tomorrow's deals
I am assuming as usual that Albertsons and safeways have the same deals. I am going from favado.
Grapes 1.99
Albertsons lists Foster farms chicken for .87
Nathan's hot dogs are 3.99
Bumble bee solid albacore tuna 125
Broccoli / cauli .99
And wait for IT.........
GRATED CHEESE IS 7.00 a pound! Lucerne is 5.00 for two pounds.
Note: it is two dollars a pound at Costco for white at regular Costco,and 2.08 a pound at business Costco.
QFC
Strawberries 2/5
That's about alol. Not the best week for stocking except the chicken at Alberways. LOL
Feed your family- BETTER, CHEAPER, FASTER. Four plus one is five. Four people, one meal, 5 bucks!
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Off the grid.
I have not a clue what to write about today. Anyone have things they want to read about please comment.
Yesterday, we had tuna melts. Fruit salad, amd a green salad with black olives and tomatoes.
I went to Fred Meyers and bought just what was on sale that we needed to fill in our meals.
Eggs were on sale for two dollars for 18. That's eleven cents an egg. .88 for protein a meal is about as cheap as you can get. We will have breakfast for dinner once a week for the next month.
I replenished the raspberries. I always have fresh fruit and veggies in season.
I bought four boxes of cheesy potatoes. Betty's Crocker made with real potatoes. They were a dollar each. I had two coupons for .50 off of two. There was a .50 Ibotta on them. Net cost .62.
You can add a small amount of ham to the potatoes, make a salad using hard cooked eggs and vegetables and have a dinner well unde a five dollar guideline.
English muffins are the base for our tuna melts. Fred Meyer always has a l a r g e bag of English muffins for 3/5 or 1.67 each. We had tuna melts and still have enough for egg muffins another day. That is cheaper than Costco.
Coffee was 4.99. I keep a back up when we open the last coffee, I buy a new one. I avoid running to the store for one thing like the plague. Going to the store without a plan is a sure derail manuvere.
We had to go further into town for an errand. Grocery outlet netted nothing. Everything was too high priced. No harm, no fowl, we were already there. I did check the coffee prices, more
expensive than Fred Meyers.
We were gone 1.5 hours and stopped for our errands for part of that and got gas.
We are full and I only need to fill in perishables the rest of the month.
Yesterday, we had tuna melts. Fruit salad, amd a green salad with black olives and tomatoes.
I went to Fred Meyers and bought just what was on sale that we needed to fill in our meals.
Eggs were on sale for two dollars for 18. That's eleven cents an egg. .88 for protein a meal is about as cheap as you can get. We will have breakfast for dinner once a week for the next month.
I replenished the raspberries. I always have fresh fruit and veggies in season.
I bought four boxes of cheesy potatoes. Betty's Crocker made with real potatoes. They were a dollar each. I had two coupons for .50 off of two. There was a .50 Ibotta on them. Net cost .62.
You can add a small amount of ham to the potatoes, make a salad using hard cooked eggs and vegetables and have a dinner well unde a five dollar guideline.
English muffins are the base for our tuna melts. Fred Meyer always has a l a r g e bag of English muffins for 3/5 or 1.67 each. We had tuna melts and still have enough for egg muffins another day. That is cheaper than Costco.
Coffee was 4.99. I keep a back up when we open the last coffee, I buy a new one. I avoid running to the store for one thing like the plague. Going to the store without a plan is a sure derail manuvere.
We had to go further into town for an errand. Grocery outlet netted nothing. Everything was too high priced. No harm, no fowl, we were already there. I did check the coffee prices, more
expensive than Fred Meyers.
We were gone 1.5 hours and stopped for our errands for part of that and got gas.
We are full and I only need to fill in perishables the rest of the month.
- Tacos, refried beans , rice with salsa
- Pizza
- BBQ chicken thighs, French fries, salad
- Pork sausage, potatoes, peppers, bread
- Mac and cheese with chicken and bacon ( Pinterest)
- Breakfast for dinner
- Tuna melts. , salads
Monday, March 14, 2016
25 pantry staples
Having a well stocked pantry means that you don't stop and run to the store when you are on the middle of cooking. Everyone has a stock set of recipes that you use to cook meals. Your family likes them and they usually are easy to cook. This makes it easy to keep a pantry and make a meal.
25 pantry items
25 pantry items
- Olive oil. Costco is good. I cook almost exclusively with olive oil. It boosts your good cholesterol and is a natural oil.
- Salt, pepper, Italian seasoning. Parsley. Chilli powder, cumin, garlic, oregano. Paprika. All these can be had at the dollar store or at grocery outlet in bulk jars. Costco has many, but grocery outlet has smaller jars so you can be fresher.
- Sugar, brown sugar, flour, cornstarch, baking powder. Non fat dry milk
- Chicken and vegetable stock. Better than bouillon, or granulas. Winco has some of that in the bulk isle.
- Coffee, tea,
- Beans, dried, split peas, rice. Costco had rice for .33 a pound. Winco had it for a dollar a pound on a bag.
- Pasta. Pasta has a eight year shelf life. I wouldn't want to keep it that long. But we go through a lot of pasta. I buy only good brands and I buy it when I can get it less than a buck. I have bought it for as little as .38. Coupons for pasta aren't as plentiful as I have seen on the past. I did get a good brand,without a lot of variety of shapes at QFC a few weeks ago for .50.
- Pancake syrup
- A brownie mix
- Instant mashed potatoes. Idahoan makes flavored mashed potatoes and I can get them as cheap as .60 with coupons,
- Diced tomatoes. Diced tomatoes are tomato product that is the most versatile and often on sale for as little as .38 at Winco, almost always at least one we k a month at Freddie's for .50.
- Beans. Several varieties. Also .50 or close to it at Winco and Fred Meyers. Win is own beans have no preservatives on them.-- just beans, water, and salt. Always rinse your canned beans and drain off the liquid.
- Canned green beans , a few corn!
- Chicken noodle soup , tomato soup. Costco has tomato, roasted red pepper soup for two dollars a box. It's really good and o out basil, milk, amd cheese to it.
- One each of a backup of catsup. Mustard, mayo.
- Oatmeal, bulk. (Quacker oats at Costco)
- A cake mix in case of an emergency.
- Bread crumbs ( home made )
- Yeast
- Black olives ( a treat) or for pizza and salads. Slices are .58 at Winco.
- Refried beans
- Cream soup mix ( scratch)
- A box of a gratin potatoes ( Betty Crocker is sometimes BOGO with coupons at the dollar store.
- A box of suddenly salad. I was buying them on the summer for as little as .75.
- Salsa
With this stock, I can always make a meal without going to the store with a few added staples from the fridge or freezer. We always have grated cheese, eggs, and my rotation meat. Fresh carrots and celery. They are cheap and can fill in any number of dishes from soup to roasted root vegetables with a chicken breast.
Hope this helps. If you are just starting out. Don't expect to get all of,this on one trip to the store. It takes time. When you have s well stocked pantry, life is a lot easier. Your scope of shopping just got easier. There are on,y a few that nags you HAVE to purchase, and you don't have to try to remember that last little thing to make a recipe.
You are looking for a loss leader protein that you don't already have , fresh produce to fill in your meals, dairy , and a stock item of you find one and need it.
Protein sources and what they make
Obviously, what protein sources you use will be your personal preference.....within reason.
I am going to try and identify common ones and what can be made from them. Variety of good when cooking on the cheap. It keeps things fresh and not boring. That being said, I don't know a child that wouldn't just love speghetti and meatballs or pizza every night. lol.
- Chicken. Target price 1.00 or less a pound. I only want Foster farms. Whole chicken is your Best Buy unless you get split breasts for .98 like I did last week. Sometimes Winco has thighs for .58; they come out of Idaho. I roast a whole chicken or cook it on the crockpot and divide it into t breast portions, the dark meet and the bones and broth for soup. Thighs can be roasted off and either cooked with BBQ sauce or shredded for tacos of pulled chicken sandwiches.
Chicken pot pie
Roast chicken dinner
BBQ dark meat , fries , salad
Chicken and noodles
Chicken soup.
Buffalo chicken pizza
Chicken and bacon Mac and cheese
Chicken taco
Chicken enchiladas
Chicken burritos.
Chicken Quesedas
Chicken impossible pie
Pork loin roast or pork sirloin,
Slice off pork chops
Section off a roast and roast on the oven.
Slice off thin sliced for BBQ pork sandwiches.
Cut some into cubes for stew, soup, tacos. Pork hero.
Cheese : white and cheddar. Grated cheese is cheaper and gives you more bang for your buck. When I grated a block of cheese, we went through four pounds in a week. The finer grate stretches the cheese. Target price 2.00 a pound. Usually at Costco, but you sometimes can do better at grocery outlet.
Mac and cheese
Pizza
Cheeseburger macaroni. (scratch)
Ground beef - 7 percent fat. Best price o see these days s 3.18 a pound at Winco. Keep your eyes peeled, it's not always advertised. I buy between three and six pounds. I make meatloaf. Meatballs, taco meat and crumbles. Defat the taco meat and crumbles. Meat balls are baked on the oven on a sheet pan that has a metal screen on top to wick away the fat. Meatloaf is cooked on
meatloaf pan that wicks away the fat. It's not healthy to cook meatloaf on its own juices.
meatloaf pan that wicks away the fat. It's not healthy to cook meatloaf on its own juices.
Tacos
Pizza
Red sauce
Soup
Enchiladas
Burritos.
Meatloaf with baked potatoes
Meatballs with spaghetti. (Red sauce)
Meatballs over noodles ( white sauce )
Meatballs over rice ( sour cream sauce)
BBQ meatball sub
Meatballs with brown gravy.
Tomato basil, Gorgonzola soup and toasted cheese sandwichesn
Pepperoni pizza ( pepperoni is 1/2 price at .50 with coupons at dollar store)
Sausage, potatoes, peppers.
Beans and rice
Eggs
Breakfast for dinner
Quiche
Cobb salad
Sunday, March 13, 2016
getting started, now what.
You have an empty fridge and pantry. How do you proceed.
Start my taking your total monthly amount you have for food and divide it by 4.2 ( the number of weeks in a month) .
Now, you are going to divide that figure up by food groups. Protein is going to take more, followed by dairy and vegetables, staples.
Week 1
Staying in budget, find two loss leader proteins. Buy enough for eight meals each. - two per week. Obviously you aren't going to buy the most expensive meats in the store, and portion control for use in a stirfry or a casserole, tacos, or something you can stretch meat with.
Fill in with dairy and veggies, maybe a pasta package.
Plan really inexpensive meals to fill out. A vegetable bean soup. Mac and cheese, eggs. Use two meals of each protein, and fill in.
Week 2
Next week, add a loss leader and buy the dairy and vegetables you need to complete meals add a
stock staple in modera
Week 3 concentrate on the perishables you you need to fill out our meals and stick what you can stock on.
While you are building a stock, pick vegetables that are plentiful and cheap. Add frozen peas and
carrots , or just peas. Buy just what you need in dairy, provided you are not paying a premium for a small container.
This is the hardest stretch month you will have. You are building a protein rotation. Decide your protein rotation ahead of time and watch for really good loss leaders. They won't happen all in the same week. Occasionally, I find two in a week.
