate and marshmallows in a pan.  When completely melted, remove from heat and add vanilla.  Stir on remaining ingredients.
2) drop by rounded tablespoons onto waxed paper.
3) refrigerate 2-3 hours

From favorite brand name recipes

My daughter makes a cranberry bar akin to the bars at Starbucks.  It's a lot of layers and time consuming, but really yummy!

We have been  eating pumpkin pie a lot.  With eggs, pumpkin and the fact that there is only one crust it is pretty healthy.

we went grocery shopping yesterday.  I'm not quote done and still have to get the things for thanksgiving a little closer to thanksgiving.  But, I saved half.  I am still under budget and I got a cart full of real food.

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane

Friday, November 22, 2013

Thanksgiving

I have been thinking about sides for Thanksgiving.  Betty Crocker sent me some really good recipes for an alternative to the green bean casserole and mashed potatoes in the crockpot.  Also corn pudding and I found some salads that sounded good until they got to the cool whip.  I don't think that whip cream would hold up for a substitute, so I think I'll pass.  Has anybody used sour cream sweetened instead?   There was also a recipe for a muffin that used the leftover cranberry sauce.  I thought that was very clever.

I can't seem to find the links, but you can google on the Betty Crocker web site.  I have some of the recipes, but can't publish them.

There is usually not a lot of bargains during the holidays.  They know you are going to buy certain things anyway, so they don't have  to mark them down .   I found the best buys at Fred Meyers a few weeks ago.  If you waited until the last minute, you are pretty much paying full price. Turkey's remain the same price. There are coupons for a total of eight dollars off a butterball, but butterballs are more expensive in the first place-  almost double the mean price of a regular turkey ( .69).

Traditionally, we always eat leftovers several days after thanksgiving.  Probably because we cooked a day and need to rest and there is food left over.  There are a lot of leftover recipes on the same Betty Crocker web sites.

Coupon matchups are making QFC a store of choice.  My next pick would be top.

Free milk when you buy four  General Mills.
Pillsbury pie dough is on their list, and there are coupons for it.
Also cereal and fiber one bars.  I can always find coupons for them.

Betty Crocker potatoes and a buck, and there are coupons for them too.  You can add leftover turkey and a salad and vegetable and have a weeknight meal.

Broccoli is .99 a pound

I guess that's all

Please share

Jane




Wednesday, November 20, 2013

The ads , coupons

ALBERTSONS

Potatoes 10/.97
Coffee 5.99@@
Butter 1,99@@
Milk 2.69

QFC

Turkey .59
Butterball 1.89
Broccoli .99
Raspberries, blackberries BOGO nets 2.00 ea
Cheese 4.99
Celery .69
Ice cream 2/5

TOP

TURKEY.
FREE WITH 150.00 purchase
.49 with 100.00
.69 with 50.00

Cranberries 2/4
Veggies 2/1 @@
Olives 1.00
Butterball 1.29
Cheese 3.99@
Butter 1.77@
Eggs .97@@

SAFEWAYS
Bitterball 1.29
Spend  150.00 free
Spend 100.00. .49
Spend 50.00 .69

Grapes 1.99
11 inch pie 5.99

5.00 Friday
Raspberries 2/5
Bc cake .99@@$$
Pumpkin 1.49@@$$
Sweet potatoes .99
Coffee 6.99

Note @@ means there is a in ad coupon.  $$ means that there is manufacturer coupons , see coupon connections website on line.

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Jane




Wicked Wednesday

We still have no ads.  This would normally be the day that I do the ads.  This month they all seem to have a thanksgiving theme and are not really conducive of stocking.  That being said.  Now is the time for you to stock pumpkin of you are a pumpkin eater.  ( no pun intended LOL).

My guess is they next month will be the same.  That's why stocking when prices are low makes sense.,  The trick is to stock in moderation, just enough to last you until the next sale. this won't happen overnight.  It will take a while.  you are building one can or jar at a time.  I am not advocating buying a years worth of food on one shopping trip unless of course, you live where you get to the store once a year!    This isn't about hoarding. Mints about keeping enough of an item you use on a weekly basis to last you until it goes on sale at the RBP again.

I am still getting some things at times at the RBP or lower lately like refried beans, pasta sauce, and vegetables.

Last night was taco Tuesday.  I dissected one as covertly as I could.  There was one T of taco meat, at least a cup of lettuce, and a tablespoon maybe of grated cheese on three tacos with a garnish of about three tomato cubes.  In their defense, they were all you can eat for five bucks.  I think the guys use ot for a contest, how many can you eat!   They certainly don't have to worry about too much fat or cholesterol!  


 We had chicken, potatoes, and mixed vegetables one night last week and chicken,stuffing,and green beans another night.  Both what I would consider a decent dinner that was balanced.  My goal is to feed a family decent, well balanced meals, on a very thrifty budget.

