Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Wednesday, the basics bullets

Here are odds and ends of the basics


  • No one store is the best store.  There are a few that are noted for certain items for being the lowest price  or the largest selection. 
  • Bananas are cheapest at Costco.  They have a stable price.  We also get paper products and bisquick there.  
  • Grocery outlet has a huge selection of cheese and sometimes  it is cheaper.  They also have inexpensive coffee 
  • The bread outlet has bread for 1.59 a loaf for the good fiber loaves.  
  • Safeways is usually good for their five dollar Fridays and they have inexpensive hard rolls.  
  • Costco wholesale has coffee syrup, grated cheese, and large supplies of cornstRxh and such things.  
  • SAFEWAYS and QFC have chicken on sale most often.  
  • Fred Meyers has milk and sour cream on sale often. Otherwise, Costco is a better price.  
  • I can almost always find coupons to match up with Yoplait yogurt someplace.  

Don't look past Big Lots  or grocery outlet for bargains.  Always check pull dates anywhere you go.  
Ditto the dollar store. I get almost free or free at the dollar store matching coupons.  I collect up toothpaste for the women's shelter when I can get it free or almost free.  I got two today for .25 each with coupons.  Often you can find soap and deodorant too for free.  
Big lots has a twenty percent off everything in the store days sometimes.  They do not take snap.


  • Weigh bags of produce.  They have to put the minimum amount of product in a bag, but all carrots are not created equal. So,e,bags are as much as 25 percent heavy. 
  •  Check bags before you buy them.  If one thing is bad, you might not be getting a bargain. 
  • Read th fine print on coupons to be sure you are aware of the real deal.  
  • Watch pull dates.  Rotate stock.  
  • Stock thongs you use on a regular basis , you can make a meal from amd your family will eat.  
  • Look everywhere you are for new recipes.  Backs of packages, the Internet, magazines, almost everywhere you look these days there os a new recipe. Shake things up, dinner doesn't have to be boring.  
  • Watch for after holiday sales.  Often you can get perfectly good food for a lot less just because it has holiday associated with it.  Like my daughter so aptly put it.  Your stomachs does not know there are Christmas trees on your cookies. I just got the pumpkin bread that I paid eight dollars for at Costco for four dollars.  It still makes a good breakfast bread. 

That's all for today.  

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Thanks for stopping by

Jane 




Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Wicked Wednesday -- the ads

I actually got the ads on time.,,

QFC

Strawberries 2/5
Pears .99
Oranges .99
Yellow squash .99
Barilla pasta  1.00

SAFEWAYS

Sirloin tip roast 2.99
Pork loin bone in 1.49
Oranges .99
Apples .99
Eggs 1.49@@

5 dollar Friday
Strawberries  2/5
Cheese pizza take n bake
BREYERS 2/5
Fresh express salad 4/5$$

ALBERTSONS

Tillamook yogurt .38@
Milk 2.29@
Brandon cheese  4,99@
Salad kits 2/5$$
Clams 3/5

TOP
Mandarins 3/3.79@@
Coffee 4.99@@
Milk 2.99@
It's a slow day at the grocers.  Maybe a trip to Winco or a week to skip shopping altogether.

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Jane

Rite-aid saga

I thought for fun I would keep track of my Rite aid buys.  Last year I kept my Rote Aid up rewards aka Rite - aid bucks  going for several months.

This year I

Bought 17 cans of HORMEL chili and used 4-.55 coupons for a net of 14.80 and got 5 Rite Aid bucks.

Took the five rite aid bucks and added three bucks and got
2 energy saver light bulbs and a 24 pack of stay free pads and got
8 right aid bucks.

Took the eight rite aid bucks and bought 7 cans of Campbell's soup with coupons , and 16.00 worth of makeup for a total of 22.20 less eight rite aid dollars is 14.20 and got 10  Rite Aid bucks.

Nets total outlay of 19.00 net.

17 cans of chili at 1.59
2 energy light bulbs at 7.00 each
1 pkg stay free maxis 4.00
7 cans Campbell's soup at 1.29
1 lipstick and eyeliner at 16.00 total.

I took ten rite aid dollars and ........to be continued.

Terrific Tuesday: shopping

The obvious next step on our groceries on the cheap journey is shopping.  We have already talked about choosing your stores based in the ads and what staples you need to fill in and what meat is on a super sale that week.  We talked about getting on the store with your coupon book, your list of specials and the ads.  Get in and get out.  The longer you stay on a store, the longer they have to tempt you with their impulse buy strategies and the more you will spend.

If you spend less for real food all month, you won't have to count your pennies at the end of the month, you should have food leftover in the pantry.  This is a whole lot less stressful and you are covered if it snows or you are sick and don't feel like going to the store.

