Buying food on Food Stamps

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Replies

  • Aldi is a great store for cheap, good quality food if you have one nearby.

    Aldi also carries a brand called Fit & Active. I haven't had much that I didn't like. It is all low calorie & healthy foods. It is about all I buy these days.
  • miss_ally08
    miss_ally08 Posts: 167 Member
    I can't think of anything else except for coupon shopping. I coupon shop a lot (we are a military family) and I save a lot doing that. I will say compare prices for frozen veggies vs. canned veggies - depending on the sales, you can get all kinds :) Rice and beans as people say go a long way. Best of luck to you!! (BTW - If you are in need of any more assistance, I will say Catholic Charities are very helpful and are other food assistance programs locally in your area. My parents had to go through that before that's how I know) :)

    Take care!! :)
  • webdaughter
    webdaughter Posts: 162 Member
    Also..something else to think about. Coupons!! I save a ton of money by couponing. You can't use coupons at Aldi but you can at Walmart and at other stores. If you check out their websites or facebook pages they have deals that they don't advertise that are sometimes really good too. You can get coupons in the paper, or you can print them off on various websites. You can also email companies and request coupons and they will mail them to you 2 times per year!!
    All the meal suggestions have been great so I won't repeat any of them. You can do it!! Good luck!!
  • I spend a little over $200 a month in groceries shopping for me and my boyfriend sometimes while he is in school. That doesn't including toiletries or my animals.

    Things we stock up on: You can get 2 lbs of tilapia for around 7 and bulk salmon. I can find 6oz containers of Greek yogurt for $1. We also stock up on steam in bag frozen veggies. Other things like dried beans and brown rice make quick meals and barley is cheap and you can throw it in soup. We also get things like spinach wraps and throw beans and various other things in there for quick wraps

    Also, 1 bag of dried garbanzo beans and a little tahini and garlic will make enough hummus to last us 2 weeks
  • Also, 1 bag of dried garbanzo beans and a little tahini and garlic will make enough hummus to last us 2 weeks

    No idea what any of that stuff is lol!
  • SweetCheekszx0
    SweetCheekszx0 Posts: 478 Member
    Uncle bens pouch rice in the rice section
    Canned tuna fish
    Eggs
    Already chopped up assorted fresh fruit
    Shrimp! The frozen kind ah gotta love it !
    Tyson's grilled and ready chicken breasts or tenderloins
    Peppercorn / turkey/ BBQ Holmes pork tenderloin -stick it in the oven with some foil and u can refrigerate e rest.
    Packaged and already portioned ceaser salad brand - market street u can add the Purdue grilled short cuts chicken to this yum
    Pico -brand market street
    Mini digorno pizzas 650 for one entire thing to yourself
    Healthy choice topchef frozen TV dinners.. These things are delicious
    Stoufers singles example. Stuffed pepper
    Almond milk -yummy
    Yoplait light yogurts- Boston cream is bomb! I swear lol
    ^^^all at your local walmart^^
    Shoprite
    Microwaveable sweet potatoes in the produce section
    Hummus shoprite brand - has less calories then be name brands
    Fit and easy Purdue raw chicken usually at Walmart or shoprite even a hearts I believe.
    Any canned soup by select harvest is delicious

    Al I can come up with for now lol - good luck love ❤????
  • wahmx3
    wahmx3 Posts: 633 Member
    I don't have experience with food stamps however, we spend about $150 a week for a family of 5 along with feeding 5-8 daycare kids at least 1 meal and 2 snacks a day! I shop by flyers, rarely buying full price with a few exceptions such as oatmeal and milk. If fresh produce on sale isn't what you like, buy frozen, we always have 3-4 bags of frozen veggies on hand. Soups are great and can be a meal or go along with a sandwich. Breakfast foods for dinner is also good. I love making casseroles... add whatever you like to lean ground beef, turkey or chicken (whatever is on sale). Add rice or pasta and a ton of vegies. I sometimes do rice, frozen veggies, soup and greek yogurt, bake in oven and you can make enough for 2-3 meals. My favorite "go to" cheap and easy thing is anything with tortillas.... pizza, wraps, breakfast sandwiches, chicken quisadillas (sp?), etc.
  • marie_eve_78
    marie_eve_78 Posts: 72 Member
    I don't know anything about how food stamps work, since I'm canadian, but this might help:
    http://www.foodnetwork.com/healthy-eating-on-a-budget/package/index.html
    :)
  • angel79202
    angel79202 Posts: 1,012 Member
    What about bakery outlets for whole grain breads?
  • buffalogal2
    buffalogal2 Posts: 2 Member
    If you have a Whole Foods nearby, believe it or not, they do have a program to help people on a budget learn how to afford to eat healthy. Look on their website, or give them a call.
  • hesn92
    hesn92 Posts: 5,966 Member
    Buy a bunch of frozen chicken in bulk. I buy a 3lb bag for somewhere between $5 and $10..
  • rcthale
    rcthale Posts: 141
    Wow, that's a tight budget! My list is probably the same as others':

