Friday, February 8, 2019

What we don’t buy

We  eat on less than four dollars a day.   Now, to be fair, we are not feeding a linebacker or construction worker.  We are feeding some of a 7yo.

We, however, buy good food cheap rather than cheap food.  Buying your food from more than  one store, buying it in bulk to keep a four  week stock, saves tons of money.

We don’t buy :


  • Chicken that isn’t local. We buy NW grown chicken.  
  • Fake Parmesan cheese. That stuff in the green box has wood pulp in it 
  • Fake maple syrup.   Use less, enjoy more 
  • Fake vanilla.  We use very little vanilla, it doesn’t go bad, enjoy the food stuff. 
  • Cheap hot dogs,  processed meat isn’t supposed to be good for you.  We eat some, but we limit the use and don’t  buy cheap.   
  • Boxed Mac and cheese. Some of that stuff has a caustic soap in it.  Also sugar.  You are much better off making scratch.  Kids will eat what you lit in front of them if they aren’t used to garbage.   
  • Boxed sugary cereals.  Our grandchild just doesn’t like it, she would rather have a bowl of real oatmeal.  
  • A lot of chips and cookies.  If you are especially on snap these days, it is better to buy all of what you need of good, basic food, and then,if you have money leftover, buy the snacks.  If I brought home 10 bags of chips when my children were home, they would eat 10 bags of chips, not good for them and they won’t eat good food if they are full of garbage.   We buy tortilla chips for part of dinners.   
  • Ditto pop. 
  • Fruit juice,  full of sugar.  Ditto fruit boxes.   The nutritionist when my daughter was little told me. It to give her even natural unfiltered apple juice.  She said she would be better off eating the apple.  
  • Herbal teas are good, amd hydrate without rotting teeth out and filling kids up so they don’t eat good food.  
  • Catsup with HFCS.  Read the labels. Use less . 
  • Boxed food.   I have still got a certain number of things, but have avoided a lot and make our own mixes. 



Thursday, February 7, 2019

Hauls to 2/6

Safeways
Grapes 1.99
Total 3.94

Nite these were free because of a precious overcharge.

QFC
Sargento cheese slices 1.49
Bread w coupon .29
Blues 3.88 18 Oz
Chicken wings 4.99- 2.5 lbs

Total 16.61

Total soent 16.61


Dollar tree
Noodles
Bagels ( priced at 3.99 at safeways)
Total 2.00

Safeways
Pie crust 1.26
Cream cheese 1.67
Chocolate whip cream 1.99
Grapes 2.75
Cost 7.66 actual FREE

Grand total 18.61 out of pocket

Winco
Eggs 1.28


Total out of pocket
19.89

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Best of the ads

Best of the ads...working in the internet again because I didn’t get the ads in the mail.  

Fred Meyers 

Roast sale BOGO - nomway of knowing if there are bargains or not, 
apples. Several varieties.99
Milk .99
Blues 3.99

Strawberries 2/5
Yoplait 10/5$$

Orowheat bread BOGO 
Note you can  sometimes  get it at the DT. 

Digi up to 5 
Cream cheese 1.49
Pasta 4/2
Nathan’s 3.99

QFC 
Draper valley boneless, skinless breast, thighs BOGO 

Digi - up to 5 
Cream cheese 1.29
Cottage cheese 1.29
Ore Ida frozen 2 lbs 1.79

Alberways 
Progresso soup .88@@

Cereal and bars, various brands 1.88 probably $$



Things you can buy at the DT that are good.

In his climate of the aftermath of the government shutdown, there are probably people that are stretching their food a bit more than usual.  Here is a listing of Dollar Tree food that is good and a way to get through.  Some food is better than others. I am listing the things that can make meals and are mostly name brands that can be purchased elsewhere.

  • Chicken boullion 
  • Barilla pasta 
  • Thomas bagels 
  • Noodles 
  • Hunts pasta sauce 
  • Tortillas - read the package, so, have little hydroginated oil and no lard. 
  • Beans - pinto beans are grown in USA and non gmo.
  • Soft white bread 
  • Name brand turkey bacon 
  • Enchalada sauce, although scratch is easy and cheaper.  

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Little money , no problem,

I have been watching people’s hauls on food stamps.  There are the good, the bad and the ugly represented there.   I started this blog to help people stretch their food dollar so that they could eat reasonably  good for  for low cost.  Google has made it impossible to share.  To say that I’m bummed is an understatement.  There is not much sense in me spending hours a day to write a blog and research if no one is able to find it.  People don’t stop and look for sites, they want a reminder or a link.   Unless I can go viral on Facebook, I don’t think I will be wasting my time.

One maybe last time.   How to s t r e t c h food to feed a family when there is no money left.