On to stores.  We go to 2 chain stores a week.  If they are close together I may go to them one after the other.  I keep a cooler in my car to store perishables.  If they aren't close I cluster them with other errands.  I usually hit  Rite- Aid after the Sunday ads come out.   We go to the warehouse store on a need to basis-- usually for the necessary paper product.  The alternative stores are hit when we are in the area for other reasons.  About once every eight weeks, we go to the bakery outlet and I stock bread.  The other alternative if you don't have freezer space is to make your own bread.  There are simple cheap sources out there.

It seems like a lot of shopping, but it really isn't.  I spend little time on the stores.  I know where everything is and I get what I came for and get out.

The stores spend a lot of time and money researching our shopping habits to get us to spend more.  Seventy  percent of their sales are from impulse buys.  Beat them at their own game!
 Keep your eyes open.  I systematically go through the store, skipping the isles that are of no interest to me.  I always hit the meat and dairy department.  A few weeks ago, I found chicken for .50 a pound.  It wasn't advertised.  I took it home and my husband cooked it the next day.  ( I would have, but I am nursing a cracked elbow.   ).

Take your monthly budget, divide it by 4.2 and get your weekly budget.  Try to stay at or under it.
Some weeks there will be none of your target items on sale, then I generally buy only my dairy and produce and my meat or protein item.  That week I will spend less so that the next week I can spend more.

Don't buy cold cereal.  It's one of the most expensive items in the supermarket.  I only buy it as a treat when I can get it for free or nearly free.  Oatmeal has more food value and costs less.  Obviously you need to get it on sale on the cardboard drum cartons.  It takes very little more effort to make oatmeal from the drum than it does from the pouch.  The savings are remarkable.

1 cup water
1/2 cup oatmeal
1-1/2 minutes.  In the microwave.
I split the minutes and cook it for a minute and then a! 30 seconds.  It seems to keep it from boiling over.  Using a bigger bowl will help too.


Starting out strategies.


  • Cut out all junk food....chips, ready made anything.  
  • When something on you target list is on sale, buy twice as much as you would normally buy,effectively spending the same, but getting twice the product.  
  • Over  time, the snowball effect happens.  The money you saved this week, becomes the seed money to buy more for 1/2 price and pretty soon you have a pantry built.  
Over time, there will come a point where you can almost skip a week, or coast on your stock-- that's a very good feeling to know you have a stock and if something happens, you are covered..  I hate living on the edge, it's not good for your nerves.  A study said that you can actually loose iq points from the stress of being poor.  Groceries on the cheap can reduce that stress by cooking from scratch the smart way and distressing some of the hectic dinner hour and having food in the pantry and not wondering where the next meal is coming from.  We all know that certain legislators are cutting food stamps and food costs are on the rise. This is a way to beat it.

You can be a minimalist with your stuff and your wardrobe, but it doesn't make sense to be a minimalist with your food.  I am  not talking about hoarding.  I am talking about a sensible approach to buying food.  Why waste money to pay full or more than full price to have just enough food to last you for a day and have to waste gas going to the store and buying more over priced food.  That doesn't make sense to me, especially of you are short  of money in the first place.

The most important thing to do is to know your RBP. My mother used to have the expression, some people could have a bargain get up and bite them on the butt and wouldn't see it.  Don't be that person.  LOL

Next time: quick takes

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Jane








Monday, February 3, 2014

Monday madness- meal plans

We had a wonderful night last night.  The Seahawks won-- big time.  Yeah!    Good food, Good friends.

On to matters at hand.  The  next installment of groceries on the cheap.  The last part of planning and organizing is meal plans.  I can hear the dreaded really!   It is important because without a plan , the temptation to go to the drive through or order pizza is too great when you have had a hard trying day and the last thing you want at the moment is to set out and cook dinner.  If you know it's going to be a busy day,  you can plan to have dinner in the slow cooker or plan an easy dinner.

I have a matrix that I use for meals.  I do ot to afford us a variety of protein and give us balance in our meals. Because I have a limited number of already cooked meats in my freezer, I can pull together a meal from what is on sale that week as far as veggies is concerned and I have basic starch on hand.

My matrix may be different than your matrix, but it makes meal planning easy.  Ours is

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

I do my plans after I come home from the store. I do this because you never  know what you are going to find at the store, or find that the veggies look cruddy or the meat is in too big a package to be believable or just looks bad.  I walked into the store last week and found chicken for .50 a pound-- a good brand.  I bought two.  There is no need to be a pig, let someone else have a bargain too.
This week, I went to Fred Meyers and found white fiber pasta for a buck. Mi had coupons so I got the pasta for .50.  Add that to a .79 can of pasta sauce and some parm or Romano cheese and you have a very cheap meal.  I would add a protein rich dessert in that case.  It makes for a good vegetarian meal.
Protein doesn't have to always take the main star of the dinner.
Being flexible really helps in a quest for cheap dinners.