Batch cooking meat is beneficial because it saves time, makes meal time easy when you need it to be, and allows you to portion control and not waste food.  Whether you have a bog family or are cooking for one or two you can break down bulk priced food into meal sized portions.

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Jane

Ads later when I get them.














Tuesday, November 19, 2013

MIA

I know, I have been MIA for a couple of days.  I finally got some medical attention for my headaches, bit now have another "headache. ". Seems planned parenthood, yet again, put the wrong fax number on their medical release forms.  I can't tell you how happy I was, even with my happy pills, to get seven phone calls with the obligatory s q u e e ch between five and six o'clock this  morning.
Seems none knows how to make them go away or nobody cares.  How many ways can you spell frustration.

I digress

On to food!  Glorious Food!  

Fred Meyer had pumpkin for a buck.  I have coupons for Libby.  I bought just enough to see of ot os any good.  I don't usually buy off brands of pumpkin.  We also got canned veggies that were Kroger.  They tasted fine.  They were fifty cents...more than RBP.  Cranberry sauce was also on sale as well as blackberries2/5.  Granddaughter loves blackberries--go figure.

Betty Crocker has a couple of  emails out for thanksgiving.  Seems you can put pumpkin in just about everything.  I am not so sure about some of them.  I'll try to figure a link.

There is a coupon out there for three dollars off of butterball turkey, and a coupon in the Sunday paper for another five dollars off coupons, like a rebate.  That's 8 dollars off.  You have to buy any combo of fair sides, the potatoes and the crescent dinner rolls both have coupons to match up.  My daughter says that target has butterballs for a buck a pound.  I haven't seen them advertised this week.

Turkey's are free at ALBERTSONS and Fred Meyer with minimum purchases.  Fred Meyers is a hefty amount, but it covers most everything in the store from the paint for the deck to dishes for the thanksgiving table or the kids Christmas toys.  ALBERTSONS is more generous.

My  mother always cooked the same things for thanksgiving dinner.  It is interesting that none of these recipes are liked by my husbands family, so traditions are replaced.  Such is life.

We had
Turkey
Dressing with a lot of sage and celery and onion.
Mashed potatoes, gravy
Green beans with bacon
Creamed onions
Sweet potatoes, mashed, formed into a ball with a marshmallow and dipped in corn flakes and baked off to melt the marshmallows.
lime jello salad with green pepper, cucumbers and pineapple.

Of course, pumpkin Pie

YUM.   memories

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane





Monday, November 18, 2013

Repost: retailers secrets


As I have said before, the retailers have spent considerable money to research our habits and find ways to get us to spend more money.

Advertising multiples, when you can only by one item is one trick they use. Because something is 3/1.00 doesn't mean that you have to buy three.


The longer you spend in a store, the more money you will spend. That's why some retailers change things aroumd frequently. Costco is notorious for it. If you have the mind set that you are on the clock and want to get the most bang for your buck, you'll spend less time. It's a game. I want to save as much as I can in the least amount of time.

Impulse buying is the retailers profit. They figure that 70 percent of what we buy is impulse. Often it is the most expensive things in the store that. you don't really need. We want the retailers to prosper but they can do it on someone else's dime who can afford it more.


Create your own path through the store, if you don't need anything in an isle, don't go there. The true necessities are on the outside perimeter of the store.


Sometimes, what is truly on sale isn't the featured items up front.


Exercise the hands off rule. Studies say that if you touch it, you are most likely going to buy it.


It's a well known trick that if prices have to increase, the manufacturers will reduce the size of the package instead of outwardly increasing the price.


Know your prices, the bulk isle isn t always the cheapest price.


Keep in mind that foods are sold other places other than grocery stores. Many time you can find overstocks at the dollar store, big lots, Bartells and almost anywhere. Keep your eye open, and know your prices.


Pick your grocery store based on the prices, not how friendly the clerks are or how fancy the store is, or how uncrowded it is. think about it, there is a reason why the store is crowded. Either they have just forecasted that dreaded S word, or it's because they have the best prices. You go to the grocery store to purchase your food.


Stores charge manufacturers slotting fees. Basically they charge rent for the eye level shelves. You can just bet they are going to pass on the cost. Look UP and DOWN for the best buys.


Thanks for stopping by


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Jane




















Sunday, November 17, 2013

Fred Meyer ads and coupons.

It's Simday.  Thos week quote a few of the grocery stores have ads on the Sunday paper.

One thing to note.  there are coupons out there, (One is on savings Star) for three dollars off when you buy some sodes.  There are also coupons for some sodes.  In the savings insert this week, there os a mail in rebate for five dollar off coupons for butterball products., T hats eight dollars off your Turkey of you can make all that happen.  I haven't researched the particulars.  I was hoping it would be on couponnconnections.  There is also a coupon for Betty Crocker potatoes, fifty cents on two.  They are at the dollar store.   Nets  .75 each.