  • Make chicken noodle soup.  Chicken thighs were .78 a pound.   A pound of chicken thighs, a couple of carrots, a rob of celery and some chicken steelmakers soup.  Cook chicken, remove the meat from the bones . Place the bones in a bag or plastic container.  Wash veggies, peel the carrots and save the peelings in your “bag” .  Save the ends of the celery on the bag as well.   Cook the chopped vegetables in chicken stock.  When they are tender, add the cooked chicken that has been cut up or shredded.  Add noodles and cook until tender. Cheezy biscuits are a good pairing. Noodles can be found at the Dollar  tree. Or, you can make them yourself. 
  • Take the bones and vegetables you have saved from this cook or more and place on a s,ow cooker with water up to within an inch of the top.  Add 2 T Italian seasoning and set the skow cooker to low.   You can do this before you go to bed and wake up on the morning to chicken  stock ready to strain.  Freeze or use soon.   
  • Potato soup. Peel and cut 2 lbs potatoes into cubes.   Peel 2 large or 3 small carrots and slice.   Wash and cut  up a rib of celery.   Cook in insta pot with chicken stock.   When vegetables are tender. Add a half cup of milk that has been thickened with 2 Tbls of cornstarch.  Stir  until soup has  thickened . Garnish with anything you have. Bacon, cheese,chives, sour cream.  Turkey bacon is at the dollar tree. 
  • Chili.  Hamburger (1/4 pound already cooked and de fatted  , 2 cups beans, dried. 2:cans diced tomatoes, 3 cups beef stock.  Cook 35 minutes in the insta pot, or cook on the stove . 
  • Leftover chili can do double duty by making nachos,  cheese, nacho chips, chili, peppers, diced tomato or fresh tomato.  Leftover block olives. Tortilla chips are cheapest at Costco.  
  • Flour tortillas are at the dollar store.   Mix real cheese with beans a a 1/4 pound of hamburger and fill tortillas and place in a baking pan that has been spread with enchilada sauce.  Homemade enchilada sauce is really easy and cheap to make.  I hear it is also at the dollar tree and  you can use 1/2 a can.  I have not tried it , or looked at its country of origin.  Put more enchilada sauce on the rolled enchiladas and cover with cheese.  You can also add a .69 can of mild  green chilies from Winco drained.  Place the n a medium oven and heat through until the cheese is melted.  
  • Flour tortillas can also make breakfast burritos.  Add smashed beans, cooked sausage, and scrambled eggs, cheese  and fold.  Eggs continue to be cheap if you shop around.  Winco has them for 1.28, others were two dollars.  Sausage can be cheap of you use coupons and shop around.  The price discrepancy  between stores for the same brand and size of chub can be between 2.48 and six dollars.  
  • Spaghetti in the insta pot. Or not, is another cheap meal. 1/2 a package is adequate for four servings.  Barilla is a dollar  at the dollar store. And, you can find it cheaper on sale.  Pasta sauce is cheaper to buy ham make scratch.  A can is .88 at winco.  Jars can still be found for a dollar on sale and the jar cost .80 to buy.  I wouldn’t use it to can, but for dried food or storage on the fridge, it works.   Add meat and or parm cheese.   8 minutes in the insta pot.  You need 2 cups of stock or water in the insta pot.  
  • Pizza crust  costs .19.  You can get pizza sauce at the dollar tree for a dollar.  Freeze the sauce in an ice cube tray and pop out onto a freezer bag.   Use 2 cubes for a pizza.  Or take a couple of tablespoons out of the pasta sauce in a pinch.  Add cheese and any vegetable or meat you have around.  A cheese pizza can cost a dollar made from scratch 

  • 7 meals, piggy backing ingredients. Low cost.  





Book review: Betty Crocker bisquick cookbook

Berry cricker bisquick cookbook c 2000

302 pages of every imaginable way to cook with Bisquick.

Many recipes are ways to make a dish that might call for a yeast bread or store bought bread in a pinch.  Everything from pizza crust, waffles, pancakes, popover dough, cakes, pies, tarts, dumplings, stews, a syrup substitute that is better than the sugar laden syrup you buy.


  • Autumn brunch waffles 
  • Cinnamon cider syrup 
  • Waffles 
  • Whole wheat waffles with honey pecan syrup
  • Chocolate waffles 
  • Belgian waffles 
  • Pancakes 
  • Puffy pancake 
  • Potato pancakes 
  • Danish 
  • Coffee cakes 
  • Fruit swirl coffee cake 
  • Banana nut bread 
  • Pumpkin bread 
  • Blueberry muffins 
  • Scones ,
  • Egg and sausage bake 
  • Apple brunch cake 
  • Cheese  garlic biscuits 
  • Mini Chinese chicken snacks 
  • Sausage cheese balls 
  • Crab cakes 
  • Biscuits 
  • Pull apart bread 
  • Beer bread 
  • Cheese flatbread 
  • Cheeseburger bake 
  • Italian sausage pot pies 
  • Oven fried chicken 
  • Easy chicken pot pie 
  • California pizza
  • Turkey with corn bread casserole 
  • Southwestern  bean bake 
  • Veggie pizza
  • Asian oven pancake 
  • Easy pizza pie 
  • Chicken Primavera pie 
  • Salmon asparagus pie 
  • Impossibly easy Mac and cheese pie 
  • Impossibly easy spinach pie 
  • Impossibly easy cheesecake
  • Impossibly easy mocha fudge cheesecake 
  • Quick fruit cobbler
  • Impossibly easy French Apple pie 
  • Impossibly easy pecan pumpkin pie 
  • Chocolate swirl cake 
  • Strawbweey shortcake
  • Peach toffee crisp
  • Pineapple upside down cake 
  • Carmel Apple cake 
  • Cream cheese pound cake 
  • Caramel turtle bars 
  • Chocolate chip cookies 
  • Veggie pizza pie 
  • Glaszed  lemon bars 
  • Granola pancakes 
  • Berry banana bread 
  • Citrus yogurt muffins 