Sausage, cheese, and tilapia are pretty stable prices at Costco and Winco. Costco is the cheapest for the best quality in sausage in a three pound tube. You should be able to get six meals for a proverbial family of four out of a tube. Cook crumbles and use in pizza, in eggs , in soup.......
Cheese is a staple around our house. We go through five pounds of white and 5 pounds of yellow in a month to six weeks. Cheapest at Costco...about twenty dollars for both. Cheese can make a cheap dinner.
Good hamburger 7 percent, is hard to find on a loss leader. It happens, but they don't always advertise it. You have to have an eagle eye.
Whole chickens are pretty easy to find ( Foster farms ) for a buck or less. So,etimes there are chicken thighs at Winco for .68.
Pick three loss leaders, enough for 8 meals each. Portion control. You are based on six ounces of protein a day. Use cuts while you set yourself up that can be put in pizza, soups, casseroles, tacos with some beans...etc. in other words s t r e t c h.
Rotate 2 a week of 3 proteins and add a vegetarian. Make sure you get a lot of cheese in case you
misjudge the protein. You can always fill in with Mac and cheese and pizza or soup and toasted cheese sandwiches.
Examples :
First week. Buy two chickens. Cook. Divide into 2 half breasts, the dark meat, amd soup bones and stock. Buy 5 pounds of cheese. About 20.00 worth of meats/ protein. Bisquick, eggs, carrots, celery, potatoes 2 cans of tomatoes and 2 cans of beans. Dairy
Start my taking your total monthly amount you have for food and divide it by 4.2 ( the number of weeks in a month) .
Now, you are going to divide that figure up by food groups. Protein is going to take more, followed by dairy and vegetables, staples.
Week 1
Staying in budget, find two loss leader proteins. Buy enough for eight meals each. - two per week. Obviously you aren't going to buy the most expensive meats in the store, and portion control for use in a stirfry or a casserole, tacos, or something you can stretch meat with.
Fill in with dairy and veggies, maybe a pasta package.
Plan really inexpensive meals to fill out. A vegetable bean soup. Mac and cheese, eggs. Use two meals of each protein, and fill in.
Week 2
Next week, add a loss leader and buy the dairy and vegetables you need to complete meals add a
stock staple in modera
Week 3 concentrate on the perishables you you need to fill out our meals and stick what you can stock on.
While you are building a stock, pick vegetables that are plentiful and cheap. Add frozen peas and
carrots , or just peas. Buy just what you need in dairy, provided you are not paying a premium for a small container.
This is the hardest stretch month you will have. You are building a protein rotation. Decide your protein rotation ahead of time and watch for really good loss leaders. They won't happen all in the same week. Occasionally, I find two in a week.
Sausage, cheese, and tilapia are pretty stable prices at Costco and Winco. Costco is the cheapest for the best quality in sausage in a three pound tube. You should be able to get six meals for a proverbial family of four out of a tube. Cook crumbles and use in pizza, in eggs , in soup.......
Cheese is a staple around our house. We go through five pounds of white and 5 pounds of yellow in a month to six weeks. Cheapest at Costco...about twenty dollars for both. Cheese can make a cheap dinner.
Good hamburger 7 percent, is hard to find on a loss leader. It happens, but they don't always advertise it. You have to have an eagle eye.
Whole chickens are pretty easy to find ( Foster farms ) for a buck or less. So,etimes there are chicken thighs at Winco for .68.
Pick three loss leaders, enough for 8 meals each. Portion control. You are based on six ounces of protein a day. Use cuts while you set yourself up that can be put in pizza, soups, casseroles, tacos with some beans...etc. in other words s t r e t c h.
Rotate 2 a week of 3 proteins and add a vegetarian. Make sure you get a lot of cheese in case you
misjudge the protein. You can always fill in with Mac and cheese and pizza or soup and toasted cheese sandwiches.
Examples :
First week. Buy two chickens. Cook. Divide into 2 half breasts, the dark meat, amd soup bones and stock. Buy 5 pounds of cheese. About 20.00 worth of meats/ protein. Bisquick, eggs, carrots, celery, potatoes 2 cans of tomatoes and 2 cans of beans. Dairy
- Chicken soup, cheesy biscuits
- Roast chicken dinner with root vegetables
- Pizza
- Mac and cheese
- Vegetable bean soup
- Eggs, pancakes, fruit
- Potato soup.
Second week. Loss leader pork loin. @ 1.69. Buy about five or six pounds. Or pork sirloin for about the same price. Cut 1/2 inch slices off for a pork chop Dinner. Roast a small 2 pound section, and then cut the rest into cubes. Portion for 8 dinners. You can make tacos, roast pork. Thinly slice the left over roast for BBQ pork sandwiches. Pork pie, or stew.
You still have chicken and cheese. So. Prolly 2 pork meals, 2 chicken meals, 2 vegetarian with
cheese and a breakfast for dinner.
Third week: let's say you got 7 percent hamburger. Buy six pounds. two pound meat loaf, 2 pounds of golf ball or smaller sized Meat balls, and the rest of cumbles or taco meat. Portion onto 8 meals.
Now, you will have 2 beef, 2 chicken, 2 pork, amd a vegetarian or a fish.
Fourth week, add another opposit. Color of grated cheese/ and or a bag of fish. This s a wk to try and replenish dairy and stock for the next month.
Of course, you need to adjust your sources of protein to suit the needs and tastes of your family. There are a lot of recipes out there for very good meals that use smaller amounts of protein. We have a fee meals with a "Slab" of meat. For the ,oat part, using smaller pieces and adding them to other ingredients uses less meat. Sloppy joes use less than a hamburger would. You can add beans to taco meat. Or use refried beans on the bottom of the taco shell and add meat amd cheese. Remember. Cheese is a protein too, So you can use less meat and still get six ounces of protein a day.
Chicken thighs at .68 a pound can be cooked and shredded for pulled chicken sandwiches or tacos.
Or cook, add BBQ sauce homemade at the last minute and serve with home style fries or French fries (3.00 and change at Winco for five pounds.
Our matrix for meals is 2 beef, 2 pork or chicken, 2 vegetarian, and a fish or shellfish. By rotating a loss leader a week, and identifying what kinds of protein you are going to buy, you can eat well. On a 75.00 a week budget, I would plan twenty dollars for a protein.
That buys:
4 chickens
10 pounds of pork sirloin.
6 pounds of ground beef (7 percent) .
6 pounds of pork sausage at Costco (Jimmy Dean )
10 pounds of cheese ( Costco)
That is less than four dollars a day. The best way to assure that you have good food all. Moth is to buy loss leader protein. Buy vegetables and fruit in season, the dairy you need, and stock items you find at RBP. By making meal plans and portion control, you can have food on the pantry at the end of the month. With some families, if you put a whole chicken on front of them, they will eat a whole chicken. Dietary guidelines say six ounces of protein a day. No one needs a whole chicken.
After you get to the point where you are stocked, it's easy just to go to the store and buy your staples to fill in and a loss leader. Some weeks, you won't have to go at all. Your pantry will
have the ingredients for a. A fiery of ,eat you amd you can meal plan from the from the freezer and pantry.
Saturday, March 12, 2016
Meal plans
- Meatballs and rice w sauce , stir fry mixed veggies : zucchini, carrots, celery, peas, peppers
- Pizza ( parents night out) salad.
- Tuna melts , salad
- Sausage, potatoes, peppers, rolls , salad
- Breakfast for dinner
- Tacos, refried beans and Spanish rice
- BBQ chicken thighs fries, green salad
Fred Meyers ad for tomorrow.
Quick Fred Meyer ad
QFC
Ham 1.49
Grapes 1.99
Broccoli, cauli. .99
Milk 4/5
Corned beef 3.99
Fred Meyers
Grapes 1.88
Pot roast 3.47
Point cut corned beef 2.77
Best foods 2.49@@
Sour cream/ cottage cheese ,99@@
Hillshire farm sausage 2/5@@
Berries 2/5
Cream cheese ,99@@
18 count eggs 1.99@@
QFC
Ham 1.49
Grapes 1.99
Broccoli, cauli. .99
Milk 4/5
Corned beef 3.99
Fred Meyers
Grapes 1.88
Pot roast 3.47
Point cut corned beef 2.77
Best foods 2.49@@
Sour cream/ cottage cheese ,99@@
Hillshire farm sausage 2/5@@
Berries 2/5
Cream cheese ,99@@
18 count eggs 1.99@@
Saturday madness
Yesterday, QFC had a coupon for a free Marie Cahlanders chicken pot pie; I ate it for lunch. I love free. It goes a long ways to stretching your food dollar. I feed is on less than four dollars a day and we don't eat beans and rice everyday, omit whole food groups, and starve, None of us are overweight,
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
With the lack of sales ads last week, I had to resort to going to the stores and making a quick glance of the in store ads or just walking the store. It doesn't take long, I can get in and our of a store pretty quickly. If an isle doesn't have what I need or use, I skip it. That means I am going down about four isles and across the back of grocery outlet. The freezer is full, so I skipped the frozen isle. I checked the coffee price and moved on to the cheese that I did need. I stopped by QFC for meds and picked up grapes because they were cheaper and better quality than anywhere else. Fred Meyers was a planned trip as well as Winco. They have been my go to chains since Haggens took over Alberways and jacked the prices up. I go when there is something I need and it's a loss leader. I plan trips to piggy back on to other errands to save on gas. We have a very fuel efficient car. I hit QFC for meds when I got my haircut. I hit grocery outlet when I had business deliveries to make. I hit Winco after the doctors. That means that Fred Meyers was the only store I went to by itself. I had planned the trip and knew exactly what I was going to buy. It made getting in and out fast. I probably spent less time on all four stores than if I had walked Costco and got in and out of its parking lot. lol. I don't do two hundred dollar grocery hauls. Most of the time my ticket is 15-30 dollars a store. Sometimes less. We go to Costco on a need to basis. It's close to the house and we get gas at the same time.
I brought home the split chicken breast from Fred Meyers and deboned them and made stock from the bones. We'll have chicken soup for lunch. Mid week, I cleaned out the fridge and noted what needed to be used and what we needed to fill in for perishables for the weeks meals.
I can't emphasize enough how important it is to know the answer to what's for dinner question at least early on the day. It affords you the ability to plan to use up all your perishables and not waste. It also staves off the order pizza demons. lol. It gives children a sense of security.
I don't spend a lot of time cooking. I have found ways to cook things with passive cooking. I am 70 years old and I am still learning, I try new things. I tried rice in the crock pot. I used a controlled amount of rice so that I wasnt wasting a lot if it was a bust! I tried brown rice in the microwave. It works out better for us and is very easy. You can cook the rice while you cook the rest of the dinner or earlier in the day. Just remember, rice and beans are not supposed to be left out of the fridge after cooking more than two hours and not in the fridge when they are in a dish more than two days. These things spoil fast. It's not worth a few cents of rice or beans to make your family sick.
Tonight we are having breakfast for dinner. Last night we had a salmon noodle casserole with peas and fruit salad. The cantaloupe I bought for two dollars a fofty cents Sunday was really ripe. We ate some last night and I out the rest on a green box so that it quit ripening until I got it used up. We will have fruit again for dinner with our eggs and hash browns.