Rite Aid has Colgate toothpaste on an up reward, nets .99 unless there is a coupon out there.  My coupon had expired.

Fred Meyers

Turkey

Free  when you spend 150.00
.49 when you spend 100.00
.69 when you spend 50.00
Note that Fred Meyers sells lots of stuff.  There are some exclusions, mostly the normal stuff ( booze etc plus jewelry and fuel.

Apples .98
Butter 1.79@@
Canned veggies 2/1@@
Pumpkin pie 3.99
Butterball turkey 2.19
Cranberry sauce 2.00
Pills bury crescent rolls 1.88$$
Pie crust 2/5$$
Pumpkin 2/4$$@@
Cranberries 2/4
Raspberries, blackberries 2/5
Ice cream 2/4@@

That's about all.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane




Saturday, November 16, 2013

Suddenly Saturday: what to do with what you got!

We went shopping Yesterday.  It was a short trip.  I went to the doctor, but the computer messed up my prescription , so I haven't had any relief yet. going to the physical therapist Monday.

 I did no matchups and got what we were out of fresh food wise and 2 chickens because they were .79 a pound.  When stores are gearing up for a holiday, there are not a lot of real food sales.

I don't usually bake a lot for the holidays.  Everyone has made it perfectly clear that they don't want any part of rich deserts.  I don't want food to go to waste.  I do make a "treat " for thanksgiving when I can.

Pilgrim Hats

Chocolate thin wafer cookies
Regular sized Reese's peanut butter cups
Frosting in a bag or put into a zip lock bag with the tip cut off.
Place wafer on a plate.  Place a small dollup of frosting to glue the upside down Reese's to the wafer.
Make a buckle in the center of the side of the hat.  Perpendicular to the plate.

They are really cute.  I found chocolate wafers at SAFEWAYS In the cookie isle.

I digress

What to do with what you have.
I would, obviously pick chicken for my Stock meat for the week.
Don't forget your matrix.   it makes it pretty easy to do meal plans.

Our matrix is

2 beef
2 chicken or pork
2'vegetarian
1 fish or shellfish

Fruit seems to be relatively inexpensive.  Especially apples, pears, and oranges.
Lettuce seems to have taken a hike, maybe fruit salads and fruit and cottage cheese is in order.
Making a fruit and cottage cheese salad is a good boost to protein if your main dish is falling short.
Dairy seems to still be cheapest at Costco.  Milk, however is a buck at Freddie's often and butter is 3/5.

Again, I can't stress enough that knowing your prices is your best defense against paying too much.m
Jimmy Dean  sausage is 3.99 at TOP for a pound.  It is 2.30 a pound at Costco .  Also, don't make your meal plans etched in concrete before you go to the store,  at SAFEWAYS this week, for instance, the pumpkin pies were boxed too soon and were wet.  The grapes were ugly.  You just can't predict what you are going  to find or what the quality is going to be.  no one grocery store is perfect, and no one grocery store has all the best prices.  Shopping more than one store hedges you for the best prices  and chance at the best produce.

On another note, food stamps have been cut 5 percent.  Add that to the thirty percent increase on meat prices on average, that's a big dent on an already short budget.  I really would like to reach more people that need to cut their food bill and still eat well.  I think itmos the right person at the right time kinda thing.

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane



Friday, November 15, 2013

Let's try apple cake again.

The last recipe I tried was a little crumbly and needed a little whip cream or ice cream on it.
It came out more like a bar than a cake.

I am sure that the original recipe came from the mid west.

New Apple cake

2 c sugar
2 cups flour
1 T cinnamon
1 tsp salt

2 eggs
1 c oil
1 T vanilla

6-8 apples ( 3-4 cups ) chopped apples
Nuts of desired

Mix wet ingredients, beating eggs.
Mix dry ingredients

Mix dry and wet ingredients together.

Add apples.  Mixture will be stiff.

Bake at 350 degrees for 50-60 minutes.

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane




Thursday, November 14, 2013

It's Thursday, the ads

Here are the ads finally.