Monday, February 4, 2019

Monday Kitchen Management aka food prep

Kitchen Management aka food Prep saves time and money.  You are preping what you are eating the next week and cleaning up the kitchen once.  Cleaning the kitchen is not everyone’s most favorite job, so doing it once instead of multiple times is a good thing.

Reminder of meal plans.


  • Chicken noodle soup 
  • Pizza
  • Chicken pot pie 
  • Tacos , refried beans 
  • Brats, rice and peppers 
  • Chicken adobo, rice 
  • Breakfast for dinner 

Things to do 
  1. Wash kitchen floor 
  2. Wash and disinfect the kitchen countertops and sinks and drains.
  3. Clean out the refrigerator and dump anything dead 💀. 
  4. Make a note of things you need to use up shortly. 
  5. Wash carrots and celery with vinegar
  6. Make chocolate pudding, 
  7. Straighten pantry 
  8. Replenish the rice mix. 





Sunday, February 3, 2019

Meal Plans

Meal plans are a necessary part of planning for dinner that saves time and money.

Having a matrix that works for you makes the chore fast and easy. Taking into consideration, what needs to be used soon and what you have purchased on a clearance section is a good thing. Having a form  that also includes  a basic list of food that you can check off what you have and mark what you need to buy is also a great help.
  • Chicken noodle soup. Cheesy biscuits 
  •  Pizza
  • Chicken pot pie , chocolate pudding with chocolate whip cream 
  • Tacos, refried beans ( homemade) 
  •  Brats with rice and peppers
  •  Chicken adobo. Rice 
  •  Breakfast for dinner 

Notes :

  1. Chicken noodle soup uses the last of a package of noodles . Cheezy biscuits are a baking powder biscuit that has been rolled out and filled like cinnamon rolls, but with cheese and herbs instead of the brown sugar and butter.   
  2. Pizza is a mainstay,  cost 1.27 for pepperoni and 1.00 for plain cheese. 
  3. Chicken pot pie is to use the 1.25 double crust I got on closeout .  This will make 2 pies when only having a top crust. 
  4. Tacos uses already cooked hamburger, lettuce, tomato, and cheese. Refried beans in the insta pot.  Not cheaper than canned, but more healthy with no fat. Better tasting 
  5.  Brats uses the rest of a package from last week. Rice is .02 a serving, amd peppers are frozen and purchased for a dollar a pepper.  
  6. Chicken adobo is from Taste of Home a carryover from last week  . Add rice.   
  7. Breakfast for dinner is a family affair and everyone participates in the cooking. 
Cooking for two meals that often a batch or oackagemif is,etching gets repeated in order to it waste food. 




Easy savings

There are quotes that emphasize principles of Groceries on the Cheap. One basic principle is that “It isn’t necessarily what you buy, but, rather, when and where you buy it.

By switching your mindset from I want xxx and I’m going to buy it , to I want to feed our family things they like that I can incorporate into good meals, you can save a bundle.

Yesterday we hit the dollar store.  There are things that the dollar store carries that make no sense to buy at any other store.  Cleaning supplies are one category.  A lot are name brands or just as good quality ingredients as anywhere else, just at a fraction of the cost.  

You don’t want to pay much for anything that goes away.  Things like paper products, foil, wrapping paper or gift  bags, are not cheap elsewhere and why pay more for something  that isn’t durable or long lasting.  The paper napkins are smaller and for the most part do an adequate job for those times when you are eating bbq ribs or other messy food.  You can use cloth napkins, but it is more practical to use paper when the food is messy and likely to stain the cloth.

I digress .
Yesterday we bought Thomas bagels for a dollar at the dollar store.   They were 3.99 elsewhere.   
Butter was 4.00 a pound, I paid 2.50 on a sale.   Cake mix can be upwards of 2.50, or .78.  
We paid .41 for cream soup.  It is 1.58 now.   It isn’t what you buy, but when and where you buy it.  