Having a list of main  dishes in your back pocket, and stocking when prices are low goes a lomg ways in affording your family good food within your budget.

Again, this is not hoarding.  This is stocking for self sufficiency and to save momey.  You are not stacking food to the ceiling, or buying something you can't or won't use.  You are purchasing a few select items that you use on a regular basis.  Just enough of them to last you until you find another sale is about a three to six month supply.

More next installment.  Strategic shopping.

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Jane






Sunday, February 2, 2014

Special Sunday... go Seahawks!!!!!!

Sorry, bronco fans, I am from Seattle!    

The next step in our groceries on the cheap journey should be, meal plans, but I would be remiss if I didn't talk about coupons or my version of extreme coupons.  Don't loose me, I, not talking 40 hours a week or 90 bottles of red pepper sauce.  LOl

I used to think that coupons were just for junk food and stuff I never buy.  I watched some couponers on the u tube that were taking a practical approach to couponong.  I also went to a free class with my daughter at a local church.  It opened my eyes to a more practical approach to couponong.  I spend little time on couponing, but save an average of sox dollars a week om coupons,   That's 312 dollars a year.

I buy one paper from the dollar store a week.  My friend sometimes brings me her inserts.  I put them in a binder clip by month and stash them in a cubby on the office area/ computer hall .  that's maybe a two minute chore.  I made a coupon book.  This os a once in a lifetime chore.  I picked up a binder at a flea market for a dollar.  I got some dividers and a pencil pouch from the dollar store.  I out a pen, a small calculator, and a small pair of scissors in the pouch.  I bought photo sleeves  from office max.
They fit printable coupons perfect.  A small coupon  envelope will get you started just fine.  Or take envelopes from the recycle bin and staple or glue them together.  Mark them with categories.

On the first of the month coupon.com loads the new monthly coupons on their site.  I go on and print TWO of everything I might use.  If you put this chore off, you loose, because there is a limited amount of coupons and when they are gone they are gone.  The biggest dollar values go first.
I only print coupons for toothpaste, soap, dairy, and anything that I can make a meal of.  Taco shells come to mind.  I buy cream of mushroom soup because my husband likes to make tuna casserole and he doesn't want to make white sauce.  I have been getting soup starter coupons because they are for .50 off and they are .50 at the dollar store. They are cheaper than buying tomato sauce or making white sauce.  I file the printable coupons in the coupon binder.

After I pick my stores to go to for the week, I look on our coupon matching site to check the ads and the coupons that match up with the sales. They will link the printables and tell you which insert has a coupon to match up.  This can be very advantageous to you.

For example, Rite Aid this week has light bulbs for 3.99 with a 3.00 up reward.  Up rewards put money on your store card to be used  the day after or beyond . ( usually good for ten days.) that leaves .99 .  There is a coupon for a dollar for them.  That makes them pay you a penny to take them out of the store.  There is a similar deal on  maxi  pads, but it haven't found a coupon and neither did the coupon match up site.

Coupon matchup sites are regional.  Ours is couponconnectionNW.com.  It is free.  You can google coupon matching  and the nearest big city and get one for your area.

This makes couponing manageable.  It probably doesn't find you all the coupons, but it also doesn't consume you.  Watch for coupons on the labels of jars etc.  some are instant and if you don't point it out to the checker, they probably won't use them.  Also, there are sometimes coupons that come out of the cash register with your receipt.  It pays to be aware of coupons.

Case in point.  One day I went to Joann's to get something I needed for business.  My husband ran over to SAFEWAYS to get a package of hamburger buns I needed.  He got a coupon for 1/2 off any one item for Joann's.  He didn't look at the receipts that were given to him, I could have got my item for half off.  It pays to be aware of any coupons that come your way.  Not all of the, will be useful, there is a lot of garbage out there.  I compare it to thrift store shopping.  You have to sort through a lot of garbage to find a true treasure.  A family member not long ago found a sterling compote for two bucks!  Treasures are there, but you have to bypass the garbage.

Next time, meal plans

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Please share

Jane

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Wallgreems is open at west gate!

New Wallgreens at West Gate.  We will all miss the bowling alley that was an icon for the city.

I got the paper for tomorrow.  I would guess that most of us will be watching the Super Bowl tomorrow, but these ads go all week.

Walgreens
FOLGERS 6.99
Skippy peanut butter 2/5
Bumble bee tuna .89@
Lindsay olives .99, both green and black
Soft scrub BOGO

Rite aid
I have five rite and dollars.

Light bulbs 3.99 with a 3.00 up reward.
Stay free maxi pads  3.00 with a 2.00 up reward makes them 1.00

That's about it.

