Seems like I'm spending a fortune on food lately....

jerryb73

Well-Known Member
Pretty much same here.It's one of my worst pet peeves.I'm sure after 13 yrs it's drives the other half nuts hearin me bitch when we eat out about how much food i see go straight towards the trash.




Isn't that nuts?!

And those people worked to give their money for it.Kinda goes hand in hand with when we're eating out......you just paid $70,$100 for a dinner and only ate $30 worth of it.Fuck that....i luv my money i ain't mad at it.I do pretty well at making sure our trash bag has very little food waste in it when it goes into the can.If we';re out and some thing isn't eatin,it comes home.








Shit......i forgot about this.....ok so i do buy "some" fish.:lol:
Lol, apparently I do too...
 

MonkeyGrinder

Well-Known Member
Tips for eating on the cheap.
Invest in a rice cooker. It does all of the work for you and there's little chance it'll screw up.
Curry. Hit up the mom and pop Asian marts. Get rice in bulk. They usually have a backroom with loads of stuff in bulk. Curry is tasty. You can buy pre made bases in small cans (about the size of a tuna can) or just get the big tubs of basic stuff if you're inclined to tweaking them.
Another one that's insanely cheap to make. Chances are you can find supplies to do so where I mentioned above. Like pennies on the dollar. Art school hipster chicks dig it as well. You'll be in like Flynn.
You can easily learn to do all of the above via youtube.
Get a crock pot. It has a million uses. And you set it and forget it.
Buy dried beans. Learn to make re-fried beans. Make some banging ass burritos. Also doable in a crock pot for easy mode.
Acquire a deep freeze and use it. Shop around sales for protein and veggies. Cut and prep your own veggies. Bag em and freeze em. Not a lot of cash and need a deep freeze? You grow dope. Loads of people will take some good dope for trade. Or just buy one new. Bigger = better.
 

jerryb73

Well-Known Member
Tips for eating on the cheap.
Invest in a rice cooker. It does all of the work for you and there's little chance it'll screw up.
Curry. Hit up the mom and pop Asian marts. Get rice in bulk. They usually have a backroom with loads of stuff in bulk. Curry is tasty. You can buy pre made bases in small cans (about the size of a tuna can) or just get the big tubs of basic stuff if you're inclined to tweaking them.

Another one that's insanely cheap to make. Chances are you can find supplies to do so where I mentioned above. Like pennies on the dollar. Art school hipster chicks dig it as well. You'll be in like Flynn.
You can easily learn to do all of the above via youtube.
Get a crock pot. It has a million uses. And you set it and forget it.
Buy dried beans. Learn to make re-fried beans. Make some banging ass burritos. Also doable in a crock pot for easy mode.
Acquire a deep freeze and use it. Shop around sales for protein and veggies. Cut and prep your own veggies. Bag em and freeze em. Not a lot of cash and need a deep freeze? You grow dope. Loads of people will take some good dope for trade. Or just buy one new. Bigger = better.
Love my crockpot, that’s where the roast was gonna go.. I had a 100# “rice cooker” my girl made me send her back:bigjoint:
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
My guilty pleasure was the induction plate I bought for us for Christmas.
I only use the oven part of the stove these days. The induction plate is pretty clever.
I can put shit on to boil, and it will switch off after about 10 minutes and even big arse potatoes are done.
 

whitebb2727

Well-Known Member
Ways to save money on food so you have more for your cable TV bill:
Grilled cheese- easy to make and quite filling.
Pasta- let me count the ways
Pancakes, waffles, and French toast- Easy to make from scratch
Oatmeal cookies with Cannabutter- Oops, that one slipped in there
Crockpot- Chicken thighs w/ tomato sauce and salad olives, Beef cubes w/ carrots, celery, onions and a couple of teaspoons of paprika, Boston butt with ten or so shakes of Worcestershire sauce
And more I'm sure you can come up with
None of which do we eat in our house anymore. No sugars or carbs.
 

Fubard

Well-Known Member
Easiest way to save on the food bill?

Stop buying the big brand name stuff. That's a biggie, you look around and you'll get store own-label stuff that's just as good, or better, at a fraction of the cost.

Don't take advantage of big flashy "Buy 3 get 1 free" deals unless you know you WILL use whatever is on offer and that it works out cheaper than a store's own-label offer. These deals are one of the worst for creating waste, and you ain't saving squat.

Stop buying pre-made and junk food.

Watch out for deals, especially on meat and fish which can go straight into the freezer.

Look for discounted meat/fish close to sell by date, straight into the freezer with it.

Figure out which stores do the best prices on things. Some are cheaper for some things than others so take advantage of it, don't just stick to one place because it's convenient. I'm off to one store soon, and will pay roughly €40 on a load of stuff we need. I go to a different store then the same things, effectively, in different packaging will cost at least half as much again

Ground meat, whether it is chicken, pork or beef, is your friend. Cheap and can be turned into so many things from a stew to burgers to meatballs to kebabs.

If there's enough leftovers, freeze them. And don't forget that any potatoes that are at least part cooked can be frozen for use another day. Never throw out food that can be frozen and eaten later unless there's not enough for one person.

Make soup. Healthy as fuck, filling, and cheap as hell to make.

And make a list before going to the store, and STICK TO IT, no more "Oooh, this looks nice, I'll buy that" impulse buys.

We cut our food bill in half, we like to stick to around €50-60 per week for two now and that ain't some poor "student" diet, we eat enough and eat decent food which, considering that we have to be on a low-fat, zero-sugar diet means we can't buy the cheaper things like chicken thighs and so on is no mean feat. But with proper planning you buy only what you need, and make as many things as you can so you're not buying expensive pre-packed stuff costing a fortune. A good idea above was the crock pot, and there's so many other ways like the reason I bought a tajine that is WAY too big for two but gives a good rice/veg/meat dish for at least two days that costs very little. We could cut the food bill further if we wanted, but since we have a good variation in what we eat, from chicken to turkey to pork to beef to fish with potatoes/rice/pasta/noodles/wraps/pita/whatever and plenty rabbit food then I'm happy with how the bill sits right now, especially as my regular blood tests are telling me that most things are in order (cholesterol is a little high but coming down quickly, blood sugar in order, mostly everything within "normal" parameters except white blood cell count which has always been high and vitamin D which needs supplements since, being Scottish, is always going to be low no matter what).

You don't need to spend a fortune to eat well, even when you avoid any "white" bread/pasta/rice and go for multi/wholegrain or spelt versions instead of "regular" stuff, and by avoiding certain things and making it ourselves we also cut the amount of garbage so that cost has gone down as well (we pay by the bag. Produce less waste, you pay less). If I had a garden then that would be cut further as any food waste, what little there is but including coffee grounds, used tea, and so on, would be turned into compost instead of being thrown out but that doesn't work in an apartment. Chinese supermarkets are a godsend for things like rice and herbs/spices, you can save a fortune buying there and, well, I do, especially on spices.

Oh, add on another €30-40 per month on cat litter and cat food. We buy everything like that online, a site called Zooplus over here, saves at least 40% compared to going to the stores on exactly the same stuff sold in the stores, the cat litter being the biggest saving there for bloody decent stuff that we get 1+1 free, so that's at least half the cost compared to the equivalent from various stores.

Easy ways to cut bills
 
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