Barilla pasta is 1.00 at the dollar store. It was .98 at another store, and 2/3.00 at yet another.  Now, I’m not going to drive to a particular store for two cents.   If I’m already there and especially if I have a coupon, I’m going to use the coupon on the lowest price.  But, you have to consider that you can get 50 to 75 cents on your dollar just by knowing prices and taking advantage of the good ones.   If the banker was going to give you 50 percent interest instead of the fractions of a percentage they are paying you, you would be stupid not to jump at the chance.  You are getting that percentage on your money and you aren’t paying income tax on it.  

I was sick last week.  My husband went to the store and bought groceries with a list.  When he got home I noticed  that we were charged 5.68 for something we didn’t get.  He took the receipt and food back to the store,  they gave him credit, but not for the amount of the overcharge.   I politely wrote the management.  I felt it wasn’t prudent to have to go back to the store twice.  They gave me my money back and a gift card for twenty dollars.   We used part of the twenty dollars to buy a few things to fill in our groceries for the week.   I checked Ibotta and found a 15 cent rebate.  Ibotta takes a couple of clicks and a picture and it gives you basically free money.  The 15 cents put me over the top and I now have a 20.00 gift card for amazon. 40.00 free money.   Sweet. And, I sent a few minutes at a time over a period of time.   That three minutes that I might have been waiting for the water to boil on the stove, or for hubby to get ready to leave the house.   

A few cents here, a few cents there can make your money 💰 stretch and improve your quality of life.   

I , especially with recent goings on, can’t stress enough that everyone should have a four to six week supply of basic food on hand.  It can be done on a four dollar a day budget.  It just takes avoiding the f word....full price.   If you can get four packages of bagels for the same price as one, you have one for this week, and three in the freezer for the next 3 weeks. If you pay a dollar for Barilla pasta. Instead of 1.50, you can have three pastas for the price of two.   Two pastas for the next 2 weeks.  Double that and you have a five week supply.  You have spent the same amount, but you have hedged your bet covering yourself for an emergency situation and giving yourself peace of mind.  Studies
have shown that the person that has to worry about where the next meal is  coming from has a lower life expectancy.  Children should not have to live with that insecurity.

It just takes a concentrated effort.  After you have a small stock, you can go to the store and buy what you need to replenish with sale prices and fresh produce and dairy on sale. 



Saturday, February 2, 2019

The basics

Haven”t written this for a while.

The basic concept of groceries in the cheap is never to pay full price for your food.   This is realized by taking some baby steps that take a little time, but only have to be done once.

  • Make a list of dinners that your family likes that use inexpensive sources of protein. 
  • Simplify the protein.  The less ingredients you use  , the less items you have to buy and the easier it is to organize and store your supplies.   We use boneless , skinless chicken breast, pork loin, and hamburger. Add cheese, beans, rice and eggs.   Picking versitle sources of protein is key. 
  • Buy your protein in bulk at its lowest price.  This is more beneficial if you find a sale  and rotate your purchases buying a four  to six week supply at a time.  This means that if you use a pound of hamburger a week,you will buy four to six pounds of hamburger.   
  • Use the store ads to fill in what you need.  Know your prices of  the things  you buy on a regular basis.  Write them down in  a small notebook for a few weeks and you will  see a pattern.  This will tell you when you are likely to find things the cheapest. 
  • Use every available means at your disposal to lower costs.  Coupons, sales., apps  like Ibotta.  Every little thing is a help.  Don’t pay to much time to it, but a few minutes can reap great rewards.  Taking a couple of minutes while watching tv to load coupons on a store card with anything you regularly buy can save money.  We just paid .29 for a loaf of bread.  It cost me a quarter t make bread and I didn’t have the labor. 
  • Portion control.  No teen needs to eat the better part of a two pound roast.   Fill the plates in the kitchen or put what you expect to eat on the table.  Fill little kids plates with a small portion, they can have seconds if they eat what  they have. Waste not, want not. 
  • Use every bit.  Make soup, make stock instead of buying stock.  It takes almost no time and saves a lot of money.  Like five minutes saves several bucks.  Your ingredients are free.  Dumping a few things in  a slow cooker and going to bed is not really work. 
  • Efficient scratch cook.   The internet and Pinterest are full of ideas for recipes that take less time to make.  Spend more time planning and shopping and less time cooking,  the money is to be made on the planning and buying of the food. Not the cooking.   
  • Tools like insta pots. Slow cookers, and food processers help on saving time and money.
  • Always shop in at least two stores a week.  Go with a plan and stay away from junk food and drinks.   If you must buy junk food and drinks, use a separate budget so that it is abundantly clear how much those items add to your budget.   Going to two stores gives you the best selection of produce and two sets of sale items. 
  • Go with the plan of replenishing your stock.  You are not buying a weeks worth of food.  This affords you the luxury of never having to pay full price.  Dairy usually goes on sale at least once a month.  Much of it with the exception of milk, has a near month pull date.   
  • Buy fresh vegetables and fruit in season at their lowest price.  Otherwise, buy frozen.  Frozen sometimes can actually be  fresher than fresh. 
  • Keep a supply of eggs equivelentto three weeks supply.  If eggs aren’t at your buy price. You won’t get stuck.  
  • Dry goods can be purchased when on sale, buy 4-6 weeks supply unless that goes on a mega sale at a particular time of year. Picnic condiments go on at summer holiday time.baking supplies go on at Christmas and thanksgiving time.  Less at Easter.  
  • Meal prep time is a good tool to save time and  money.  Anything you can do once and use for a week is a time saver and you only cleanup once.   When the meal is half prepped. You are more likely to finish it when you are tired than you are to call for pizza.   Pizza costs 1.27 for a scratch pepperoni pizza when you buy your ingredients for a RBP. It can cost 20.00 for delivery when you add tax and tip.  There is, o tax here on ingredients,  it anything bought that requires a food handlers card is taxed. 
  • One of biggest things you can do to save money is to go to Costco or Sams club and buy a bulk sack of flour, oatmeal, yeast, and rice. Saves hundreds.  Muffins can cost a dollar a piece.  A dozen smaller ones can cost .30. Better for your waistline and budget.   
Little things all add up.  One step at a time. 