Bartells
K cups 5.79
1.00 off coupon for blue diamond almonds

Fred Meyers
Grapes 1.68
Kroger cheese 8 pz 2/3 @
Celery .49
Zucchini .99
Peppers, green and cucumbers .58
Pears .99
Oranges .88

Coupons only
FOLGERS 5.49
Jiff  1.99

That's all. Please note cheese is 5.00 a two pound brick at QFC.  It is cheaper to grate your own.

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Jane


Suddenly Saturday, analyze the ads

It's quiet.  A rare commodity with a two yo in  the house.  Never three years ago would I thought I would be dealing with doc mc stuffins and curious George.  LOL.

This is part of an on going series of how to get groceries on the cheap.  The next step is analyzing the ads.  We are lucky enough to have 4 chain stores, maybe 5; two dollar trees; a warehouse store; and two overstock stores within a five mile radius of our house.  I realize that not everyone is so lucky.
Whatever your situation, you can apply these concepts.  If you are far away from a big chain store, consider getting their ads by mail on line and going once every two weeks or a month.  Carpool with a friend or neighbor to cut gas costs maybe.  Make best use of your trip by going when you can get the best deals on you target list.  ( the things you stock, nothing to do with the store of the same name.).

The ads.

  • Take a piece of copy paper.  I use something out of the recycle bin if I can.  Section it off in fourths.  I have a spread sheet made up for thos, but I started with just a piece of scrap computer paper.  
  • Top each section with a name of a chain store .  
  • Start going through the ads looking for 
  1. A protein that is super low priced that you can buy in bulk.  
  2. Anything that is on your target list that is sale priced 
  3. Any produce or dairy that is low priced.  
  • Mark each down under the stores ad.  Now, cross off anything that you have enough of or anything that is a higher price elsewhere.  
  • Now pick the TWO best stores.  You want two to maximize your savings and give yourself the best produce of both stores.  
  • Plan your trip to maximize gas.  I go to both stores of they are on the same route.  Otherwise, I buy from one store and cluster the other store with another errand I need to run.  
  • Go to the stores, buy what's on your list, and get out.  The more time you stay in a store, the more you will spend.  The stores have spent a lot of money trying to get you to impulse buy. low cost specials are usually on the front page of the ad.  There are to entice you onto the store so that you buy the impulse buys.  Beat them at their own game.  
When something  is on your target list at your target price ( aka RBP ( rock bottom price) buy as many as you can  afford, as many as the store will let you buy,or as many as you need to fill your 
Self imposed quota.  I have shelves in a pantry.  They are marked off in sections.  When my tomato section is full, I quit buying tomatoes until I see some shelf space.  

If you buy one large item of meat a week and batch cook it, portion control meals and bag it for the freezer, you will save a lot of time and money.  No waste, less time cooking dinner at the most hectic time of day on most households, and you have purchased ot at a RBP.  I got chicken for .50 a pound last week.  My husband roasted two chickens and cut them up for the freezer.  I have enough chicken for is to have two chicken dinners a week for a month.  Another time it might be a pork loin that I cut into pork chops and roast for a roast dinner and or BBQ sandwiches. Or a tube of sausage from Costco that I fry and defat and store in meal sized freezer bags in the freezer.  Hamburger makes taco meat ( with homemade seasoning) , crumbles, meatballs, Salisbury steaks amd or meatloaf.  When cheese is five dollars for two pounds, I grate it, toss a little cornstarch in it and freeze it.  Eggs already
 have a long fridge life. 
You can rotate whatever is on sale and cook your protein on a Saturday afternoon or whenever things are the calmest in your house.  My answer to cook for a month freezer cooking. MIT doesn't take
long to cook a vegetable or make a salad, them eat is the biggest time hog.  Batch cooking affords you cheaper cuts of meat without the lomg cooking time that is not practical on most week nights.  

That's all for today

Next meal plans , alternative stores.


Thanks for stopping by

PLEASE share.  

Jane 






Friday, January 31, 2014

Freaky Friday, the basics.

It's finally Friday.  Last night I oven roasted potatoes, carrots and radishes and cooked sausage.  We had cheese pizza the night before.  We eat more simple on work days.

Its  that time of the month when I go over the basics of groceries on the cheap.

I started this blog when it came to my attention that some people were running out of money before they ran out of month on SNAP( food stamps). It wasn't hard to tell why when I heard what what they were eating for dinner.  The sad truth is that if you spend ten dollars for dinner and there are 30 days in the month, your three hundred dollar food allowance is spent and you don't have breakfast or lunch.  Aw, the ugliness of reality. LOL

I learned groceries of the cheap over the past 47 years. In the early 70s I found myself a single mother.  It was a time of double-digit inflation and wage and price freezes. The wage freezes held steady , but the price freezing didn't.  The reality was half of my income went for rent the other half went for daycare .  There  was very little left over. I started reading everything I could find how to eat on the cheap. I wasn't alone most of the middle class was in the same boat.  What all that was over, it became a habit to eat on the cheap. Over the years I found the new ways and new tricks. I took the best of what I found and tailored them to fit our needs.  The result is groceries on the cheap.  I feed us on less than the USDA stats for thrifty cooking.  That is the basis for snap.  They add COL adjustments.  That's why you get more in NYC than you do in some other places.