Next weeks plans are done and are coordinated to use up things we need to use before pull dates. I got taco shells with the sauces for a buck at grocery outlet. It has an April pull date. Well eat them this week.
We have a fair amount of lettuce, so we will have salad a few times. I bought lettuce for the tacos. We have more burritos and enchiladas on the winter when lettuce is at a premium or doesn't look good. Flexibility helps stretch your food dollar because you can use the things that are cheap on the marketplace at any particular point in time.
The Sunday paper is here. Will post Fred Meyers on another blog.
Friday, March 11, 2016
Winco......interesting observation.
I have been watching a lot of grocery hauls from across the United States. It gives me perspective ( sorta) as to prices other places. A lot of people buy all organic, al lot buy a lot of junk food. I tend to try for the middle of the road.
While watching these, I discovered a very interesting pattern. These are on the same week of purchase. One lady bought Classico pasta sauce on the regular jar in Utah for .58 from a Kroger store for .58 if you bought five. Our Kroger stores (QFC) in Seattle has it for 1.50 each of you buy 5. Some other lady in another city, paid like 2.16 for the same jar at Wallmart in Indiana.
That's some price swing! It goes to reiterate that your quality of food doesn't have to go down to eat on the cheap. You just have to find the lowest prices on things and buy them when you are low. You buy five pasta sauces, and don't buy the green beans that you found on sale the week before. You still eat pasta and green beans, you just eat more days for the same money spent.
Last night we had spaghetti and meatballs. Tonight we will have either salmon or breakfast for dinner.
My focus , now that I have got to the point where I can serve good meals for four dollars or less a day, is to work harder on reducing our fat, sugar, and salt intakes. It was never bad, I just want it to be better. It's something to work towards.
I went to Winco yesterday. I got a lot of veggies and lettuce that was on my list. I also got brown rice in a bag. Yesterday morning I found a microwave recipe for brown rice that comes out in grains rather than sticky rice. I found a white rice recipe too that I will try another day. I was using instant and figure that the bagged rice will be cheaper and probably more nutritious. I cleaned out the vegetable bin and bread basket before I left so I know exactly what we were short of. This should do us until next week, or the week thereafter.
Put 1 cup of washed rice in a microwave safe bowl with three cups of water. Cook uncovered in high for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 50 percent power and cook an additional twenty minutes.
I sometimes use chicken broth or vegetable broth for the water.
Albertsons has purchased their stores back (33) of them in Washington state. Other companies have purchased stores in Oregon and California. Haggens will close their last store. I am saddened because Safeways was the better store here. The prices were lower and it was a lot cleaner. Only time will tell of there is an improvement. The prices while Haggens had control were way to high, we will have to see if things improve. Fortunately, we have Kroger stores and Winco for other chains and grocery outlet. Costco, and SAMs club. Competition breeds lower prices.
I will be glad of things go back to having a grocery ad on a regular basis. It's hard to compare. I know some things are consistently cheaper at some stores.
While watching these, I discovered a very interesting pattern. These are on the same week of purchase. One lady bought Classico pasta sauce on the regular jar in Utah for .58 from a Kroger store for .58 if you bought five. Our Kroger stores (QFC) in Seattle has it for 1.50 each of you buy 5. Some other lady in another city, paid like 2.16 for the same jar at Wallmart in Indiana.
That's some price swing! It goes to reiterate that your quality of food doesn't have to go down to eat on the cheap. You just have to find the lowest prices on things and buy them when you are low. You buy five pasta sauces, and don't buy the green beans that you found on sale the week before. You still eat pasta and green beans, you just eat more days for the same money spent.
Last night we had spaghetti and meatballs. Tonight we will have either salmon or breakfast for dinner.
My focus , now that I have got to the point where I can serve good meals for four dollars or less a day, is to work harder on reducing our fat, sugar, and salt intakes. It was never bad, I just want it to be better. It's something to work towards.
I went to Winco yesterday. I got a lot of veggies and lettuce that was on my list. I also got brown rice in a bag. Yesterday morning I found a microwave recipe for brown rice that comes out in grains rather than sticky rice. I found a white rice recipe too that I will try another day. I was using instant and figure that the bagged rice will be cheaper and probably more nutritious. I cleaned out the vegetable bin and bread basket before I left so I know exactly what we were short of. This should do us until next week, or the week thereafter.
Put 1 cup of washed rice in a microwave safe bowl with three cups of water. Cook uncovered in high for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 50 percent power and cook an additional twenty minutes.
I sometimes use chicken broth or vegetable broth for the water.
Albertsons has purchased their stores back (33) of them in Washington state. Other companies have purchased stores in Oregon and California. Haggens will close their last store. I am saddened because Safeways was the better store here. The prices were lower and it was a lot cleaner. Only time will tell of there is an improvement. The prices while Haggens had control were way to high, we will have to see if things improve. Fortunately, we have Kroger stores and Winco for other chains and grocery outlet. Costco, and SAMs club. Competition breeds lower prices.
I will be glad of things go back to having a grocery ad on a regular basis. It's hard to compare. I know some things are consistently cheaper at some stores.
- Sliced cheese in a lot of varieties are almost always 2.39 at grocery outlet. Coffee, if you aren't particular, is cheaper at winco and grocery outlet.
- Tomatoes and beans are cheapest at Fred Meyers and Winco. Lately it has been Fred Meyers.
- Green beans are cheap at Winco. Low sodium ones are best at Costco for about .66 a can.
- Refried beans are cheaper at Costco, but there is,no variety. Winco has vegetarian ones close to the same price.
- At any point in time, I can usually find Foster farms whole chickens for a buck or less a pound.
- Periodically, I can find 7 percent hambirger at Winco for around three dollars
- Fred Meyers is cheap on dairy about once a month. You can stock that week because most of it has a month pull date. Sour cream, cottage cheese, and milk.
- Costco , unless there is a sale, is cheapest on butter at 2.50 a pound. Sales sometimes bring a better price, but like this week, you have to buy five and there is nothing else on the buy five list that is a good price and no coupon match ups. You are laying more for some things to pay less for others. No 75 percent off this time.
- Vegetables are a crap shoot. Windows are sometimes good......watch! Grocery outlet sold me a whole bag of apples that were written inside and wouldn't do anything about it. I watch very closely before I buy any vegetables from them. Costco is good especially on bananas. Watch the bags, if even one piece of fruit is bad, you haven't saved anything, Their prices are fairly consistent through the the year. That means, that at the height of the growing season, they may be cheaper elsewhere. It also doesn't pay you of you don't use that quality. We never, unless we at pot lucking, use a whole box of spinach. Tomatoes and berries are eaten most of the time , or I can freeze blues.
- Black olives are cheapest at Winco. Hands down!
- Frozen veggies are cheapest at Costco wholesale or Winco or Fred Meyers on a coupon, Bigger bags are better for us because I can take out what I need and save the rest for another meal. Dollar store potatoes ar good. Check the country of origin. Five pounds of French fries are around three dollars at Winco. Rarely can I find cheaper with a coupon.
- I can almost always find yoplait for fofty cents and I can always I can find a coupon for an additional ten cents off. Yoplait is the lowest in sugar I can find.
- Pepperoni is always a dollar at the dollar tree and sometimes a coupon makes it BOGO. Ditto Betty Crocker potatoes and they have mashed sweet potatoes. Uncle bens rice is another BOGO when you have a coupon. Hunts pasta sauce is always a dollar. Watch, they are coming out with smaller cans. It is sometimes cheaper at Winco or Fred Meyers. My target price is less than a dollar. I have got ot for as low as fifty cents, but most recently .75. Pineapple is a buck and there are coupons out there. Name brand turkey bacon is always a buck ( check pull date) .
- Bread and buns are cheapest at Winco.
- Instant mashed potatoes at cheapest at Winco and coupons can make them as cheap as .60.
That's a good run down. If you have questions on the Seattle area on another inexpensive ingredient, please let me know on the comments.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
Shopping anyway you can.......
yesterday, I had to do business in Bothell. This week, we have gone to Fred Meyers on Sunday, QFC on Tuesday, and grocery outlet on Wednesday. No store had a large expenditure. Fred Meyers was a planned trip, that is, we went there and there alone. The other two trips were on conjunction with other errands. It makes no sense not to take advantage of an already scheduled errand to add the grocery store. It saves gas. In total, I have spent very little this week. I bought grapes at QFC, the other stores were more expensive and lesser quality. The grocery outlet netted :
- Cereal, fiber one with extra protein and almonds and craisens .99
- Rice
- Taco kit .99
- Sliced cheese
- Tortillas
- A bag of peppers for 1.50. Total 13.00
I saved more than I spent. This is an unusual week. There were no ads, and the only way to get the best of the stores is to go to the best of the stores. Grocery outlet is not a store we go to on a weekly basis. I do business in. Bothell once every four to six weeks and I co-ordinate the trips to save gas.
My planned trips for the two chains this week was to be Winco and Fred Meyers. I'll do Winco when I go to the doctor since its on the same neighborhood to finish with a few perishables that are cheaper there.
The trick is to only buy what you are almost out if, and not to impulse buy. I'm still on track for the budget, but I have got everything cheaper than if I had just gone to a store and purchased what we needed. I spent 46.00 total between the three stores.
Having ads would have helped, but with the shake up on the food industry here, it's the best I can do. The bottom line is that the house is full of good food and we are eating well on less than 75.00 a week. Last night we had a vegetable bean soup that had no fat except the little olive oil I used to sauté the vegetables. --and olive oil is a good oil; it increases the good cholesterol levels.
Planning meals and eating a variety of meats and proteins gives us the luxury of having beef once a week or so and not having too much trans fats. It also helps to stay at a three to four ounce portion of meat when you eat it.
Grocersies on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
It's ad day....
It's ad day and there is,not much there. QFC was an two week ad. I got grapes yesterday, but the five for five is not a good one to work with this time. A lot of things that I don't buy or can get at a lower price, there no coupon match ups. It's matching the dollar off and coupons than can bring you anywhere from 64-75 percent off. Alberways is almost entirely exactly alike and there are not many bargains.
The last I heard the auction to sell Safeways and Albertsons stores was Feb 22, but it kept being postponed. I think things should be better when the dust settles. It's been a long time for this part of the country.
We have Winco, Fred Meyers, amd QFC along with Costco, SAMs club, grocery outlet, and some things at big lots.
Albertsons
Top round, London broil, 15 percent hambirger 3.99
Salad kits 2/6 - not a bargain
Cantaloupe 2.99 strawberries 2/5. - cheaper at FM
Five dollar Friday
No real bargains.
Blues and blacks 6 ounces 2/5
I honestly can't find anything on ad that isn't cheaper almost everywhere else. They want 1.67 for peppers each. They want. 1.49 for the oranges that are like .58 a pound last week at Winco. I have purchased naval oranges for a buck or under for weeks now.
Fred Meyers has a lot of dairy and chicken on sake. Canned tomato and beans were 2/1.
Winco has good prices all the time, they fluctuate, but usually you can find a find a good price on many things.
Those have been my two chains for a while now.
I am not seeing flyers from many if the grocery stores. Favado might help, out but they are not always accurate. Sometimes you can match with coupons.
I am under my 75.00 a week budget for several months now sticking with Winco and Fred Meyers, adding a grocery outlet and dollar store run and my regular Costco things. I am very particular what I buy at dollar store and where it comes from. I don't buy much. Some American brands match with coupons for almost free food.