Friday, February 1, 2019

The story behind groceries on the cheap

Long ago, in the 70s , I was a single parent.  We went through double digit inflation in the 70’s and I had a job that didn’t get a raise in three years. Our  rent went from 145.00 to 285.00. Child support was sparotic at best and we didn’t qualify for welfare, or so they said.  Needless to say, it was sink or swim.  I already learned a lot from my mother about stretching your food dollar, but I set out to learn more.  I watched everything I could find on our 10 inch black and white tv with rabbit ears, and  got every book I could find in the library.  Food was the  most expensive part of our descressionary income.  I cut the dry cycle on the dishwasher and turned off the heat on some of the rooms.  December of 1972 we ate on 25.00 for the month.

Fast forward to the 80’s and things were better .  It was a habit by then and we still economized on food.   I was published in the Woman’s Day and Taste of Home.

On to the 90’s and beyond and my daughter had graduated from college and had been teaching children from low income families for years.   She was getting feedback from mothers that were lamenting that they were running out of snap before they ran out of month.  She , trying to help, told them my mother knows how to stretch a food dollar.  My adult children convinced  their not so tech savvy mother to start a blog.

And the rest is history.

I have written a blog almost every day for almost six years.   It is my hope that I can reach people that need to stretch their food dollars.   No one should go without proper food.  I have heard horror stories of kids eating top ramen and potato chips for breakfast , lunch and dinner, and Sunday dinner being corn on the cob and watermelon.

A few changes a little at a time can change your habits to make it easy to feed your family on four dollars a day and keep a four to six week supply of basic food.  The recent government shutdown is a good example of why this is necessary.  Anything can happen from weather to shutdowns to other natural or unnatural disasters.  Having a small stock saves money and gives you piece of mind.

We were already pretty frugal, but I set out to lower our food costs as low  as I could without sacrificing good food.  It wasn’t until I set out to write a class that  it came to me that we were in fact eating on less than four dollars a day and grew a small stock.  In fact, last year our grocery expenses were almost 5.00 a week less than four dollars a day.  The usda has charts on line that tell you what your cost of food at home should be per your family ages and sizes.  This is not adjusted for your States COL index

It happened  one little step at a time.








What we ate : Jan 2019

What we ate:

  1. Vegetable bean soup with oatmeal French bread 
  2. Ham quiche , salsa 
  3. Soup over rice 
  4. BLT’s 
  5. Ham and Alfredo sauce pasta 
  6. Pork sausage quiche , pear, blue cheese and walnut salad 
  7. Pizza
  8. Pizza
  9. Chicken pot pie 
  10. Potato soup
  11. Pizza
  12. Spaghetti
  13. Sausage, sauerkraut, apple 
  14. Chicken noodle soup
  15. Pizza
  16. Quesadillas
  17. Pork chops, apple bread dressing with Craisens , green beans. 
  18. Pork chops, applesauce, baked potatoes 
  19. Burrito bowls 
  20. Nachos 
  21. Chili
  22. Orange chicken, fried rice 
  23. Baked potato bar 
  24. Chicken soup 
  25. Ham and Swiss sliders , fries 
  26. Tacos 
  27. Hamburgers, French fries 
  28. Ham and cheese quiche with red peppers and chives. 
  29. Pizza
  30. Brats, oven fries, sliced tomatoes dressed 
  31. Tuna casserole 

Thursday, January 31, 2019

Hauls to 1/30

Grocery outlet

Celestial seasoning tea 1.49
Elbow macaroni .33
Blue cheese 1.00
Pepper jack slices 2.00
Swiss slices 2.00
Total 8.15

Big lots
V 8 2.40
Marshmallows .76
Total 3.18

Winco
Ice cream 2.99
Potatoes 1.99

Total 16.31

QFC
3 pasta @.49
Milk .99
Brats 2.77
Diced ham 2.00
Butter 2.50
Pork shoulder 6.29
Total 18.02

Winco

Roma tomatoes 1.40
Bell peppers .98
Olives (2) 1.56
Green chili 1.38
Pepperoni 1.78
Low carb taco shells 3.48
Turkey 2.88
Celery 2.96
Total 17.28
Grand total 51.61



Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Dinners in Pictures

Ham and cheese quiche, pear and blue cheese salad 



Pizza  





Start or tuna casserole. I forgot to take a picture.  