SAFEWAYS

Cheese 2 lbs/5.99
Chicken .79, limit 4$&@&$$$$$
Pumpkin pie 5.99
Oranges .99
Butterball turkey breast 12.99
Pears.99

Pudding ring 2.49
Grapes 3/5


TOP

Top round roast 2.97
Bottom round  2.97
Pork ribs, chops 1.96
Apples .69
Oranges .77

Baking buy 4 save 2

Cake mix .99$$
Flour 1.99
Pasta 48 ounces 2/4@@

QFC

Chicken .99
Tillamook yogurt 10/4
18 count eggs 1.99
Pears .99


Buy 10. Save 5
Milk 1.29
Butter 1.99
Cream of mushroom, green beans .69$$
Ice cream 2.79

ALBERTSOMS

Spiral ham 1.98
BOGO with 35.00 extra purchase.  Turkey.  I'm confused as to what that means,

Tomatoes 1.00
Ice cream 2.48
Milk 2.19@@
Cream cheese .88@@



Tillamook yogurt 3/1@@$$
Apples 1.00
Carrots 2/1.00
Pears 1.00

That's about all.
Remember to cross off anything that is higher priced. Check coupon connections for coupons. $$$
@@@means an in ad coupon.

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Jane



Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Wicked Wednesday/ notes and recipe

I yet again saw another article about What not to eat.  this time I think they were a bit more restrictive.  What was left would take a entire months worth of food budget to eat a week.  If everyone got on that band wagon, there wouldn't be enough food for the nation to eat.

Again, the FDA and the USDA have very well qualified scientists that evaluate our food supply.  America  has some of the most rigid standards for our food in the world.  Both foreign and domestic food has to meet the same standards.  My take is that if all this stuff is so bad for us, the federal government would be finding ways to change our standards.

I ran a medical facility for mental patients many years ago.  We had a patient that was sure that Martians had got a hold of our food supply and tainted everything but the milk and sweet potatoes..

Practically speaking, buying Puritan food is not going to work in most households in America.  no one has convinced the USDA and the FDA that we need to eat Puritan food yet, and it is not produced in mass quantities yet.  I am not sure that organic is the best alternative anyway.  I also saw an article on the Internet that showed organic baby food in pouches with larvae in it.

There are ways to eat healthy without spending all your resources on food alone.  That just wouldn't be prudent.

  • Eat a variety of foods in moderation.
  • Wash veggies and peel them when it makes sense.  
  • Defat your meat and eat a reasonable amount.  (3-4 ounce serving. ) 
  • Make scratch food and avoid using a lot of foods that are processed with added salt, sugar, and preservatives.  
  • Limit the amount of sweets you eat.  When you have sweets, try to have ones that have protein in them too.  
  • Buy fruits with antioxidants often.  Blueberries are inexpensive a lot of the year, when they aren't buy frozen.  Blueberry pancakes, etc., 
  • Grow what you can.  Remember organic veggies can still have five percent pesticides in them. 
That's my best laypersons approach to healthy eating on a limited budget.  

How do you make that soup!  
Dump in a crockpot 
2 cans diced tomatoes ( hunts peels theirs with steam, not chemicals.  Some more expensive brands do it with chemicals) 
2 cans beans ( any kind, but different.) I used kidney and black, drained and rinsed.  ( reduce sodium) 
1 quart stock ( chicken, vegetable,or  beef) 
2 cups diced veggies, sautéed till crisp tender.  
   I use carrot, celery, red pepper.you can add onion, my hubby doesn't like onion.
1 T Italian seasoning
2 tsp parsley
2 tsp onion powder if you don't add onion.

Stir and cook on low anywhere between 6-12 hours.  I usually make it 8 depending when I leave the house.  

That's about it.  
Thanks for stopping by
Jane



Tuesday, November 12, 2013

It's Tuesday

It's Tuesday.  I can just about bet that the ads are going to be late today.  Our mail system leaves a lot to be desired here.
FYI

WIC is a women and children assistance program for nutrition for mothers and small children.  ( under 5) It offers breast feeding instruction and nutrition tips too.  There are income guidelines,  an unborn child is counted as a family member.

I started this blog to try to help people on SNAP feed their families good food on a not so good budget.  Best laid plans, it seems I am reaching a lot of other folks.  That's fine, my mission is to help people.  Whether  it is to get out of the kitchen faster, cook more efficiently, or try a new recipe, I hope I am helping people. That being said, I still would like to find a way to reach the people that are running out of money before they run out of month.

Eggs , even at the highest prices, are still a protein that can give you a lot of bang for your buck.  breakfast for dinner works well to stretch the bucks.  Quiche, waffles or pancakes and sausage or bacon.  Remember, you don't have to have a lot of meat if you are having another source of protein too.  In fact, of you are having something like a vegetarian soup with beans,  havin creme brûlée or an egg rich pudding, rich cheesy bread can fill out the meal.  Your main source of orotein doesn't necessarily have to come from the main course.  It doesn't matter how you get the protein into you, just that it gets into you.

Fun desert

Layer
Slice of pound cake that has been toasted . ( butter both sodes and toast on frying pan like a toasted

cheese sandwich)
Plain yogurt
1/2 of an apricot.

Looks like sunny side up egg on toast!  