Costco has
Grocery outlet is a good one for coffee sometimes and cheese. You never know what you are going to find. Foster farms chicken breast, frozen is sometimes cheaper. If I don't know where my chicken is from, I don't buy it- I prefer Foster farms, but draper valley works. Buzz words don't necessarily give you the best chicken.
Thanks Jane
The last I heard the auction to sell Safeways and Albertsons stores was Feb 22, but it kept being postponed. I think things should be better when the dust settles. It's been a long time for this part of the country.
We have Winco, Fred Meyers, amd QFC along with Costco, SAMs club, grocery outlet, and some things at big lots.
Albertsons
Top round, London broil, 15 percent hambirger 3.99
Salad kits 2/6 - not a bargain
Cantaloupe 2.99 strawberries 2/5. - cheaper at FM
Five dollar Friday
No real bargains.
Blues and blacks 6 ounces 2/5
I honestly can't find anything on ad that isn't cheaper almost everywhere else. They want 1.67 for peppers each. They want. 1.49 for the oranges that are like .58 a pound last week at Winco. I have purchased naval oranges for a buck or under for weeks now.
Fred Meyers has a lot of dairy and chicken on sake. Canned tomato and beans were 2/1.
Winco has good prices all the time, they fluctuate, but usually you can find a find a good price on many things.
Those have been my two chains for a while now.
I am not seeing flyers from many if the grocery stores. Favado might help, out but they are not always accurate. Sometimes you can match with coupons.
I am under my 75.00 a week budget for several months now sticking with Winco and Fred Meyers, adding a grocery outlet and dollar store run and my regular Costco things. I am very particular what I buy at dollar store and where it comes from. I don't buy much. Some American brands match with coupons for almost free food.
Costco has
- Bananas 1.39
- Blue cheese
- Oatmeal
- Bisquick
- Rice
- Refried beans
- Green beans
- Stir fry frozen veggies
- Bacon
- Laundry detergent
- Toilet paper - paper towels can be cheaper with coupons,
- Over the counter meds that the doc orders.
- Vitamins on sale
- Sour cream and cottage cheese in bulk.
- Grated cheese at wholesale club ( 2.08 a pound last time) other flavors are 2.35 or so.
- Hopefully brown and serve sour dough baguettes.
All of this is bought on a need basis. I don't keep a large stock of them. I usually have more green beans. It's one of the vegetables everyone eats.
Grocery outlet is a good one for coffee sometimes and cheese. You never know what you are going to find. Foster farms chicken breast, frozen is sometimes cheaper. If I don't know where my chicken is from, I don't buy it- I prefer Foster farms, but draper valley works. Buzz words don't necessarily give you the best chicken.
Thanks Jane
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
What's for dinner.
Good morning. Meal plans for the week.
This week the loss leader was chicken breast for .99 a pound at Fred Meyers ( Kroger) . I got a half package of ham bits for 2.83 at Winco. We also have sausage, pork chops, 7 percent ground beef that has been defatted. ( if defat-ing takes as much as 17 percent of the away, does that mean that
It's virtually fat free ? --certainly it is a lot less fat.. I still have some frozen chicken, One of the keys is to remember that we only need a sox ounces of protein a DAY including egg.
Meal plans for this week
- Sunday: oven roasted chicken breast with oven roasted vegetables ( carrots, potatoes, zucchini and radishes. (radishes take in a really good sweet roasted taste. )
- Monday: leftover chicken with rice . ( I cooked the rice in vegetable broth and added asparagus, peas, orange pepper, parm, parsley, and salt and pepper.
- Tuesday: pizza
- Wednesday : vegetable bean soup , bread - parm- peppercorn
- Thursday: speghetti and meatballs.
- Friday: salmon
- Saturday breakfast for dinner. ( ham)
That's about it, one less beef dinner, but we have been doing that lately. My matrix is
2 beef, 2 pool or chicken, 2 vegetarian and a fish or shellfish. Eating a variety of meats or proteins, keeps eating less boring and gives you the best of the meat sources . Some meats have more fat and than others. Beef has four more grams of trans fats and cholesterol than a chicken breast ( 3.5 ounce of sirloin. I suspect that if you defat hambirger that is already low on fat, the figures will be closer. None the less, if you limit your protein to six ounces total in a day as recommended and eat a variety of meats, you should be able to be well rounded without eliminating a food from your diet.
Less fat, less sodium , less sugar.
Gone are the days that we would sit down and eat a eight ounce steak. I never did eat the fatty cuts of meat. Things like stew meat don't have the fat and ,at eking, so they are best cooked low and slow and I always cut off the visible fat.
That's about it.
Jane
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Monday, March 7, 2016
Eating on four dollars a day.
This is going to be a quick one because I have no time this morning,
Basically, it dawn on me last night, what I am saying is : you,can eat well on four dollars a day if you get eight dollars worth of food for four dollars. An easy fix if you shop wisely.
Lately I have been reading about the food additives that are bad for you. It still boils down to what I have been saying , watch your fat, salt, and sugar!
I think it will almost impossible to eliminate all hydrogenated oils out of your diet because of their widespread use- until the food industry finds a new way of manufacturing. It would be nice to say that we could make everything from scratch , but in this day and age, not many of is have the time to make everything from peanut better to crackers and everything in between and you would probably have to use some fat anyway or your family wouldn't eat it. You would be cooking the entire day and have so much waste trying to cook for a small family.
Your best is all than anyone can expect you to do.
That's all I can do right now, back later.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
Basically, it dawn on me last night, what I am saying is : you,can eat well on four dollars a day if you get eight dollars worth of food for four dollars. An easy fix if you shop wisely.
Lately I have been reading about the food additives that are bad for you. It still boils down to what I have been saying , watch your fat, salt, and sugar!
I think it will almost impossible to eliminate all hydrogenated oils out of your diet because of their widespread use- until the food industry finds a new way of manufacturing. It would be nice to say that we could make everything from scratch , but in this day and age, not many of is have the time to make everything from peanut better to crackers and everything in between and you would probably have to use some fat anyway or your family wouldn't eat it. You would be cooking the entire day and have so much waste trying to cook for a small family.
Your best is all than anyone can expect you to do.
That's all I can do right now, back later.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Sunday, March 6, 2016
Sunday notes
My husband ran in to a lady that was so nice that she offered to return our cart to the store. She was impressed that I had a coupon book/binder. That must take a lot of time, she sad. No, actually it took a little time and very little money to set up a coupon book. I got the binder from the goodwill. The dividers and pencil pocket from the dollar store, and some sleeves from office max. It's not hard to set up and binder with dividers.
I spend about twenty minutes the week of the month pulling old coupons while I watch tv, and downloading the coupons for the new month. Click and print. Then separate them into categories and file. Done.
The inserts from the papers that come in the mail and the paper I get for a dollar at the dollar tree get marked with the date (if I remember ) and filed in a file folder. Minutes.
I check favado before I go to the grocery store to see what they think is on special and pull any coupons that will get me more bank for my buck.
I have got as much as 75 percent off my purchases that way. I do the math, If it isn't going to be worth while to coupon or make something from scratch, I don't do it.
Spending all Sunday afternoon clipping every coupon in five papers even if I'll never use it is a waste.
We know what we will buy, that we buy on a regular basis. The junk food....,it can stay in the paper. LOL.
Onward and upward.
Our meal plans went out the window last week. I regrouped and went to easy things I had on hand that my husband and daughter could cook.
We had
Roast beef a jus sandwiches and waffle fries ( dollar store fries, not so good) steak fries are good.
Shrimp stir fry
Speghetti with red sauce and meatballs.
Sausage , potatoes and peppers.
Pizza
Back to normal.
I spent 10.00 at Winco yesterday . I'll finish at Fred Meyers today. My loss leader meat will be chicken breast if they have them, and the cubed ham I got from Winco.
Fred Meyers has milk for a buck and sour cream and cottage cheese for 2/4. I already have eggs.
Cantaloupe, blueberries, and some romaine and radishes should balance the vegetable Bin out.
That should be it unless something is a grand unadvertised special I really have to have.
Ps: this isn't meant to be all about me......I'm trying to show how with a stock , in adversity, you can punt and not revert to take out. All we brought in from the outside last week was a bag of roast beef from the deli, because I was hungry for a jus sandwiches. And, how you can make best use of the specials and just buy what you need to fill in your perishables and make best use of your protein dollar.
Thanks for stopping by
Please share
Jane
Saturday, March 5, 2016
fm ads - for tomorrow
Foster farms split chicken breast/ drums or thighs .99
Blues 399
Milk 100@@
Kroger ice cream 1.99
Radishes 2/1
Cantelopev2/5
Red Barron 3/10
Cottage cheese/ sour cream 2/4
Philadelphia cream cheese .99@@
Blues 399
Milk 100@@
Kroger ice cream 1.99
Radishes 2/1
Cantelopev2/5
Red Barron 3/10
Cottage cheese/ sour cream 2/4
Philadelphia cream cheese .99@@
5 ways retailers get you to spend more at the grocery store.
It's no secret that retailers have spent a lot of time and research to get you to spend more money at the grocery store. To be forewarned is to be forearmed.
1) they place a really good buy on something really desirable by the entrance to the store. The plan is to get you into the mindset of putting things in your oversized cart. Of
If its empty, you have to fill it up, right.
If its empty, you have to fill it up, right.
2) I just ate a dinasour! All those taste tests are placed around the store to divert your attention train of thought and make you want to buy more.
3) 70 percent of a stores profit is made from impulse buys. Stick to a list. If you don't have a specific list, stick to a meat, produce, and staples you need to replace list. Some stores have no
Store flyers, so you are flying solo.
So called loss leaders and coupons that at for dollars off a specific total amount purchased are a way to get you into the store. They are hoping that you will impulse buy, especially if you have "free money,". Many times the regular things we normally buy every week are at FBP. Beware. Buy specials that you need or will need in the near future and stop buying when your total reaches the xx. Dollars. Figure the percentage of the "free money" and calculate on your head or with a calculator of an ite, is a good RBP. The more you go over the limit, the less percentage you are going to get off.
So called loss leaders and coupons that at for dollars off a specific total amount purchased are a way to get you into the store. They are hoping that you will impulse buy, especially if you have "free money,". Many times the regular things we normally buy every week are at FBP. Beware. Buy specials that you need or will need in the near future and stop buying when your total reaches the xx. Dollars. Figure the percentage of the "free money" and calculate on your head or with a calculator of an ite, is a good RBP. The more you go over the limit, the less percentage you are going to get off.
4) just because something is on an end cap doesn't mean that it's a bargain and signs at eye level can be .for the thing on the bottom of the display. . Read carefully.
5) manufacturers pay slotting fees for the best shelf space. The expensive stuff is at eye level. Look up and down for the good buys. Many times the store brand is just as good and a whole lot less-- sometimes better. Winco canned beans have beans, water, amd salt in them. Other higher priced beans have chemicals in them. Always rinse beans and discard the liquid.
To reduce distraction
1) go by yourself .
2) eat before you go. But, not so much that everything doesn't appeal to you.
3) stick to a list
4) group your list by department so you don't backtrack. The longer you spend in a store, the more money you will spend. Get in and get out.