Garlic fries, chicken wings , celery sticks 



Tomato salad, fries, sausage 



Baked potatoes, green beans with tomato and red pepper flakes 



The best of the ads 1/30

The best of the ads .  I still haven’t seen any case lot sales this year.

QFC

Draper valley  whole chicken  .99

Oranges 4# 2.99
Grapefruit 5# 2.99

Digital, can buy 5 * Thursday to Sunday
Sliced cheese 1.49
Chicken wings 4.99

Alberways
Country style ribs  1.99
Roma tomatoes .99
Grapes 1.99
Tillamook ice cream 2/6 must buy 2

Milk 1.99@@

NAGB
Barilla 1.49 - my buy price is a dollar and a lot of times, I can get cheaper with a coupon, sometimes at the DT.

Fab 4 Sale
Another case of it is NOT WHAT  you buy as much as it is where it when you buy it.
Best foods mayo.  2.99 - I have some in my pantry that I paid .67 for with coupons and sale.  It’s a good idea to keep one ahead,  running out in the middle of making a salad is not a good thing,

Sweet baby rays 1.39.   My best price  on that was .54.   The most I ever pay is a dollar.  Use coupons and  buy in the summer holiday picnic bbq time.

Salad dressing is almost always simeth My youmcan find sales and coupons for. Q.67 is my buy price and the closer to a dollar is better.

The one bargain here is the hamburger and hot dog buns at .89.

Fred Meyers

Foster Farms chicken - whole, thighs, legs, breast BOGO

3# clementines 2.99
Avacados  .88
DiGiorno 3.99
Grapes 1.99
Yoplait 10/5$$

Buy 6 save 3 net cost
Ritz 1.49
Goldfish .99
Chunky  soup .99
Chili, Nalleys .89
Sour cream .89
Mission tortilla chips 1.49
Kroger ice cream 2.29
Cheerios, Frosted Flakes 1.99$$
American beauty pasta .49

Digi , up to 5 third to Sunday 
Sausage ropes 1.88
80 percent ground beef 1.97
Red Baron pizza .99
Cheese slices 1.49 

Senior discount 10 percent off private selection and regular non food merchandise is with in ad coupon and Tuesday feb 4th . Some restrictions apply 

Insta pot 6 quart 79.99 with in store coupon and you get a ten dollar gift card.




Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Retailers Dirty Little Tricks

It should come to no surprise that retailers have studied our shopping habits in order to extract as much money from us as possible,   Knowing their tricks, you can make the best of their strategies .


  • 70 percent of our purchases at the grocery store are impulse buys. Its 80 percent in England. 
  • Impulse buys means that we are not being logical about our decisions,   This could speak trouble. 
  • 50 percent of any given cart is usually liquids and snacks.  Cutting these off your grocery list can save a lot.   If you just have to have the pop and chips, set aside a different ‘entertainment’ budget so it’s really evident how much you are spending,   
  • The verbiage  10 for 10 in an ad, is to entice you to buy 10.  Unless it specifically states buy 10, you don’t have to buy 10.   
  • It is no accident that the snack attack and bakery items bombard you as you walk in the door.   Its a good idea to not go to the store hungry or uptight.   Your resistance is down and you will spend more.
  • Stick  to your list. Make a list, or at least know what categories you are shopping for. If you shop to replentish stock, take a quick inventory so you have a good idea that you need dairy, and produce, and quite possibly a rotation protein.   Do keep a list of staples that you are noting are dwindling. Watch for a RBP on those things.   
  • Don’t impulse buy, but do take advantage of an unadvertised special if the price is at your buy price or below if you can readily use it.   One time I walked onto QFC and Local chicken was .50 a pound because they needed to be cooked that day or the next.  I bought three and went home and cooked them.  It was then that I researched and found the easiest way to cook a chicken.   
  • Offering basket coupons is another way to get you into a store. Pay attention to the minimum amount that you need to spend.  The closer to that minimum amount you come to, the more percent off you are saving,   Be sure to include the coupons you may have on items so you don’t come up short.   Only buy things that are at or close to your buy price.   It is  not a good deal if you buy things that they have already marked up the 20 percent they are giving you for instance.  
  • Manufacturers pay slotting fees to get to display their merchandise in preferable places.  Notably the end caps and middle shelves.  Some chains get upwards of a million dollars for the privilege.  You have to know that the companies are going to still make a profit and that cost is going to be reflected in your purchase price.   Look up and down.   Consider the store brand. Those brands are mostly name brands that manufacture for the stores.   The cost is remarkably different.  Mild green chillies at Winco for Winco brand are .66.  The name brand is 1.28.  
  • Knowing where things are on the store helps.   You can, for instance, pass a lot of hamburger buns at Winco until you get to the bread isle and find the cheapest Winco brand buns.   We are talking 1/2 price.   
  • If a store is offering hot  dogs on sale cheap especially on a holiday weekend, you can bet the buns will be full or an inflated price.   This is why you shop at two stores.   
  • Shopping  at two stores gives you the best selection of produce and with some ad watching, the  best prices on any particular item on your must have list.  That being said, being flexible can save a lot of money.   
  •   Certain stores are have a reputation for the best price on certain things.  Fred Meyers has a huge bag of English muffins for 3/5 all the time.   It used to be by the eggs, but now that they remodeled, I will have to hunt it up again. 
  • Going with a clear view in your mind of what you are specifically looking for is you best hedge against falling for the impulse buys.
  • Winco has been having a freezer near the door, skip the  bakery and snacks, and The check the freezer.  It usually has bargain meats. Again, know your prices.  
  • Some items will have instant coupons on them.  Be sure to read the fine print and remind the checker to use the coupon. 
  • Winco will give you six cents per bag you use that you brought .  It he,os to remind them of that too.   