Pudding from scratch ( not a whole lot more work than cooked kind out of a box)
I like that it takes things I usually have around the kitchen.

3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup flour
1/4 tsp salt
3 cups milk
3 eggs
1.5 tsp vanilla extract

1) in saucepan mix together dry ingredients.
2) whisk in milk,mstirring until thickened
3) in small bowl.slightly beat eggs. , add a little of the puddong mixture to them and continue beating.  Add the egg mixture to the pudding mixture and wisk together.  ( this is called tempering)
4) bring to a low boil and cook 2 minutes.
5) remove from hear.  Stir in vanilla.
6) cool 15 minutes,stirring  occasionally.
7) pour into serving dishes.  Cover with plastic wrap  to prevent a skim on top.

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Jane














Sunday, November 10, 2013

Jane vs the Extremmies

I thought I would talk about some things that I haven't talked about lately and clear up some differences  what you see on videos and real life.  ( In Washington anyway) .  Most of the techniques I talk about will work no matter where you live.

The basics of reading an ad.
Three for xxx dollars doesn't mean you have to buy three to get the price.  Buy 10. Save xx., however, means you have to buy a quantity of ten to get the discount.  Usually there is a variety of foods on their list.  Usually I can match them with a coupon to sweeten the deal.  So,eti,es, the things are what I wouldn't buy in the first  place.  I pass on those.

If there is an in ad coupon ( I usually tag those with a @@) you have to have the ad to get the deal.  If you buy multiples to the limit imposed on the coupon, you still only need 1 coupon.  You can also match these coupons with a manufacturers coupon.

Of you see BOGO. You can use a manufacturers coupon for the ONE that you are buying.

Some stores limit the number of a single item that you can use coupons for.  Dollar tree will only take two coupons for the same thing in one transaction.  QFC let me use 4 chili coupons and two cake mix coupons.

It's a joke in the coupon world that young male checkers are more even tempered about coupons.  You can be your own judge on that.

Be sure to check sizes of packages, the fine print, and the expiration date.

Just because a coupon comes out in a paper, doesn't mean that that week is the best week to use the coupon.  Sometimes, later is better.  Checking a coupon matchup site is a good thing.

I don't try to use zillions of coupons at the same time.  It's just a courtesy to the clerk.

Apparently, there is no laws about couponing in any particular state.  I have, however, never seen double coupons in this state in the fifty years I have been buying groceries.  That being said, I have seen ALBERTSONS publish a few double coupons in the Sunday paper once.

I, also have not seen where you get a money maker on purchases.  SAFEWAYS has a coupon policy that states if you have a dollar coupon, and a .99 price on an item, you can't use the coupon.  Rite aid is the only place you can make money.  You can use a coupon and get a reward to use another day.

I cannot, nor do I want to coupon for 40-60 hours a week and buy things that I don't want or use to get a bottom line of a penny.  It doesn't make logical sense to me.  And, most of the deals they use on TV are not real.

With that being said, it is still believable to save money using coupons.  The balance of taking a small amount of time is worth the savings.

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Jane






Saturday, November 9, 2013

Thoughts and Sundays ads early.

My husband went to the dollar tree this am and got the newspaper.  He tried to use the hefty coupon, but they did not have the small bags.

Fred Meyers ads were not as fruitful as they have been in the past few weeks.
Oranges are the same .68 that they are at QFC
Milk is a buck, along with chocolate milk and of. @@
Pot roast is 2.97
Pasta sauce is .69@@ ( .50 at top) no coupon
Peanut butter 3/5
Cucumbers .68
Pears 1.00
Pumpkin 2/3$$
Butter 2.00


The smart source has some good coupons.
Chocolate right off the bat!  
Bc baking mixes pair up with the mega at QFC.
A buck on toothpaste

Be sure to check your coupon match ups for the best deals.

Now, I received a comment on yesterday's blog.  I love comments and I love learning something I didn't know.  Sue alerted me to the fact that some states have laws that prohibit stores selling items for less than their cost.  I suspect that the term loss leader can still apply to those items,because the actual cost of a product is comprised of the actual product and the overhead applied to that product.  I was an accountant for many years and my husband was a manufacturing engineer for part of his career.

She also talked about walmarts price matching policy.  It would be simpler to go to Walmart after planning your trip and matching prices if you are in a state that has convenient walmarts.  Ours is not so convenient,.  I, personally have a problem with Walmart because they made a mistake and charged me 8.00 for something I didn't get.  That's a whole hours pay for me, and I don't take too kindly giving money away unless I decide I want to.  I rarely go because it is far away and they left a bad taste in my mouth.

While double coupons are prevalent some places, I have not seen any on Washington except the few limited days that ALBERTSONS offers the coupons in the paper.  That particular time. I had a hard time finding some good matchups.  I know they were prevalent in California when I was theor visiting relatives.