5) if an isle doesn't have anything you need don't go there. If you don't have a baby or a pet, why go down that isle? You are wasting time, Avoiding the candy and bakery departments won't tempt you.
6) if you have a husband that hates to shop, but has to go with you, send him on a hunt. It's in his instincts and you are able to concentrate. Have a specific coupon, he can find it.
6) if you have a husband that hates to shop, but has to go with you, send him on a hunt. It's in his instincts and you are able to concentrate. Have a specific coupon, he can find it.
Friday, March 4, 2016
Freaky Friday.
QFC s freebie is a chocolate egg. Woohoo. Chocolate, did somebody say chocolate.
I haven't grocery shopped . Maybe tomorrow.
It's good to have easy meals in your pantry or stash to have when the main chef in the house is unable to cook. Wednesday we had shrimp stirfry..I got up and tried the crockpot rice. I had never tried it before, so I only made about a quarters worth. It turned out as stickey rice and a put a reasonable amount of olive oil in it. We like our rice more like individual grains. I love my husband and daughter.
Yesterday I asked my husband pick up just enough roast beef sliced thin at the neighborhood deli. Surprisingly, enough for two sandwiches was only three dollars. He cooked waffle fries and the sourdough baguettes in the oven and he made a jus. Roast is so high or iced, I don't cook it very often. I still came in with enough food to feed four of us for five bucks. My daughter made lentil soup. It looked very good, but I'm not fond of lentils.
Tonight I hope to cook. Otherwise, we will have speghetti and meatballs. My daughter is a pro at cooking pasta and the rest just needs to be heated up.
Stocking helps. I haven't been to the grocery store. We could have skipped the roast beef sandwiches, but I saw a picture on Pinterest and was hungry for them. We could go for some time more.
After having emergency surgery , I sent my husband to the store for perishables. He came back with beer and Pomegranates . I sent my college aged daughter to Costco with a budget, amd she came home with two weeks worth of real food.
Stocking covers your rear.
I haven't grocery shopped . Maybe tomorrow.
It's good to have easy meals in your pantry or stash to have when the main chef in the house is unable to cook. Wednesday we had shrimp stirfry..I got up and tried the crockpot rice. I had never tried it before, so I only made about a quarters worth. It turned out as stickey rice and a put a reasonable amount of olive oil in it. We like our rice more like individual grains. I love my husband and daughter.
Yesterday I asked my husband pick up just enough roast beef sliced thin at the neighborhood deli. Surprisingly, enough for two sandwiches was only three dollars. He cooked waffle fries and the sourdough baguettes in the oven and he made a jus. Roast is so high or iced, I don't cook it very often. I still came in with enough food to feed four of us for five bucks. My daughter made lentil soup. It looked very good, but I'm not fond of lentils.
Tonight I hope to cook. Otherwise, we will have speghetti and meatballs. My daughter is a pro at cooking pasta and the rest just needs to be heated up.
Stocking helps. I haven't been to the grocery store. We could have skipped the roast beef sandwiches, but I saw a picture on Pinterest and was hungry for them. We could go for some time more.
After having emergency surgery , I sent my husband to the store for perishables. He came back with beer and Pomegranates . I sent my college aged daughter to Costco with a budget, amd she came home with two weeks worth of real food.
Stocking covers your rear.
Thursday, March 3, 2016
Don't believe everything you hear and only 1/2 of what you read.
I have been reading a lot of grocery and health articles lately. Mostly because I'm sick and that what can do in bed. lol
A lot of things might have been true a few years ago, but some don't pass the logic test. Yoplait yogurt has no HFCS and no fake sugar in its low calorie yogurt. Before you go ballistic on somvetching you read, it's best to do a little research. There is a lot of hype where there is no merit behind it.
I can believe that boxed Mac and cheese is processed, organic one report said has more fat in it.
Hamburger meal boxes are processed and have very little product in them.
A study, however, said that processed lettuce in bags or crates has less germs in it than of you wash it. Yourself.
Sometimes processed just makes sense especially if you have a small family. Costco stir fry vegetables are a good price. They are frozen and you can take just what you need out of the package. I would cost a lot and take a lot of time to buy all those veggies separately.
Frozen French fries are as cheap as raw potatoes, there is no Waste. ( buying at RBP.) cooking them in the oven is good.
Look at what the ingredients are on the package. How much per pound are you paying. Is it easy to make yourself. Does it have a lot of oil, HFCS, or sugar of salt in it. Will it save me money if I make it from scratch, or will it take a lot of time. I made pita bread.... Once!
I read an article today about raised bread. No gluten, no sugar, to HFCs, no this,no that...WHAT DOES IT HAVE IN IT.
I got mission tortillas for a quarter for ten. Not worth my time to make them.
Buyer beware. Sometimes the healthier version isn't really that healthy.
Learn to read labels. Sugar has a lot of names. Total carbs on the label is the total carbs less the dietary fiber.
Ingredients have to be listed in order of volume. The thing that has the most in the ingredients has to be first and on down the line. So when a tub of fake butter has water for the first ingredient, I'd be looking twice. HudroginTed oil has a lot of names. Palm oil. Coconut oil. Soybean oil, amd probably many more. They are manufactured oils that use metal in the process. They stay as a thick substance on the blood. Not the best, my guess, for heart patients. I'm not a doctor, I'm just giving an educated guess.
Of something doesn't have as a first ingredient the product it's suppose to b, I'd look again. How about cheese sauce with no cheese!
Ingredients on labels are easy to research. And so is a logic test. Protein bars , as one person stated, have oodles and oodles of sugar. If they have well under 20 carbs, that's not oodles of sugar.
Read labels amd ask yourself it it passes the logic test. Do the pros and cons. Before you make a life changing decision.
A lot of things might have been true a few years ago, but some don't pass the logic test. Yoplait yogurt has no HFCS and no fake sugar in its low calorie yogurt. Before you go ballistic on somvetching you read, it's best to do a little research. There is a lot of hype where there is no merit behind it.
I can believe that boxed Mac and cheese is processed, organic one report said has more fat in it.
Hamburger meal boxes are processed and have very little product in them.
A study, however, said that processed lettuce in bags or crates has less germs in it than of you wash it. Yourself.
Sometimes processed just makes sense especially if you have a small family. Costco stir fry vegetables are a good price. They are frozen and you can take just what you need out of the package. I would cost a lot and take a lot of time to buy all those veggies separately.
Frozen French fries are as cheap as raw potatoes, there is no Waste. ( buying at RBP.) cooking them in the oven is good.
Look at what the ingredients are on the package. How much per pound are you paying. Is it easy to make yourself. Does it have a lot of oil, HFCS, or sugar of salt in it. Will it save me money if I make it from scratch, or will it take a lot of time. I made pita bread.... Once!
I read an article today about raised bread. No gluten, no sugar, to HFCs, no this,no that...WHAT DOES IT HAVE IN IT.
I got mission tortillas for a quarter for ten. Not worth my time to make them.
Buyer beware. Sometimes the healthier version isn't really that healthy.
Learn to read labels. Sugar has a lot of names. Total carbs on the label is the total carbs less the dietary fiber.
Ingredients have to be listed in order of volume. The thing that has the most in the ingredients has to be first and on down the line. So when a tub of fake butter has water for the first ingredient, I'd be looking twice. HudroginTed oil has a lot of names. Palm oil. Coconut oil. Soybean oil, amd probably many more. They are manufactured oils that use metal in the process. They stay as a thick substance on the blood. Not the best, my guess, for heart patients. I'm not a doctor, I'm just giving an educated guess.
Of something doesn't have as a first ingredient the product it's suppose to b, I'd look again. How about cheese sauce with no cheese!
Ingredients on labels are easy to research. And so is a logic test. Protein bars , as one person stated, have oodles and oodles of sugar. If they have well under 20 carbs, that's not oodles of sugar.
Read labels amd ask yourself it it passes the logic test. Do the pros and cons. Before you make a life changing decision.
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Apples, tomatoes, broccoli, oh my.....
And what do they have in common? They are all good for us and cost under a dollar a pound. Wonco always has some variety of apple for a dollar a pound. QFC has broccoli for .99 a pound and a can to docs tomatoes is anywhere from .38-.68 a can . And, they are good for you.
I think the biggest yuk factor in the eyes of people towards broccoli is that most people over cook it. Broccoli is a vegetable that you threaten , not cook. Cook it until it is crisp tender. I saw a picture on something) that I thought was cute. It was called Mac and trees. They put blanched broccoli in a bowl of mac and cheese. $how fun is that!
Apples are good just by themselves, or on a crisp, or cut up and put with cinnamon on your oatmeal.
How about dipping it on peanut butter. I found a peanut butter that had very low hydrogenated oil. Read the labels. We like apples and craisens in bread stuffing under oork chops. Gandmas apple cake is moist and wonderful- just don't try to use fake sugar! ( doesn't work) .
Canned diced tomatoes are a staple in our household. They can be side in many ways. Out of salsa? Dead of winter and want a green salad! Chilli, vegetable bean or sausage and bean soup, red sauce? And many more....
Vegetable and bean soup in the crock pot
Sauté 1.5 cups of the following ( total) in any combination until soft.
Onion. Celery. Carrot chopped or sliced thin, colored peppers, chopped.
Add to the crock pot
Now open some cans and dump in crockpot.
2 cans of diced tomatoes (15.5 ounces ea)
2 cans of beans, rinsed and drained
4 cups vegetable or chicken broth
2T Italian seasoning
2tso garlic powder.
1 cup cooked sausage if desired.
Cover and cook on low for 6-10 hours. We usually predict when we want dinner and count back.
Garnish with parm cheese or croutons.
Apple cake
Combine :
1-1/2 cups vegetable oil
2 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla
3 cups chopped Apple
Mix together
1 tsp soda
3 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 cup chopped nuts ( optional)
Combine the wet and dry ingredients and mix by hand ,
Batter will be stiff.
Bake on greased 9x13 pan at 350 for 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in center comes out clean.
This is not the healthiest cake, but, really is any cake! It's desert!
We don't eat desert often. I try to cook come thing once a week.
Some weeks I don't get to it.
This cake is easy and really good.
I suspect that olive oil would be too heavy to substitute for the vegetable oil. Maybe some bitter melted for part of ot? I. Sure you could cut the amount of the sugar a bit depending on the tartness of the Apple.
That's about all.
Jane
I think the biggest yuk factor in the eyes of people towards broccoli is that most people over cook it. Broccoli is a vegetable that you threaten , not cook. Cook it until it is crisp tender. I saw a picture on something) that I thought was cute. It was called Mac and trees. They put blanched broccoli in a bowl of mac and cheese. $how fun is that!
Apples are good just by themselves, or on a crisp, or cut up and put with cinnamon on your oatmeal.
How about dipping it on peanut butter. I found a peanut butter that had very low hydrogenated oil. Read the labels. We like apples and craisens in bread stuffing under oork chops. Gandmas apple cake is moist and wonderful- just don't try to use fake sugar! ( doesn't work) .
Canned diced tomatoes are a staple in our household. They can be side in many ways. Out of salsa? Dead of winter and want a green salad! Chilli, vegetable bean or sausage and bean soup, red sauce? And many more....
Vegetable and bean soup in the crock pot
Sauté 1.5 cups of the following ( total) in any combination until soft.