Groceries on the cheap takes a three disciplined approach to feeding the family.

  • Planning and organizing 
  • Strategic shopping 
  • Cooking from scratch 
I'm going to try something different.  Over the next month, I will break this down and deal with one concept a day.  Every basic blog I write comes off the top of my head, please feel free to read past blogs to get different ideas, or the same ones written in a different way.  

Let's start with planning and organizing.  This is not rocket science, it's  actually pretty simple. If your not an organizational person. It is not as hard as you think. Some of it you are probably doing.  

  • First, list the sources of inexpensive  protein your family will eat.  
  • Now, list 7-14 meals that you can make from these sources.  Remember, this is scratch cooking.  
  • Make a list of the things that you use to make these meals.  We are talking basic shelf and freezer ready items that you use on a regular basis. There is probably a list of ten or so things. In our house that would be diced tomatoes, beans, refried beans, black olives, pasta sauce, pasta, instant mashed potatoes, tuna, and some green beans and corn.  
  • Start a spread sheet or small notebook and list these items, the size of the package on the top of the page.  Then create a line that has the date, store, price paid, coupon? And net price. Ie: pasta sauce, Hunts .  First  line: 1/3/14. Bartells. .79. No coupon .   The object is to find the cheapest price available for this product and how often it goes on sale.  
The main mantra here is NEVER PAY FULL PRICE FOR ANYTHING.  we are buying quantity of our staple items so that they will last until they go on sale again.  This is not hoarding. You want a three to six  months supply, depending on your situation.     If I use the item once a week, I keep 24.  If I use it once a month, I keep six.  Watch your pull dates.  Canned goods , I have been hearing
are good for some time after their pull date, pasta has an eight year shelf life.  I don't  expect the cans to last that long.  Rotate stock.  If your children are old enough, that's a good job for them.  Don't buy anything that has a pull date close to the real date unless you are going  to eat it that day.  
You are looking for half price or more.  If you can add a coupon with it, all the more sweet the deal.  

That's enough to digest for one day.  
Tomorrow: how to read a grocery ad!  

Thanks for stopping by 
PLEASE share 
Jane 




Thursday, January 30, 2014

Aw... SNAP

I read an article on Facebook written by an nutritionist from a college.  She was clearly uninformed without logic.  She stated that the average person on SNAP had 4.50 a day to eat.  The next statement was that most of the supermarket coupons were for junk food and that was making the poor people eat unhealthy food.  Any time I read anything I ask myself, does it pass the BLT-- Basic Logic Test.

Let's get this logic.  Last I looked, a bag of potato chips was at least two dollars.  If one ate a bag of potato chips and a soda for a buck. That would leave a 1.50 for food for the day.  It is nearly impossible to buy junk food and still feed a family on three hundred dollars a month.  It is true that you can't pay the prices for designer coffee and organic everything.  The figures just don't add up.

Coupons come in all shapes and sizes.  Because they are out there, doesn't mean people have to use them.  If you can't find coupons for real food, you aren't looking in the right place.  The smart source that came with the ads has a coupon for MJB coffee and one for spaghetti.  There are coupons for basic food, you just have to look past the garbage.

Last months spread sheet showed me spending an average of fifty dollars a week for three adults.  That does not cover the food my daughter buys, but we supplement the grandbaby too.  Regardless, the figure for just my husband and myself is about 85.00 a week for the USDA thrifty plan.
We eat some processed food, I try to limit it to one day a week.  We don't eat organic,gluten free, salt free, or fat free; I do cook low fat meats, defat hamburger and sausage, and watch the sugar content of foods.

SNAP can happen.  It does take a realistic approach to food prep and purchasing.  It takes some knowledge of how to do it.  I have read everything I could find since I was in the position of having to get by on next to nothing in the sixties and seventies.  I took the BLT test on everything I read and tried things that didn't work,but in the end I have come up with a system that works.  I just wish I could reach the right people.  I cringe when I hear someone running out of money before they run out of month because they have fed their family a hamburger meal box and sugar laden fruit cups and drinks.  Reasonable nutrition can happen.  You just have to know how.

I feed us well.  I don feed us what an extreme foodie would, but I don't feed us what an extreme couponer would either. ( based on what goes on the cart on one reality show) .  I try to hit a moderate happy medium.