Rite -Aid didn't have a lot this week again,  I am out of roll over dollars.  I still need to check the dollar coupon for toothpaste and see if it works somewhere.  .  Have to support the toothpaste fairy! lol

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Jane



Saturday

I went to the hair cutting place today.  It had been four months...about time!  I discovered that my husband can get a haircut Monday for free.  That's two haircuts for 14.00.  ...not too bad!   I then went  to the GW and found to princess books and a lets go potty book for grandbaby.  Three books that total 24.00 , 2.60 including our almost ten percent tax!  

I went to QFC   ,Mega  deals. With coupons I saved just about 1/2.  Twenty four bucks.  On to Top where their mega deals netted pasta sauce for .50 and refried beans for .50.  Along with fruit and veggies.  Another almost fifty percent savings.  You can eat spaghetti and red sauce for a buck for four people, or you can pay full price and pay 5.00.  That's one meal, or five.  Of you have a very tight budget, five is a lot better than one.  Chili was a buck, , and I had. .55 coupons.  And they had vegetarian and turkey.

We have a variety of foods in the pantry, freezer, and fridge and we are well under budget.
I got a lot accomplished with little gas and time.

Again, my harping point.  Know your prices.  If you can't remember, write them done in a little book, or on a 3X5 index card.  It will serve you well.

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Jane

Friday, November 8, 2013

Finally Friday

It's finally Friday .

I haven't found chicken for under 1.29 for several weeks now.  Sausage is up from 2.00 to 2.30 and beef, well, it's about double.  I hear that the average SNAP is being cut 35.00.  It's not a good combination.  Our social security raise is only 1.5 percent and all the utilities and food are going up.  Besides taxes, that's our largest expenses.

This isn't  about doomsday.   It's about the fact that I know thrifty shopping is needed more than it was before and I haven't found an avenue to reach more people.  Not that I could have this last week.LOL. That's why stocking helps.  I'm not stuck buying chicken at a thirty percent increase yet.  Maybe I'll find a sale yet.  There is always hope.  There are still a lot of recipes put there for tasty dinners.  I haven't found a good pasta sale lately either.  I have a lot I got for .50.

Chicken pot pie
Chicken enchilada soup
Pesto chicken with bow ties.
White chilli
Buffalo,chicken pizza

My process for making meal plans begins with looking over the fridge and making a note of what needs to be eaten.  I already know what is on the pantry because I keep the same things on a regular basis.  This limits the things I HAVE to remember at the grocery store, which is a good thing when you are over the hill.  LOL
Now, I need to find the cheapest meat that my family will eat, and what I might need to stock.  There are some things that we eat a regular basis.

Safeway has chicken leg quarters 1.29. Country style spareribs  are 1.99.  Butterball turkey is a 1.29 but you have to spend $50 at Safeway to get it.  There is also a three dollar coupon out there.  They want you to buy some other things, but that doesn't exclude you from using your best coupons to get deals on them as well.  I haven't seen a matchup or studied it myself yet to see if it is a good deal.  Of someone sees something before I do, please share.  Skippy peanut butter is 1.99@.betty Crocker cake mix is .99@&$.

Top has loin chops for 1.69.  This is hard because it is hard to control portions and can bounce up the price of meat per serving.  Chicken whole is 1.39 a pound.  Refried beans and hunts pasta sauce are a RBP.  Time to stock.

QFC has pork shoulder roast for 1.79.  Oranges are .68.  Milk is 1.29 on( b10S 5) .  Along with 1.99 butter and 1.79 triskit.  Chili is .99$$, 2#potatoes are 2.49 frozen.  Cake mix .99$$

If I had to pick a batch meat, I would pick the pork shoulder or buy a .69 turkey if I had 50.00 worth of stuff from SAFEWAYS.

I have a coupon for free frozen veggies from QFC.  Otherwise, they are cheapest at the dollar store.  There is a coupon in the insert that came with out RP thos week for hefty slider bags, 1.00 off two.  The dollar store has them and the sandwich bags are a buck, so one is free.  I like free.  LOl. The RP also has a buck off m&m s.  What's not to like about that.

I am bribing my granddaughter to use the potty chair.  My husbands mother used to call peeing, tinkle.  It sounds so much more ladylike.  I told my granddaughter of she tinkled on the potty chair, I would give her an M&M.  She promptly, went in to the bathroom, went tickle, tickle with her fingers on the top of the potty and came to redeem her prize!   Nice try!   LOL

I digress.

Being sick all week, my husband cooked.  His cooking talents are limited to certain things.  Needless to say, we operated off my emergency stash of premades.  I guess that's what premades on stellar sales are for.  I hope weeks like last week are few and far between.  My poor husband had to work my shifts, and keep the house running, somewhat!  