Onion. Celery. Carrot chopped or sliced thin, colored peppers, chopped.
Add to the crock pot
Now open some cans and dump in crockpot.
2 cans of diced tomatoes (15.5 ounces ea)
2 cans of beans, rinsed and drained
4 cups vegetable or chicken broth
2T Italian seasoning
2tso garlic powder.
1 cup cooked sausage if desired.
Cover and cook on low for 6-10 hours. We usually predict when we want dinner and count back.
Garnish with parm cheese or croutons.
Apple cake
Combine :
1-1/2 cups vegetable oil
2 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla
3 cups chopped Apple
Mix together
1 tsp soda
3 cups flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 cup chopped nuts ( optional)
Combine the wet and dry ingredients and mix by hand ,
Batter will be stiff.
Bake on greased 9x13 pan at 350 for 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in center comes out clean.
This is not the healthiest cake, but, really is any cake! It's desert!
We don't eat desert often. I try to cook come thing once a week.
Some weeks I don't get to it.
This cake is easy and really good.
I suspect that olive oil would be too heavy to substitute for the vegetable oil. Maybe some bitter melted for part of ot? I. Sure you could cut the amount of the sugar a bit depending on the tartness of the Apple.
That's about all.
Jane
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
The ads .....
I just got th ads....including grocery outlet!
Grocery outlet
Foster farms chicken .79. Check pull date!
Albertsons
Ground beef, 7 percent 3.99
Roma's .99
Grapes 199
Friday only
Progreso veg classics 5/5
Strawberries 2/5
Chicken noodle .69@@$$
Ragu 149@@
Safeways
Ground beef 7 percent 3.99
Ragu and chicken soup same as Albertsons with coupons ( stack manufacturers and Safeways, )
QFC
Grapes 1.99
Broccoli .99
1/2 loin 1.99
Buy 5, save 5 net prices
Butter 1.99
Cereal 1.88. CK for coupons
Red Baron pizza 3.99
Freschetta 4.49
Colgate toothpaste 1.99 CK coupons
Classico sauce 1.49
Mayo 2.49
That's all.
Grocery outlet
Foster farms chicken .79. Check pull date!
Albertsons
Ground beef, 7 percent 3.99
Roma's .99
Grapes 199
Friday only
Progreso veg classics 5/5
Strawberries 2/5
Chicken noodle .69@@$$
Ragu 149@@
Safeways
Ground beef 7 percent 3.99
Ragu and chicken soup same as Albertsons with coupons ( stack manufacturers and Safeways, )
QFC
Grapes 1.99
Broccoli .99
1/2 loin 1.99
Buy 5, save 5 net prices
Butter 1.99
Cereal 1.88. CK for coupons
Red Baron pizza 3.99
Freschetta 4.49
Colgate toothpaste 1.99 CK coupons
Classico sauce 1.49
Mayo 2.49
That's all.
Stocking for wealth
Buying your groceries consistently at 1/2 pice is paramount o having good food on the table all month and having food in the pantry when the month is over.
It is just common sense that one should have food in the pantry in case of an emergency.....which can be as simple as a child being home sick so you can't get to the store or that dreaded "s" word.......snow.
Having a controlled pantry is not hoading, The extreme television shows have given couponing and having more than two cans of beans a inflated bad name.
Our grandparents did it for years.....it was called putting up the harvest for the winter. 1/2 price foods is operating in the same premise as a stockbroker. Buy when it's low, and sell ( use) when it's high.
It used to be that you bought enough product of your staples to last you until the next sale. Now I am finding stable prices on some things and sales a little more often, but limited quantities. How much you stock is up to you. I have three or four months of some things. My object is to buy at 1/2 price and hold enough to carry us through the months when we reach the donut hole. ( a Medicare reality) .
I would want a month minimum.
This will take time. One can or package at a time. If you are on snap. You have the luxury of having all your money at the beginning of the month. That can also be a curse if you don't wisely budget. Know your prices, do it on paper before you go to a store. Buy your monthly bulk purchases first, then divide up the remainder of the money for a weekly budget. Do it on paper first so that you don't overspend and not have enough for the perishables .
This is what I buy, you might very well have different items.
I buy a ten pound box of oatmeal and a five pound bag of cheese . Both are from Costco , bit sometimes cheese is cheaper at grocery outlet. You can freeze cheese. They used to say that grating your own was cheaper. When I grate my own, we use twice as much because it is a coarser grate.
I have non fat dry milk and bread flour and yeast in my pantry on case we can't get to a store.
I stock
It is just common sense that one should have food in the pantry in case of an emergency.....which can be as simple as a child being home sick so you can't get to the store or that dreaded "s" word.......snow.
Having a controlled pantry is not hoading, The extreme television shows have given couponing and having more than two cans of beans a inflated bad name.
Our grandparents did it for years.....it was called putting up the harvest for the winter. 1/2 price foods is operating in the same premise as a stockbroker. Buy when it's low, and sell ( use) when it's high.
It used to be that you bought enough product of your staples to last you until the next sale. Now I am finding stable prices on some things and sales a little more often, but limited quantities. How much you stock is up to you. I have three or four months of some things. My object is to buy at 1/2 price and hold enough to carry us through the months when we reach the donut hole. ( a Medicare reality) .
I would want a month minimum.
This will take time. One can or package at a time. If you are on snap. You have the luxury of having all your money at the beginning of the month. That can also be a curse if you don't wisely budget. Know your prices, do it on paper before you go to a store. Buy your monthly bulk purchases first, then divide up the remainder of the money for a weekly budget. Do it on paper first so that you don't overspend and not have enough for the perishables .
This is what I buy, you might very well have different items.
I buy a ten pound box of oatmeal and a five pound bag of cheese . Both are from Costco , bit sometimes cheese is cheaper at grocery outlet. You can freeze cheese. They used to say that grating your own was cheaper. When I grate my own, we use twice as much because it is a coarser grate.
I have non fat dry milk and bread flour and yeast in my pantry on case we can't get to a store.
I stock
- Diced tomatoes (.49) Winco or Fred Meyers.
- Various beans (.49) -.58. Winco ir Fred Meyers.
- Idahoian mashed potatoes (.60 w coupon) Winco
- Refried beans, (.88) - Costco or Winco.
- Pasta sauce, hunts (75-1.00) Winco, FM, dollar store
- Pasta (.49-1.00) obviously, I would prefer .49 and double fiber or vegetable
- Black olives ( less than 1.00)
- Some chicken noodle soup, pineapple. A backup of catsup, mayo, and mustard. Best deals around Memorial Day and 4th of July
- A cake mix and a brownie mix (.88) - Winco
- A stove top stuffing, preferable for free .
- Salt, sugar , soda, flour ( replenish when low) best deals around Christmas and thanksgiving
- Spices.- Winco has a great bulk isle, you can also it's always get them cheap at the dollar store or grocery outlet Like a buck. Chili powder was 3.39 for a Costco sized bottle
- Rice That's about it.
Thanks
Jane
Please share . I have a 120 hit goal.
Monday, February 29, 2016
It's Monday!
It's Monday morning....the start of a whole new week. I need to do meal plans ; I have already printed coupons, Tomorrow there should be a lot more.
15 minute dinners take less time than driving threw the fast food line. There are many ways to achieve a 15 minute dinner, The Internet is full of what I call dump dinners. Basically , they are in three categories
1) slow cooker
2) stir fry
3) oven dinners.
We love a quiche ( aka impossible pie) with sausage and cheese or cheese and vegetables. There has to be a zillion possibilities.
Soups are easy in the slow cooker. Anything from split pea to vegetable bean, chicken and orzo. Navy bean. Clam chowder or potato soup. Chilli.
Costco has the organic, tomato and roasted red pepper soup back. It comes out to be two dollars a box and is a whole lot cheaper than buying it even at grocery outlet. We Doctor ot up with basil and blue cheese.
Stir fry veggies are a good price at Costco and go a long ways. You can add shrimp or chicken that has already been cooked . Cook it while the rice is cooking, or add ramen noodles.
Otherwise, you can get stir fry veggies at the dollar store or T Winco for 1.29 or so. Prices vary.
Mac and cheese ( scratch) is a winner here, as well as tuna noodle, enchiladas, pork chops on top of stuffing with apple and craisens. Pork chops with pineapple and green pepper, or chicken with pineapple and green pepper.
Baked potato bar with cheese, broccoli. Chili. Sour cream,
Tex -mex is always a hit. Nachos, tacos, enchiladas, burritos. A pie baked in a small round casserole with layers of tortillas. Cheese, refried beans, chicken or ground meat taco seasoned, topped off with refried beans and cheese. Baked in the oven.
Pizza, glorious pizza. Everyone likes it and it can be tailored to everyone's taste. .
Pasta: speghetti. Meat sauce, primavera. With shrimp and alfredo sauce. With tomatoes, parm, peas and peppers and cut up cooked chicken breast., olive oil.
Breakfast for dinner.
What's for dinner at your house!
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
15 minute dinners take less time than driving threw the fast food line. There are many ways to achieve a 15 minute dinner, The Internet is full of what I call dump dinners. Basically , they are in three categories
1) slow cooker
2) stir fry
3) oven dinners.
We love a quiche ( aka impossible pie) with sausage and cheese or cheese and vegetables. There has to be a zillion possibilities.
Soups are easy in the slow cooker. Anything from split pea to vegetable bean, chicken and orzo. Navy bean. Clam chowder or potato soup. Chilli.
Costco has the organic, tomato and roasted red pepper soup back. It comes out to be two dollars a box and is a whole lot cheaper than buying it even at grocery outlet. We Doctor ot up with basil and blue cheese.
Stir fry veggies are a good price at Costco and go a long ways. You can add shrimp or chicken that has already been cooked . Cook it while the rice is cooking, or add ramen noodles.
Otherwise, you can get stir fry veggies at the dollar store or T Winco for 1.29 or so. Prices vary.
Mac and cheese ( scratch) is a winner here, as well as tuna noodle, enchiladas, pork chops on top of stuffing with apple and craisens. Pork chops with pineapple and green pepper, or chicken with pineapple and green pepper.
Baked potato bar with cheese, broccoli. Chili. Sour cream,
Tex -mex is always a hit. Nachos, tacos, enchiladas, burritos. A pie baked in a small round casserole with layers of tortillas. Cheese, refried beans, chicken or ground meat taco seasoned, topped off with refried beans and cheese. Baked in the oven.
Pizza, glorious pizza. Everyone likes it and it can be tailored to everyone's taste. .
Pasta: speghetti. Meat sauce, primavera. With shrimp and alfredo sauce. With tomatoes, parm, peas and peppers and cut up cooked chicken breast., olive oil.
Breakfast for dinner.
What's for dinner at your house!
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Sunday, February 28, 2016
fm ads
nite: this week Tuesday, March 1st is a ten percent off for seniors day. Clip coupon and certain things are exempt. It only works in private selection and natural choices food.
Oranges .69
Broccoli. Cauliflower .99
Barilla pasta .89. Limit six . The coupon pit there won't work. @@
Kroger tomatoes or beans .49@@
Strawberries 2/6
That's about it.
Oranges .69
Broccoli. Cauliflower .99
Barilla pasta .89. Limit six . The coupon pit there won't work. @@
Kroger tomatoes or beans .49@@
Strawberries 2/6
That's about it.