I use coupons for real food.  I usually save about six dollars  a week.  Six times 52 is 312 dollars a year.
That's 312 dollars that I am not wasting.  Because, when I don't take advantage of a coupon on something that I would buy anyway,I  am wasting money.  That savings does not include the coupons in the store ads.  The store ads, I feel have coupons to limit the amount that can be purchased by one individual. Otherwise,when something is a really good price,  some people would clear the shelves. Clearing the shelves is just plain rude. Even when you're stocking you should take a reasonable amount and leave the bargain for someone  else too.

It is true, you can get a real sense of accomplishment when that register receipt has a 67 percent savings at the bottom, but it is only real if you have bought real food your family will eat.

Thanks for stopping by

Please share

Jane

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Wicked Wednesday--the ads

I would expect that the ads will be full of game hype and expensive booze and snacks.  Probably not a day for stocking.  Let's see.... LOL

SAFEWAYS

Chicken thighs, drums, leg quarters.  .99
Nabisco snack crackers 1.50
Blue or blackberries 2/5
Dreyers 2.88
Digiorno pizza 3.99$$
Hebrew national hot dogs 2.99
Oranges .99

Salsa 3.49@@
BC cake or brownie mix .99@@

FIVE DOLLAR FRIDAYS
CHEESE PIZZA ,MTAKE N BAKE
SUBS
Green mountain k cups
C and h sugar, 10 lbs


QFC
Broccoli .99
Tillamook cheese 4.99 *****
Freshetta pizza 3.99
Cucumber .68

Top

20 beef, or turkey 2.99
Brandon cheese 4.99
Roma's .79
Dreyers ice cream 2.99
Dole salads .79@
Red Baron and Freshetta pizza 3.99

ALBERTSONS

Broccoli , cauliflower .99
Dryers 3.00

Buy 10, save 5
Yu ban coffee 6.49
Taco shells .99
Salsa 1.49
Oscar Mayer lunch meat 2.99
There is. Not enough there to stock on.  Taco shells would go stale before they would be eaten.

@@ means there is an in ad coupon.
$$ means there is a manufacturers coupon out there

I would be sure to take advantage of the Tillamook cheese for five bucks.

Thanks for stopping by

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Jane






Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Terrific Tuesday, recipe edition

OK, I've got writers block.  I have been working on St. Patricks D ay to get the product out on a reasonable time.  There's not much paper to work with, so I'm having to be very creative.

One of the ways to stretch your food dollar is to take advantage of what produce os plentiful in season.  It's usually better quality and better prices--a real win-win.
Carrots, potatoes, kale, cabbage, apples, oranges, squash.


Carrot - potato casserole

 2T butter
1T EVOO

1 T flour
1 tsp salt
1/4 t pepper
1-1/2 cups milk
Pinch of nutmeg

4 ounces grated cheese ( 1 cup)
3 cups grated potatoes- raw
1 cup grated carrots

Make a roux with the flour and butter.  Add milk in stages until you have a white sauce .  Gradually add in 1/2 cup cheese .

Combine with grated vegetables.
Place on well greased 8X8 baking pan.
Bake at 350 for an hour
Top with remaining cheese

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Jane



Monday, January 27, 2014

Monday madness

I want to talk about yesterday's shopping trip.  It takes some tenacity to make deals work.  Often the karma is not working like clockwork.  Yesterday was the ultimate work with it day.

Bartells has almonds, 6 ounce cans for 1.79.  There is a dollar coupon on the flyer on Sundays paper when you buy 2 . It is misprinted to be for 16 ounce containers.  There are no 16 ounce containers.  The coupon inserts has a coupon for .75 off of two cans of 6 ounce containers.  That makes just about a BOGO.  After some discussion, we got the almost BOGO.  Roast beef hash was on sale for 1.99, it rang 2.99.  Another discussion.

At Rite Aid, HORMEL,chili is a buck.m buy 15 of anything on the section of the ad, and get a 5 dollar up reward.  There os not much on that ad that I would buy except the chili that I had .55/2 coupons for.  I had four coupons.  they did not have 15 cans of chili.  I bought 8.  And used my coupons.  Effectively getting 8 cans , but paying for 6.  I went to another rite aid to buy the remaining 7.  Turns out, the two I got for free didn't count, so I bought 9.  I wound up paying 9.89 for 17 cans of chili.  Some of them are no beans.  I'm thinking they might be good on tacos or on baked potatoes for a loaded baked potato.  Either way, I saved about a buck a can.  More than a half price trip.
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Jane


Sunday, January 26, 2014

Chicken, glorious chicken .

One of the ways you can stretch your dollar and clean the refrigerator at the same time is to make soup. My husband cooked two chickens I got for $.49 a pound at QFC yesterday. I've broke them apart into bags.  . I put one chicken breast in each of two bags. I put the dark meat in one bag and what was left in the other for soup.  This will provide many meals for five dollars worth of chicken.