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Jane














Thursday, November 7, 2013

What's really a bargain?..

I am yet again still in bed.  Watching too many couponing / grocery hauls. Finally a light bulb went off in my head.  I wonder if the reason some states have higher grocery prices is because they are double coupon states.  The old mark it up to mark it down routine.  Also, I wonder of the lack of competition in the marketplace has something to do with it.  When you have four chains competing for your business, the prices have to be better than if there is one grocery store in town.

I watched a nice lady go through all the steps of couponing this  morning.  She did a really good job.  I, personally would not cut all the coupons  out of the inserts.  The coupon matchup sites usually do a good job of telling you where to find a coupon.  I just binder clip them by month.  She showed a haul from three stores that netted her a 53 percent profit.  I think the percentage of profit is not as important as the percentage off when you are buying things that you really,need.  If you skip the garbage at any price, you will save more money.  She had a lot of juice drinks, expensive veggies, Greek yogurt at a buck a carton.  When it got down to the real food groups, there wasn't a lot there.

I could have cut that over  a hundred dollar net bill probably to half without sacrificing any nutrition.

Part of groceries on the cheap is finding the lowest price, and matching a coupon if possible.  The other part so not buying a bunch of junk food and premades.  Junk food can jack your food bill up fast.  It's not even good for you.

On another note, pasta sauce and refried beans, two things on my basic stocking list are .50 at TOP Foods  this week.  When you can get pasta for as low as .38, that makes for a really cheap meal.
A really cheap meal can mean that you can have a piece of real steak now and then.  LOL

Checking the USDA stats a couple of times a year gives you a baseline to a grocery budget.  The more you can save the closer you are to beat the stats.  Make it a game.  It's a game you can always win






Wednesday, November 6, 2013

The ads

QFC

Oranges .68

Buy 10
Milk 1.29
Butter 1.99
Veggies, cr soups .69 $$$
Digiorno pizza 4.49
HORMEL chili .99$$$
Frozen potatoes 2.49
Bc cake mix .99$$$
BREYERS 2.79


TOP

chuck roast 2.99
Apples 5/4.00
Buy 5, save 2
Pasta sauce .50
Snack lack .75
Ketchup .50
Refried beans .50

ALBERTSONS

Salad BOGO
Coffee 5.99@
Eggs 4/5 @@
Bread.99@@

Cake mix BOGO

SAFEWAYS

Chuck roast 2.49
Roast 2.99
Apples .99

Spend 50.00, turkey .69
Spend 50.00, butterball 1.29$$
Pears .99

 5.00 Friday
Oranges
Pizza
Shrimp
Cake
Coffee 5.00

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Jane






Wednesday, no ads yet.

I do wish my mail-person would get his act together.  Needless to say, I don't have the ads and can only gleen some from the Internet.  Coupon connections have some, but their math with the coupons deducted doesn't make sense  to me.

There is cream of mushroom soup with on ad coupon at FM for .50.  There so also a coupon for 1.00 off 5.  That makes five at .30 each.  It hasn't been .30 for years and years!   I am sure that they know that thanksgiving is coming and they figure that they will make up their profit with the green beans and fried onion rings.  I don't particularly like green bean Casserole, so they missed the boat with me!

We do like tuna noodle on occasion.   I buy the best tuna I can buy.  Also hot dogs.  If we are going to eat cheap food it's going to be good cheap food.  LOL. Hot dogs can have yucky fillers in them and I bought tuna one time that the neigh ours cat wouldn't even eat!   It is still within a budget to get the good stuff.  I buy real butter.  The nutritional it's told me that I was better off with a skim of butter than a regular amount of the alternative.  The more dense the fat, the worse off you are.  No one needs half a stick on their toast on the morning!

One time when I was in the hospital, my husband called me.  " how do you make tuna noodle casserole ?"  I told him, cook the noodles, drain the noodles, add cream of mushroom soup and two cans runs and something green, like peas.  he added chopped pickle!   LOL

I have been surfing the Internet a lot the last four days being stuck in bed.  Re reading couponing and meal planning sites.  I am still taking the information with a grain of salt.  Most of the tactics, ate not doable on Washington state.  We don't have double coupons with the exception of ALBERTSONS I found once!  They only covered one item at a time.  That particular week, the good buys were not so good.  LOL.  It was hard to make a good deal.  We, also can't make money with coupons.  You can't get something marked down to .99 and use a  1.00 coupon.  The only place I can make money buying something is at Rite Aid.  That is because you buy something, use a coupon and pay the balance.  Then , you essentially get store credit to use the next week.  I rolled my up rewards for a good three months.  Two weeks ago I had rewards, I used them last week and didn't get any rewards.  I didn't go this week.  There was nothing that was a good buy that I purchase.

