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Five Easy Tips to Save $590 on Your Food Budget This Year
by S. L. Simmons
Description: In tough economic times, try these tips to help stretch your grocery budget a little farther.
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Would you like to help the planet and save an easy $590 this year? It's
not a gimmick. Many families can save an easy $590 without even having to
give up their lattes from Starbucks, turn down the heat, or ride their
bikes to work. All it takes is a little better menu planning.
According to research from the University of Arizona, the average American
family throws out nearly $600 in food annually, often due to good
intentions but poor follow through. Research shows that most food shopping
is done on the weekends, when shoppers are fresh and well rested. With
good intentions to eat healthy, they buy an assortment of fresh fruits and
vegetables with plans to make healthy foods, perhaps a fresh fruit salad
and green salad with dinner each week night. Then Monday comes and brutal
reality strikes. The enthusiastic, health conscious shoppers from the
weekend come home from work tired, hungry and cranky, order carry out
pizzas with garlic fries and the family soda special, and forget about the
tasty fresh produce sitting forlornly in the crisper. Or maybe they don't
forget about the produce. They may even feel guilty about it. But they
order the pizza, soda and garlic fries just the same. By the end of the
week, the fruits and vegetables, wilted and spoiled, are tossed in the
trash. Then the weekend comes, and the tired, fast food aficionados are
once again transformed into the enthusiastic, health conscious, well
intentioned grocery shoppers, and the vicious cycle repeats.
Tips to Avoid Wasting Food Each Week
If the above description matches what goes on in your household, how can
you stop this cycle of produce and budget abuse and save money on your
food expenses this year? Try the tips below.
1. Buy canned, frozen or dried fruits and vegetables instead of fresh.
Sure fresh produce tastes great and is highly nutritious, but be a
realist. If your family is throwing out perishable food regularly, then
cut back on how much fresh food you buy each week. Buy fruits and
vegetables that will keep until you really have the time to prepare and
eat them. Frozen mangos and frozen strawberries placed in a blender with
some apple juice makes a tasty, healthy smoothie.
2. Grocery shop several times a week and just buy enough fresh food for a
few days at a time. In my family we have found that it is less complex to
plan 2 - 3 days out than it is to plan for a whole week. Plus shopping
more often makes it easier to know what is in the fridge and be able to
use up leftovers before they spoil.
3. Get a crock pot and make your meals in the morning before you go to
work or get tired out from doing housework and taking care of the kids.
With crock pots you can start baked potatoes, baked apples, baked winter
squash and a wide variety of soups and casseroles with fresh vegetables in
the morning and come home later in the day to a house filled with great
aromas and a healthy meal waiting for you and your family.
4. Plan your meals in advance and only buy what you need to make those
meals. For easy week day meal ideas, I like to buy cookbooks with dishes
you can make with 3 - 5 ingredients. I've learned to avoid cookbooks that
have "simple", "fast" or "easy" in the titles. What is simple, fast and
easy for someone who loves to cook and whose only job is to write
cookbooks for a living often means meals you can make in under an hour or
two. I'm more into what can I make that is healthy in 15 minutes or less.
Simple is a relative term often abused by cookbook authors, but three
ingredients is three ingredients.
5. Buy fruits and vegetables with long shelf lives to keep on hand for
those times when you find you do have the time and energy to prepare and
cook fresh produce. These include apples, potatoes, onions, carrots,
cabbage and winter squash. Diced onions and root vegetables, tossed with a
little olive oil and roasted in the oven, makes a great side dish in about
10 minutes of prep and 25 minutes of baking time. Sliced carrots, onions
and cabbage stir fried in a wok with a little sesame oil is another simple
and healthy side for a quick week night meal.
A Little Planning Can Turn Into Big Savings
If you can reduce waste and save $600 from your food bill each year, in
twenty five years you will have saved $15,000 (or more if you invest your
savings each year and let the interest compound).
S. L. Simmons is a frugal mom of two who enjoys finding creative ways to
live simply and inexpensively. Visit her web site for more tips on cutting
expenses, home budgeting and living a frugal lifestyle.
Copyright 2008 Always Frugal. Reprinted with permission.
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