Buying  in bulk and portioning you're meat in meal sized bags saves a lot of time and money.  Food is wasted because it is not all eaten and finds it's way to the back of the fridge and is forgotten.  You are not spending a lot of money on a box of something to go with your meat.  Chicken is a staple that has a stable price in the meat department. Pork and beef have both Rosen on oroce,meet with the largest percentage.  

I purchased " frugal moms guide to Once a month cooking" by Candace Anderson. While I am not in a position to cook a months worth of foods in a day, the recipes are good and jump start a menu plan. My spin on once a month cooking, is to batch cook a meat a week.  It is less taxing both on your energy and your time and gives you the benefit of scratch cooking lower cost meats , portion controlling, and speeding up dinner time.  In most homes, dinner time is the most hectic  time of the day.  Streamlining dinner can go a long way to reduce that stress.  

Ways to use chicken

Sweet and sour chicken 
Chicken pot pie
Roast chicken dinner
Chicken nuggets
Chicken quesadillas
Chicken nachos
Chicken tacos
BBQ drumsticks 
Chicken Tetrazzini
Chicken parm 
Chicken broc casserole 
Chicken Noodle soup
Chicken rice  soup
Chicken vegetable soup
Buffalo chicken  pizza
Buffalo chicken pie
Chicken pizza

The list could go on......and on..... LOL

That's all for now .  

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Jane 








Saturday, January 25, 2014

Pizza pig heaven

I found an even better deal on digiorno pizza. Target has 2/9 with free 2 liter soda, and there is a coupon  in the 1/26/14. RP insert for BOGO.   I think that means that you are getting 2 pizzas, normally at least five  bucks and a bottle of soda for 4.50.


Rite aid and Fred Meyers ...early.

My husband got the paper for me--tomorrow's paper.  It has P&G  COUPONS as well as smart source.

Fred Meyers

Fryers .97 ( QFC has them for .50)
Roma's .78
Milk 4/5@
Snack crackersv3/5@
Blues 2/5
Cauliflower .99
Duel monte veggies 3/2
Kraft Mac and cheese 1.00--it's .50 at QFC
Kraft BBQ sauce 100-.79'at QFC
Fm sour cream or cream cheese .99@@
Nalley chili .89@


Rite Aid

Scope 2.99 w 1.00 up reward nets 1.99
Ragu 4/5.  Less coupon in the paper .50 nets 4/4.50 or 1.12 each.

That's about it.  Please be sure to check couponconnections.com  for any more that my appeal to you.

HORMEL chili at  Rite A id is a buck.  Coupons for .55/2

The Red plum for 1/26 has a BOGO coupon for digiorno pizza.  It's 4.49 at QFC this week when you buy six of assorted buys.  These also include Mac and cheese and water.  BBQ sauce for .79  and snack crackers.

Bartells has red vines for 5.99.  Also 1.00 off coupon for 2 blue diamond almonds.  Add to that a .75 off coupon for two in tomorrow's smart saver.










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Jane

Friday, January 24, 2014

Freakin Friday

I am late .  Had a early appointment with the physical therapist.  Went shopping afterwards.  I usually go to Big Lots for pads and Kleenex.  I got 600 sheets for 4.00.   Mandarin oranges in cups are 4/1.00.  No sugar added,  pizza crust wad 2/2.50.

Next QFC

Draper valley chicken is .50 a pound.  Kraft Mac and cheese is .50.  Not quite a comparison, but I don't choose what my grandbaby gets for lunch! LOL

I took advantage of the fresh fruit buys and pepperoni at .50 a package.  Red Baron rising crust pizza netted 2.29.  A cheap lunch!

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Jane


Thursday, January 23, 2014

SNAP !

I just read an interesting Article on one persons experience trying to voluntarily live on food stamps in NYC.  I was surprised at how much she got for a week, until she listed her grocery purchases.  The prices were our full prices and some were twice what I pay.  I realize that what you get is based on what the COL is in your part of the country.

  I didn't expect to have an audience in other countries or in different parts of the USA when I started this blog. Obviously, prices at our grocery stores are different than that stores in other parts of the country.
 Clearly,access to chain grocery stores has a lot to do with the prices you pay for food and storage on NYC is probably,not an big option.  But, the majority of us do not live on NYC.  One point she made that I thought was interesting was the realization that you can't live on SNAP and afford gluten free, organic, and specialty anything.  I can eat better than she did because of stocking and having access to four chain stores, 2 warehouse stores, and some alternative stores.  The gist is, you get less money on metropolitan areas, but you have more access to cheap food if you  look for it.