A lot of coupons are for things that I just don't buy.  The simpler you live, the less you are going to spend.  We always had pure Castile shampoo that my mom bought by the gallon cheap!  Period.
Conditioner and such was not happening.  We don't buy a lot of ready made stuff. That's what most of the coupons are for.  I usually have coffee, tea, crystal light in the summer time.  I don't buy pop or other fruit drinks.  The nutritionalist told me that we were better off eating the fruit.  There are a few things that I just don't have patience to make from scratch, like tortillas and refried beans, and I can usually get them on sale with a coupon.  Some things I can get cheaper with a coupon than making them from scratch.  We still like some processed meats (pepperoni), but I try to keep them to once a week or two.  I have been getting pepperoni (3.50) for .50 with a coupon at the Dollar Tree.

I have received comments from people from different parts of the country about higher prices on some things than my RBP.  I get that there are fluctuations in prices.  I can only relate to the prices here.  The basics are still stable.  You find YOUR rock bottom price.  I also suspect that there are places that have a limited amount of grocery stores.  We are lucky to have four chain stores within a five mike radius, either south or north and some are clustered together along with dollar stores.  If you don't, and there is a town a little further away, consider going once a month for the bulk items.  Consider going with a friend or family member to split gas or take turns.  Have the ads mailed to you or get them on line and pick your week.  A lot of times the first of the month is not the best time.  I have found  that holiday time is not the best time to buy staple items either.  I also see that where our dairy may be cheaper, someone else's meat is cheaper.  Ditto veggies.  SNAP is adjusted for the cost of living where you are.

When I didn't work, I scratch cooked more and made the kids and my clothes in my spare time, as much spare time as one can have with a house and two kids under the age of three and a teenager!  LOL. No one should ever have to raise tw kids under the age of three and a teenager at the same time!  LOL what an experience!  

I found recipes that were quick and simple.  I found the apple cake, I used to make a carrot bread that was done on the blender.  I still haven't found it yet.  It was on the blender manual,  I'll bet I tossed it when the blender gave up too.

I guess that's all.

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Jane








Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Terrific Tuesday 11/5/13, repost

Repost worth reading!  I've been on bed for three days, something has to give soon! LOL

I watched a u tube seminar last night. It was on couponing and meal plans.  It could have been a boring , but  her sense of humor was delightful.  One thing resonated with me.  She was describing the difference between stockpiling and hoarding.  When you buy low and buy enough to last you until the next sale, you are stockpiling.  When you buy to be buying and buy things you don't use and at a quantity you can't use in your lifetime, that's hoarding.  

Last  night we had Chicken Alfredo and mixed vegetables.  It took me about 15 minutes , non passive time.  I put the pasta in the microwave and went out and talked to the neighbor..  I like quick, tasty meals, especially after I worked the second shift.  Cooking meat ahead makes dinner time cooking a lot less hectic.  Cooking is a lot less stressful  if there are  no time constraints on you.  
Pasta 49
Sauce .50
Chicken 1.50
Mixed veggies .75
Milk .12
Cheese.50
Bread .72
Total. 4.58

The basis for 1/2 price groceries is five dollar  dinners. Breakfast and lunch will take care of themselves as long as you keep to scratch cooking and 1/2 price shopping.  breakfast can be 
Banana  bread or muffins, or oatmeal with raisins or craisens, or yogurt and toast, an egg muffin made with biscuits.  Lunch is leftovers, a sandwich...1/2 price cold cuts, or tuna, or egg salad or a salad from the night before with hard boiled eggs.  I like cheese, whole wheat crackers and an apple . 
Basically, you
  • Buy in season.  It tastes better, and it is cheaper.  
  • Buy what is TRULY on sale, Not everything on the grocery ad is really on sale.  
  • Know your prices, what is rock bottom.  Track your main grocery items. 
  • Strive for 1/2 price there is a lot of difference between 2.20 and .38 for pasta.  The same brand. Pasta has a 8 YEAR shelf life.  
  • Stack coupons when it makes sense.  I won't spend a lot of time couponing.  A few minutes a week can make a difference. Any more than that and you aren't getting paid enough.   If I spend ten minutes and save 6 dollars, I am making 36.00 an hour.  Since we don't buy a lot of ready mades and rarely is there a coupon for meat and veggies, any more time than that would be counterproductive.  
  • Sometimes, bread is cheaper at the grocery store, but most of the time it is cheaper at the bakery outlet, especially the specialty items.  I don't have time to make bread.  It would be cheaper.  When I made sour dough bread, it didn't get eaten fast enough, so I quit.  It's not a savings if it goes on the garbage!
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PLEASE SHARE WITH A FRIEND. If they share and they share......
Maybe I can help more people.  

Jane