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Couponing. -- far from extreme.
It used to be that couponing meant that you could get a lot for free. Especially at places like Rite Aid.
I'm not seeing a lot of regular necessity things on big rewards. By watching coupons when we need heigene items, I can usually get them for near free. I don't carry a lot of those things, I buy toilet paper at Costco and that's about it. When I can find detergent for free or almost free, I go for it, otherwise, I get Costco.
As far as food is concerned, we are trying to avoid a lot of ready made food. It isn't always good for you and it's almost always more expensive. Cookbooks are full of easy ways to make good food fast. I do buy instant mashed potatoes, and some canned soups and frozen pizza.
There are still a lot of coupon opportunities for what I call real food. Coupons.com loads coupons the first day of the month. You are allowed to print two coupons per household. There is a limit on how many coupons can be printed, so the high dollar ones go fast. You snooze, you loose! Common courtesy says don't print all the coupons. Just the ones you are likely to use.
Favado is an app for your phone or other electronic device that is supposed to tell you the sales for a particular store. They aren't always accurate , but a good benchmark. They match coupons and tell
you where the coupons are located. You still have to read the fine print because they don't always do that.
Our ads come on the Tuesday mail for Alberways! And QFC ( Kroger) if they have an ad that week. Grocery outlet and Winco don't have ads. And Fred Meyers comes in the Sunday paper. I can get the Sunday paper on Saturday at the dollar tree for a dollar. I pull the inserts and the Fred Meyer food ad. I put inserts on a file folder after I date them and give them a quick look-over for things that I know I always buy on a weekly basis, like yogurt. It makes it easy when I find a coupon matchup that give you the name of the insert and the date it was released. I keep back three months.
All this takes minutes a month. It saves sometimes 75 percent off you bill. Usually about five dollars or so a week. Hey, it usually means about three hundred dollars , or another ten percent off our groceries a year. It all ads up. That's like thirty dollars an hour and I can do it in my pj's LOL.
There is no double couponing on this state that I have found and most stores will not let you make money on a sale. The only time that happens is with Ibotta or sometimes with reward points.
Ibotta is an ap that gives you rebates on food--even things like bread, milk, and veggies. When you have enough credited to your account, you get it back in a card to anywhere from Starbucks, Amazon, Walmart and more.
I don't calculate Ibotta money against my food budget. I spend 75.00 a week for two of us plus supplementing two others and that includes keeping a stock.
The USDA has stats for 4.income levels based on number of people in the family and their ages.
It is for actual food eaten. We are at half. Which makes sense, because I try for our food at 1/2 price.
No one thing makes that happen , it is a combination of efficient scratch cooking. Couponing, watching sales and trying to match coupons to them, only buying our everyday staples at 1/2 or less and stocking.
You can eat well on four dollars a day and have food in the pantry at the end of the month. It takes time, it takes patience, but it can happen.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
I'm not seeing a lot of regular necessity things on big rewards. By watching coupons when we need heigene items, I can usually get them for near free. I don't carry a lot of those things, I buy toilet paper at Costco and that's about it. When I can find detergent for free or almost free, I go for it, otherwise, I get Costco.
As far as food is concerned, we are trying to avoid a lot of ready made food. It isn't always good for you and it's almost always more expensive. Cookbooks are full of easy ways to make good food fast. I do buy instant mashed potatoes, and some canned soups and frozen pizza.
There are still a lot of coupon opportunities for what I call real food. Coupons.com loads coupons the first day of the month. You are allowed to print two coupons per household. There is a limit on how many coupons can be printed, so the high dollar ones go fast. You snooze, you loose! Common courtesy says don't print all the coupons. Just the ones you are likely to use.
Favado is an app for your phone or other electronic device that is supposed to tell you the sales for a particular store. They aren't always accurate , but a good benchmark. They match coupons and tell
you where the coupons are located. You still have to read the fine print because they don't always do that.
Our ads come on the Tuesday mail for Alberways! And QFC ( Kroger) if they have an ad that week. Grocery outlet and Winco don't have ads. And Fred Meyers comes in the Sunday paper. I can get the Sunday paper on Saturday at the dollar tree for a dollar. I pull the inserts and the Fred Meyer food ad. I put inserts on a file folder after I date them and give them a quick look-over for things that I know I always buy on a weekly basis, like yogurt. It makes it easy when I find a coupon matchup that give you the name of the insert and the date it was released. I keep back three months.
All this takes minutes a month. It saves sometimes 75 percent off you bill. Usually about five dollars or so a week. Hey, it usually means about three hundred dollars , or another ten percent off our groceries a year. It all ads up. That's like thirty dollars an hour and I can do it in my pj's LOL.
There is no double couponing on this state that I have found and most stores will not let you make money on a sale. The only time that happens is with Ibotta or sometimes with reward points.
Ibotta is an ap that gives you rebates on food--even things like bread, milk, and veggies. When you have enough credited to your account, you get it back in a card to anywhere from Starbucks, Amazon, Walmart and more.
I don't calculate Ibotta money against my food budget. I spend 75.00 a week for two of us plus supplementing two others and that includes keeping a stock.
The USDA has stats for 4.income levels based on number of people in the family and their ages.
It is for actual food eaten. We are at half. Which makes sense, because I try for our food at 1/2 price.
No one thing makes that happen , it is a combination of efficient scratch cooking. Couponing, watching sales and trying to match coupons to them, only buying our everyday staples at 1/2 or less and stocking.
You can eat well on four dollars a day and have food in the pantry at the end of the month. It takes time, it takes patience, but it can happen.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different
pro spective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food( shelf- stable/ freezer staples )at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop, rather than purchasing just what you need for a day or a week, you buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table consistently for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
De- fating ground beef
One if the ways you can make ground beef healthier, is to defat it. Beef is still a good source if protein that has iron and vitamin b-12 that is hard to get in good qualities in other foods. It's expensive now, and we eat it once or twice a week because if it's cost.
It used to be that batch cooking would be ten pounds or so; now three pounds to five pounds is plenty.
It is a more manageable quality and mess of us eat it.
Meat loaf in meat loaf pan so that the fat drips away from the meat and the meat isn't cooked in its own juices. Meatballs are cooked on rack over a sheet pan to drain fat. Meatballs were placed on rack using a portion scoop so that they are all the same size to facilitate even cooking.
I buy seven to nine percent fat hamburger -- Fifteen percent max. The way to compare prices is to multiply the percentage of fat plus 1. By the price. In other words of hamburger is 1.00 a pound and its 7percent fat, the net price is 1.07 or 1.00 X 1.07. ; if fifteen percent hambirger is 1.00, the net or ice would be 1.15. That way you can tell which hamburger is the cheapest.
De- fating the hamburger ( or other ground meat, Ground turkey and sausage don't have a fat content listed. )
1) brown the meat until it is no longer pink. Pour into colander. Set over bowl of you don't want the fat to go down your sink drain.
2) remove bowl, and pour boiling water over meat. Return drained meat to clean pan.
Heat and add taco seasoning, drain or separate some into portion controlled batches and add taco
seasoning to some.
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different prospective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food shelf/ freezer stable staples at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop you don't buy just what you need for a day or a week. You buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table and feed your family on a consistent basis good, nutritious meals for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Friday, February 26, 2016
Cake for dinner. ....
My granddaughters answer to what did she want for her birthday dinner was. Cake. I told her she could have meatloaf cake with mashed potato frosting and we would spell out her name in parsley. She wasn't impressed!
Last night we had pizza from scratch. 1/2 pepperoni and black olives, 1/2 cheese and black olives.
Tonight we are having breakfast for dinner.
After a long day. What"s for dinner is the last question you want to hear. Years ago, every once in a while I retorted with " whatever you cook! ". That had them standing with their mouth open! lol?
I digress......
What do you want to see covered in the blog.YOU CAN COMMENT BELOW. IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO HAVE A GOGGLE ACCOUNT, YOU CAN COMMENT UNDER ANONOMOUS.
What to do with what you have.
Chicken - whole. Or Thighs when appropriate.
- Chicken pot pie
- Chicken tacos or nachos
- Roast chicken dinner
- BBQ chicken thighs. Legs, and wings.
- Chicken soup
- Chicken noodle casserole
- Chicken and cheese stuffed shells
- Buffalo chicken pizza
- Chicken and vegetable stuffed baguette.
Pork Roast ( loin)
- Roast pork
- BBQ pork sandwiches
- Pork and vegetable stuffed baguette
- Pork pie
Other inexpensive protein sources : ground turkey or hambirger (7-9 percent fat) , cheese, beans, rice, eggs, sausage .
Groceries on the cheap is looking at the Put Dinner On The Table meal train from a different prospective. The emphasis is on purchasing good food shelf/ freezer stable staples at the lowest possible cost and purchasing enough to last you until it goes on sale again -- Keeping a controlled non-perishable stock of the things you use on a regular basis. It means that when you shop you don't buy just what you need for a day or a week. You buy a loss leader protein, produce you will need on sale, a stock item if it's a RBP, and dairy instead. This allows you to put well balanced meals on the table and feed your family on a consistent basis good, nutritious meals for a four dollar a day budget per person. You spend more time on the planning and shopping end of the meal train and less on the cooking end by cooking efficiently.
Four dollars a day is the target amount for people on snap. My premise is that of you can do it on four dollars a day, spending more isn't hard. You still get more bang for your buck.
Thursday, February 25, 2016
Om gosh...it's bad for you....a parody.
Hey, I have been watching way too much in the Internet about food that is bad for you, so I have come up with my own ideas......
1) WATER. Omg. It hydrates you,,,,and then you have to pee.......and my husband says that it rusts your pipes !
2) American cheese slices.....OMGOsh.......the first imgredient is cheddar cheese!
3). Food at the dollar tree..... Potatoes , frozen potatoes and their from IDAHO! Need I say more.
I have been reading a lot on the subject of what you should and shouldn't eat. Some of it contradicts itself. Somethings I've checked, and just isn't true. When in doubt, read the labels. Some suggest you make product yourself. I am reluctant with the amount of food borne illness that can happen. I think you are better off leaving things that need precise monitoring to the professionals. Not to mention, all that takes time.
The things that have been identified that are really bad for you that we can pretty much buy into are hydrogenated oils, ( thicken your blood) , HFCS, concentrated sugar, nitrates ( cancer causing ) , and fake sugar.
I'm still staying within the guidelines of four dollars a day per person or less. A lot of things I can and we already don't eat.
We love pepperoni and sausage. I am just limiting our consumption to once every week or two.
A lot of HFCS has been eliminated by manufacturers and I count carbs closely, so a lot of that concern is not a problem. We don't eat a lot of catsup or BBQ sauce. I almost never drink soda. Our cookie consumption is not a problem,.
The things that will be a problem are the hydrogenated oil and fake sugar. I already drink coffee and tea black. I drink a lot of water. I do use some things that are sugar free because of diet restrictions.
Hydrogenated oils are a problem because they are in so many of our foods . I use olive oil in our cooking almost exclusively. We use real butter. I think it is remarkable that the fake butter that is supposed to be good for you , that costs twice as much as real butter, is actually worse for you than the real thing. I looked at two fake butters. One had water for its first ingredient, The other was a bit better, it had olive oil in it as well as hydrogenated oil.