I also thought it was interesting that 80 percent of Walmart employees are on SNAP.  Walmart prides  themselves on contributing to the food banks.  H E L L O!  If Walmart paid their employees a decent wage, they wouldn't need SNAP!   And,  QFC is union, does pay a decent wage in comparison, and gives  to the food bank generously.  They just don't toot their own horn!   LOL

My principles of groceries on the cheap will work, no matter where you live.  The  prices will be different. The snap allotments are different.  The principles are the same.

I have read everything I could get my hands ( or eyes) on about thrifty cooking for some 45 years.  I have analyzed the ideas, added what I learned from my mother, and took the best of what I learned and put it together using my BLT approach.  Balance and logic test.  I don't want to spend my entire waking moments on groceries and cooking.  I want a reasonably healthy diet and a balanced diet.
Don't want  to stock until I look like a hoarder.  I want a reasonable amount of food to tide us over a disaster, and enough to last us until our staple items go on sale again. The only thing I stockpile as much as possible with no limits is toothpaste.  That is because I only buy it when it is free or almost free and I save it until I get a basketful to take to the women's shelter.

The secret to saving money is not to go buy just what you need at inflated prices.  It doesn't make sense to me to pay 1.59 for something you can get for .60.  My mother would have said, better the dollar in our pockets than someone else's.

That's not to say that she was not charitable.  I remember one time I went into Rite Aid and children's underwear was on a clearance table for next to nothing.  Knowing that a grade school in the area had children coming to school with no underwear, I bought all that I could afford.  I called my mom, she bought the rest!

I am a firm believer that no child should  wake up to no food in the pantry and the basics of a normal life.  I can't save the world, but I can do all I can to help.  Knowing how to stretch a buck and feed a family good, nutritious food can go a long way to help those on SNAP make it through the month and have food in the pantry at the end of the month.  It's not hoarding to have a reasonable stockpile of staple items that you use on a regular basis that you can make a meal from .


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Jane

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Terrific Thursday

The ads finally came .

QFC

oranges .68
Berries 2/5

Buy 6, save 3
Kraft ez Mac .49 net
Kleenex .99
Smoked sausage 2.49
Kraft BBQ sauce .79
Red Barron pizza 2.79

SAFEWAYS
Strawberries 2/5
Oranges .99
Brownie mix .99
Skippy peanut butter 1.99@

Five dollar Fridays
Blues - 18 oz
Flan, fruit
Salmon
Wings


ALBERTSOMS

Save 3, buy 5
Fresh express salads 2/5$$
Berries 2/5


Eggs 4/5@

Quarters buys
Yoplait .60$
Bumble bee tuna 1.00
Tomato paste .50
Tomato sauce .25

TOP
Potatoes BOGO 2.79


That's about it.  I'm not seeing much.
Sometimes,  it might be better to choose an alternative store.  We might try Winco

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Jane

Wicked Wednesday

Another week.  We didn't get the ads yesterday. Probably because of the holiday.  My mantra is never to pay full price for anything. More the most part, I try to get the best quality I can for my buck.  There are a few things that I doesn't pay to buy quality.  Disposables come to mind,then I try to buy the least amount as possible.

My daughter has decided that she will eat chicken now.  Before she was a vegetarian.  We eat a lot of Mexican recipes because we like them and it is easy to accommodate diet restrictions.  It uses beans and cheese for protein.  Tacos can be chicken or pork as well as hamburger

.  When we went for lettuce tacos for happy hour I had chicken nachos.  It had some taco chips, a lot of shredded chicken, beans and some cheese.  Cheese is full of protein and calcium.  A lot more food value than the lettuce tacos that is mostly water.  Iceberg lettuce is mostly water, very  little food value.  The darker the green, the more food value it has.  Those tacos have one tablespoon of meat, doodles of lettuce with no food value, and a very little sprinkling of a tomato and cheese.  Look hard, you might miss it.  You are getting ten carbs of taco shell, very little protein and a lot of water.  Knowing how to analyze your food and balance protein and carbs along with analyzing the fat content is a good start in providing good food on a budget.  

Ortega put out a recipe booklet a few years ago.  It had more dollar value coupons than the book cost.
I don't think I can duplicate the recipes, some of the, are really fat loaded, some are somewhat healthy.  Some are expensive, some can be adjusted to accommodate the fat content and the cost.

Bacon shrimp quesadillas.
Mexican egg rolls ( turkey, peppers, black beans, cheese )
Chicken nachos
Corn chowder
Pasta and grilled vegetable salad
Chocolate chili
Taco salad
Taco soup
Chicken  enchiladas
Shrimp tacos
Oven roasted veggie tacos
Taco rice and beans

Many good recipes.  You might find it at a garage sale or the goodwill.  I get magazines at the goodwill for fifty cents.
Any recipe you can partially cook when time is more relaxed, or comes together quick is a good recipe. Add inexpensive sources of protein and it's a great recipe.

That's all for now.

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Jane