Monday, January 28, 2019

Monday Kitchen Management aka meal prep

Kitchen management is a tool that Saves time and stress at dinner time.  By prepping  food for dinners and tackling a little deep cleaning , life is just a bit easier.

Reminder of meals


  • Fajitas, rice 4.98
  • Pizza  1.27
  • Chicken adobo, rice 1.64
  • Potato soup. .73
  • Beef stew 2.68
  • Tuna casserole 3.03
  • Breakfast for dinner varies 
Total dinners for foir people less than 20.00.  
  1. Wash kitchen floor
  2. Clean and disinfect countertops and sinks and drains.
  3. Clean refrigerator and dump anything dead 💀.
  4. Note what needs to be used up. 
  5. Wash potatoes and carrots with vinegar water and dry. Place on a bowl that wil allow air circulation, 
  6. Mark on meal plan the day before having chicken to thaw chicken ,
  7. Straighten the pantry, 
  8. Spot clean cabinets 
  9. Wash kitchen linens, 

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Meal plans

The old adage of make a plan, or plan to fail is a good one.   Meal plans save time and money and answer the question, what’s for dinner,

Using some kind of a matrix helps keep planning down to a nano minute— or maybe five.
Prices are for four people


  • Fajitas , rice  4.98
  • Pizza  1.27 including pepperoni 
  • Chicken adobo, rice 1.64
  • Potato soup .73 not including toppings 
  • Beef stew 2.68
  • Tuna casserole 3.03 
  • Breakfast for dinner varies 


Notes 
  1. Using pulled pork and peppers bought for a dollar each, onions were 3 lbs for a dollar. 
  2. Pizza is a mainstay.  With scratch crust, it costs 1.27 we got pepperoni for .02 a slice . 
  3. Chicken adobo uses chicken thighs , purchased for .78 a pound, Idaho grown 
  4. Potato soup is an insta pot recipe and takes three minutes plus cutting potatoes, carrots, and celery.  Top with bacon, cheese, sour cream or chives. 
  5. Beef stew,  add rolls or biscuits 
  6. Tuna casserole uses Costco solid albacore tuna,  noodles left from chicken soup. 
  7. Breakfast for dinner is a family dinner where everyone cooks.



Saturday, January 26, 2019

Bulk meat and four to six week rotation,

The government shutdown is a good reminder that bleep can happen when you least expect it.  Anything from an weather related snag to an earthquake or illness.  Having a four to six weeks supply of food is a good thing.   It can be done even on a low food budget, it just takes some planning and paying attention to prices on food.  

Buying things on sale to replenish your stock instead of going to the store and buying just what you need to get through the day or week is the key.  This drastically lowers your food bill.

Yesterday, we went to Winco and QFC.  That’s another key. If you go to two stores a week, you get the best of two worlds.

We had not purchased meat in a while,   We have chicken and hamburger in the freezer and a few pork roasts and chops, sausage.  I try to limit our processed meat.  .

QFC has pork shoulder for a dollar a pound .   The smallest we could find was six dollars. I plan to cook it in the insta pot in two batches.  6.29.  Savings 19.05.  Tacos,  , bbq sliders, enchaladas.

Brats were 2.77. That’s good for about three meals for the two of us,

Diced ham was 2.00.  It is good for omelettes, to add protein to soups and beans or to add to a quiche.