We bake our fried potatoes, I don't buy potato chips and the like, I use olive oil in dressings, and we don't use a lot of salad dressing. Mayonnaise comes with partial olive oil, I get tuna packed in water.
But, there is a lot of hidden oils in our foods. Not buying a lot of ready makes helps. Reading labels helps. Remember, ingredients are listed in order of volume. I read several jars of peanut butter at the grocery store. There was actually some that had very little oil and sugar, not HFCS.
The cost wasn't prohibitive either.
You can't believe everything you hear about a product, read the labels for yourself. There is a lot of misinformation and generalities out there, but it can be clarified with the simple reading of a label. Some brands are better than others and cost doesn't seem to be a factor. I looked at two cans of beans. The Winco brand, the cheapest had beans, water, amd salt. The other brand had beans, water, salt and a couple of preservatives.
The above information is based in a lot of reading. I am by no way an expert. I am just repeating what the consensus of opinions were. I think I read that the FDA was mandating that the manufacturers fix cake mixes and frosting mixes by a particular date. The problem might be that they are having a problem finding a suitable substitute.
1) WATER. Omg. It hydrates you,,,,and then you have to pee.......and my husband says that it rusts your pipes !
2) American cheese slices.....OMGOsh.......the first imgredient is cheddar cheese!
3). Food at the dollar tree..... Potatoes , frozen potatoes and their from IDAHO! Need I say more.
I have been reading a lot on the subject of what you should and shouldn't eat. Some of it contradicts itself. Somethings I've checked, and just isn't true. When in doubt, read the labels. Some suggest you make product yourself. I am reluctant with the amount of food borne illness that can happen. I think you are better off leaving things that need precise monitoring to the professionals. Not to mention, all that takes time.
The things that have been identified that are really bad for you that we can pretty much buy into are hydrogenated oils, ( thicken your blood) , HFCS, concentrated sugar, nitrates ( cancer causing ) , and fake sugar.
I'm still staying within the guidelines of four dollars a day per person or less. A lot of things I can and we already don't eat.
We love pepperoni and sausage. I am just limiting our consumption to once every week or two.
A lot of HFCS has been eliminated by manufacturers and I count carbs closely, so a lot of that concern is not a problem. We don't eat a lot of catsup or BBQ sauce. I almost never drink soda. Our cookie consumption is not a problem,.
The things that will be a problem are the hydrogenated oil and fake sugar. I already drink coffee and tea black. I drink a lot of water. I do use some things that are sugar free because of diet restrictions.
Hydrogenated oils are a problem because they are in so many of our foods . I use olive oil in our cooking almost exclusively. We use real butter. I think it is remarkable that the fake butter that is supposed to be good for you , that costs twice as much as real butter, is actually worse for you than the real thing. I looked at two fake butters. One had water for its first ingredient, The other was a bit better, it had olive oil in it as well as hydrogenated oil.
We bake our fried potatoes, I don't buy potato chips and the like, I use olive oil in dressings, and we don't use a lot of salad dressing. Mayonnaise comes with partial olive oil, I get tuna packed in water.
But, there is a lot of hidden oils in our foods. Not buying a lot of ready makes helps. Reading labels helps. Remember, ingredients are listed in order of volume. I read several jars of peanut butter at the grocery store. There was actually some that had very little oil and sugar, not HFCS.
The cost wasn't prohibitive either.
You can't believe everything you hear about a product, read the labels for yourself. There is a lot of misinformation and generalities out there, but it can be clarified with the simple reading of a label. Some brands are better than others and cost doesn't seem to be a factor. I looked at two cans of beans. The Winco brand, the cheapest had beans, water, amd salt. The other brand had beans, water, salt and a couple of preservatives.
The above information is based in a lot of reading. I am by no way an expert. I am just repeating what the consensus of opinions were. I think I read that the FDA was mandating that the manufacturers fix cake mixes and frosting mixes by a particular date. The problem might be that they are having a problem finding a suitable substitute.
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
This weeks meals
meal plans for this week.
monday: roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green salad with cucumbers and tomatoes.
Tuesday: out
Wednesday : BBQ pork sandwiches, salad , waffle fries mixed fruit
Time go away from me, I skipped the fries. Plenty of carbs from the bread.
Thursday : homemade pizza
Friday : tuna noodle casserole, peas and carrots
Saturday: tacos, refried beans, rice.
Sunday : breakfast for dinner. : eggs, hash browns ( oven) mixed fruit , English muffins,
2 pork or chicken
2 vegetarian
1 fish
1 beef
1 parents night out.
Notes :
Monday
green salad is romaine and cucumbers from Winco purchase less than target prices. Chicken eas .87 a pound. 2.85
Wednesday :
BBQ pork sandwich is part of the pork roast purchased do 1.69 a pound , a baguette at .95 and
More of Wednesday's green salad. 2.50
Thursday
Home made pizza- scratch crust from winco .98, pepperoni .50 from FM with coupon, cheese .50 1/2 pound, tomato from yesterday's homemade BBQ sauce. 2.00
Friday
Tuna casserole, Noodles purchased for a dollar. Tuna from Costco, peas and carrots purchased at QFC for .65 . Home made cream sauce. 3.65
Saturday
Sausage purchased for 3.00 ( mixed with cheese and vegetables ) , peppers frozen from 6/3 at grocery outlet, and potatoes 1.50 for five pounds.
3.95
All less than five dollars a meal.
Thanks for stopping by
Jane
monday: roast chicken, mashed potatoes, green salad with cucumbers and tomatoes.
Tuesday: out
Wednesday : BBQ pork sandwiches, salad , waffle fries mixed fruit
Time go away from me, I skipped the fries. Plenty of carbs from the bread.
Thursday : homemade pizza
Friday : tuna noodle casserole, peas and carrots
Saturday: tacos, refried beans, rice.
Sunday : breakfast for dinner. : eggs, hash browns ( oven) mixed fruit , English muffins,
2 pork or chicken
2 vegetarian
1 fish
1 beef
1 parents night out.
Notes :
Monday
green salad is romaine and cucumbers from Winco purchase less than target prices. Chicken eas .87 a pound. 2.85
Wednesday :
BBQ pork sandwich is part of the pork roast purchased do 1.69 a pound , a baguette at .95 and
More of Wednesday's green salad. 2.50
Thursday
Home made pizza- scratch crust from winco .98, pepperoni .50 from FM with coupon, cheese .50 1/2 pound, tomato from yesterday's homemade BBQ sauce. 2.00
Friday
Tuna casserole, Noodles purchased for a dollar. Tuna from Costco, peas and carrots purchased at QFC for .65 . Home made cream sauce. 3.65
Saturday
Sausage purchased for 3.00 ( mixed with cheese and vegetables ) , peppers frozen from 6/3 at grocery outlet, and potatoes 1.50 for five pounds.
3.95
All less than five dollars a meal.
Thanks for stopping by
Jane
Quality foods
I just read an article that indicates seven foods that if you eat too much if, can hurt you. Lately, I have been researching a lot. For every idea, there is someone to d bunk it. I tend to research the source before I repeat them. Bottom line, use common sense. Most of the "new age " foods are over processed. Isn't that what the foodies are trying to avoid?
I give everything I read a taste of common sense. Is it Logical? Who's funding the study? Some lady told me the other day that nutritionists only say what they learned. Well, duh!
There is too much contradictory out there. Our grandmothers USDA food pyramid has been revised to deal with the too much salt, sugar, and fat. It has worked for years. My grandfather was 92 years old when he died. This new-age food has not stood the test of time. I'm not sure that substituting one thing for another isn't just opening a new can of worms.
There are far too many picky eaters out there. I think that is more of a problem than eating a tried and true balanced diet. Vegetables are only good for you if you eat them.
My take.....
Eat basic food. Make it tasty. Buy the best quality of regular food you can afford. You can eat cheaper food; just eat good cheaper food.
We eat hot dogs seldom. When we do we eat them , I only buy Hebrew National or Nathan's. I only buy good white albacore tuna packed in water. Foster Farms chicken. Buy good food cheap; not cheap food.
I go back to eat in moderation. There are a lot of foods that aren't supposed to be good for you. ( this week) If you eliminate every food that someone says is bad for you, you would die from mal-nutrition--there would be nothing left to eat.
My take : Just eat a well balanced diet of a wide variety of foods in moderation. You can't fool Mother Nature. Fake is never better than the real thing.
Basic, bottom line, if you are trying to feed your family on four dollars per person per day, you can still eat good basic food and have enough to eat. You don't have to resort to beans every night or leave out whole food groups. You can avoid or use in moderation the things that are bad for you. That is, that have been proven to be bad for you. Even the experts acknowledge that to omit all the substances that are bad for you would be nearly impossible.
Some manufacturers are working on the HFCS and the hydroginated oils. I use a lot of olive oil which is better for you. It just doesn't work in a lot of things. You can avoid some of the things, but all of them would be hard. Mayonnaise does come with part olive oil and it is the same price as regular mayo.
Ingredient labels in this country have to list ingredients in order of their volume. If the first ingredient is hydroginated oil or water.......think again. If it is the last on the list, you're probably ok.
Buying food 1/2 price means you can be picky about what foods you feed your family and be mindful of the best quality you can afford.
I give everything I read a taste of common sense. Is it Logical? Who's funding the study? Some lady told me the other day that nutritionists only say what they learned. Well, duh!
There is too much contradictory out there. Our grandmothers USDA food pyramid has been revised to deal with the too much salt, sugar, and fat. It has worked for years. My grandfather was 92 years old when he died. This new-age food has not stood the test of time. I'm not sure that substituting one thing for another isn't just opening a new can of worms.
There are far too many picky eaters out there. I think that is more of a problem than eating a tried and true balanced diet. Vegetables are only good for you if you eat them.
My take.....
Eat basic food. Make it tasty. Buy the best quality of regular food you can afford. You can eat cheaper food; just eat good cheaper food.
We eat hot dogs seldom. When we do we eat them , I only buy Hebrew National or Nathan's. I only buy good white albacore tuna packed in water. Foster Farms chicken. Buy good food cheap; not cheap food.
I go back to eat in moderation. There are a lot of foods that aren't supposed to be good for you. ( this week) If you eliminate every food that someone says is bad for you, you would die from mal-nutrition--there would be nothing left to eat.
My take : Just eat a well balanced diet of a wide variety of foods in moderation. You can't fool Mother Nature. Fake is never better than the real thing.
Basic, bottom line, if you are trying to feed your family on four dollars per person per day, you can still eat good basic food and have enough to eat. You don't have to resort to beans every night or leave out whole food groups. You can avoid or use in moderation the things that are bad for you. That is, that have been proven to be bad for you. Even the experts acknowledge that to omit all the substances that are bad for you would be nearly impossible.
Some manufacturers are working on the HFCS and the hydroginated oils. I use a lot of olive oil which is better for you. It just doesn't work in a lot of things. You can avoid some of the things, but all of them would be hard. Mayonnaise does come with part olive oil and it is the same price as regular mayo.
Ingredient labels in this country have to list ingredients in order of their volume. If the first ingredient is hydroginated oil or water.......think again. If it is the last on the list, you're probably ok.
Buying food 1/2 price means you can be picky about what foods you feed your family and be mindful of the best quality you can afford.
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