Winco has a large pepperoni oni bag for less than than the  dollar store price and it looked like it was less fat.   I still use a paper towel to absorb some of the fat and load pizzas with vegetables so less pepperoni is used. 1.78 for 70 slices.   DT is 1.00 for28.

We also bought turkey lunch meat for 2.88. Total savings on QFC was 40.74 and that was 68 percent
My goal is to have the savings be 1/2.  I want to save as much or more than I spend.

My goal is to spread the pork and turkey out over the next month to six weeks,   We already have boneless  chicken breast and some hamburger, cheese, eggs, and beans.  

We bought a six pack of French bread.  I see Dagwood sandwiches in our future.

Taking advantage of sales, rotating what you buy, knowing your prices and using coupons are all part of slashing your food bill.

Or average food bill for last year was about five dollars a week under the four dollar a day budget we set for ourselves,  (56.00) and we do share with granddaughter.   We still grew a stock.

Keeping a six  week supply of non perishable food hedges off disaster.   Most dairy can be bought on sale with a month pull date.  Basics can be bought in bulk,   That leaves you weekly fresh fruits and veggies.

Our outlay was 17.00 yesterday.  We got veggies, a lot of meat, pasta, olives and green chilies, butter, and low carb tortillas.  


  • Peppers and shredded pork fajitas 
  • Brats and sauerkraut 
  • Brats and oven roasted vegetables 
  • Tacos
  • Enchaladas. 
  • Ham and cheese pizza 
  • Ham and vegetabke quiche 
  • Ham and bean soup , or potato soup 
  • Dagwood sandwiches 
  • Pepperoni pizza
  • At least five more pulled pork meals 
  • At least six more pepperoni meals 
  • One more sandwich meal 
Total of at least 22 meals for 15.61 or 1.04 a meal 











Friday, January 25, 2019

Ideas for meals - low cost

Something Different .  It’s been over a month now since the shutdown and things may be getting a bit more tight.  There are creative ways to make good meals.


  • French Toast, fruit , sausage or bacon if you have it
  • Loaded baked potato bar uses inexpensive potatoes and can use up bits of anything that sounds good. We often have them if we have leftover chili.  Taco meat, cheese, sour cream, chives, bacon, just about anyth8ng,   
  • Impossible pie.  Uses a bit of meat and cheese or vegetable and eggs, milk, and bisquick,  you can make your own bisquick, 
  • Depression stew.  Potatoes, carrots , and any meat you have.  I remember my. Other adding a little bacon and some meatballs, 
  • Meatball subs.  “Noreen’s Kitchen” on u tube has a good recipe for rolls,   Add homemade French fries.  Meatballs are two dollars for almost a pound ( equivalent of a pound of raw meat) at Winco.  ARMOUR. Brand. I have found coupons for them 
  • 1/2 lb of spaghetti, pasta sauce, and some parm.  Spaghetti can be found for as low as .59.  Pasta sauce has been a dollar lately.  Parmesan cheese - the real stiff is cheap at Winco and is a  treat that can upscale almost anything. Sometimes Barilla is at the dollar store, 
  • Chili fries, 
  • Nachos. Huge bags of tortilla chips are at Costco, but you can also get so,e at the dollar tree or make your own 
  • Pizza is cheap and can have just about anything on it.  Buffalo chicken pizza takes a bit of cooked chicken, ranch or blue cheese dressing, cheese if you have it and we add chopped peppers. Dollar store pepperoni, any wetback. 
  • Potato soup.  Add carrots and celery.  Uses only a cup of milk and some chicken broth.  Bouillon can be cheap.   
  • Tomato soup.  Make baking powder biscuits with a little grated cheese on them.  Roll dough like you were making cinnamon rolls and sprinkle cheese on it,  roll it and cut into slices, bake off just like you were making the biscuits. Homemade is cheap if you have diced tomatoes, we get the organic pacific roasted red pepper. and tomato for two dollars when we can.  Add blue cheese and basil of you like those flavors  yum.  Blue cheese was a dollar at grocery outlet.   
  • Vegetarian chili. 
  • Rice and beans , add a red sauce and SASON
  • Enchiladas,  use dollar store tortillas, beans. Cheese, shredded chicken or pork. Make sauce.  We isle red for meat and beans, or green for chicken. Pork shoulder is .99 specified days at qfc this week.  Shredded pork goes a long ways,   Tacos, pulled pork sandwiches, enchiladas.  
  • Vegetable bean  soup comes in at a bit more than two dollars for a Six quart pot. You can do a lot of things with carrots and celery. Onions help too.   Onions were three pounds for a dollar at Winco,   Carrots are 2.28 for FIVE pounds.  Save the peels after you wash them with vinegar for stock. 
  • Sausage (brown and serve in a pinch DT) eggs, pancakes. 
  • Chicken noodle soup.  Add homemade noodles, noodles from the Dollar Tree, or dumplings.