    Dry beans, rice, oats, pasta enriched with fiber with plain canned tomato sauce (salt and olive oil is all the flavoring you need on a budget), eggs, and frozen vegetables to avoid wasteful spoilage.

    If you want treats, get yourself a good cookie recipe. Brownies are also easy to make once you know the ingredients.

    Animal protein is the most expensive healthy food. If you can swing by the store every few days, get whatever clearance meat you can use and get it into your freezer.
  • brainfreeze72
    brainfreeze72 Posts: 180 Member
    I just recently started buying the dry beans, they are cheaper and go further AND have less sodium. I make a big pot of vegetarian chili and portion some out for now and some out for freezing for later. I also buy whole chickens and cook them in a rotisserie oven. You could also roast it in a regular oven. It serves my family of 3 and I have leftovers to make chicken salad, soup and/or chicken pot pie for another couple of meals. I know fresh fruits and veggies can get expensive, a better alternative to canned is frozen. If you must get canned then rinse the veggies to reduce the sodium. Canned veggies usually use extra salt as a preservative.
  • It has already been said, but crockpots are GREAT! I use mine three or four times a week. I am also single with no kids and I can put 3 frozen chicken breasts (I buy the 5 pound bag at walmart for around 10 bucks) in the crockpot with some chicken stock and opion soup mix for 6-8 hours and then shred and chicken and add brown rice. I have it with some frozen veggies. It's really cheap to make and it makes four meals usually.
  • brainfreeze72
    brainfreeze72 Posts: 180 Member
    Oh my gosh, and how could I forget, Oatmeal! I get the regular old Quaker Oats type that you have to cook. I boil a cup of water and add it to 1/2 cup of oats, a tablespoon of brown sugar and a 1/4 cup of raisins, cover and let it sit for 5 minutes. A nice filling breakfast for cheap AND it's good for you. My husband is diabetic so he skips the raisins and we use Splenda brown sugar blend but that's a bit pricey on a budget.

    If you like Fettuccine Alfredo you can make a great Alfredo yourself sauce using skim milk, flour and garlic powder. I found it via google but you can inbox me for the recipe. We have that with a garden salad once in a while.
  • In addition to the farmer's market suggestions, for next year you might want to check in your area for a CSA (community supported agriculture). I belong to one of the larger/older farm share programs in my area, and mine and some others also accept food stamps.

    They vary a lot in what they offer, but boxes of fresh fruit and vegetables are standard. Mine also has organic pasture-raised local cheese and meat available (both tend to be healthier than the grocery store versions). They also tend to offer recipes or cooking suggestions for some of the odder produce, but it definitely encourages me to try a variety of healthy things without being tempted to fall back on processed food at the store because I'm feeling uninspired.

    I split a share with another household, which is plenty for me.
  • bms34b
    bms34b Posts: 401 Member
    I've never been on food stamps, but I'm a student and money is very, very tight.

    Breakfast foods:
    aldi cottage cheese
    aldi eggs
    aldi skim milk
    aldi bread + aldi slice of american cheese + egg + salsa, DELICIOUS
    instant oatmeal, best choice
    produce = try to get on sale from flyers, or Trader Joe's if there is one close. shop seasonally. right now gourds, things like spaghetti squash, and apples are pretty cheap

    Lunch/Dinner: If you have to pack, the bread and lunch meat and cheese from aldi is pretty cheap. I do that plus cheap aldi granola bars, fruit snacks, and seasonal fruit, and I'm good to go.

    If you get to eat and cook for yourself, go with brown rice! brown rice plus chicken (frozen breasts bought in bulk), plus pasta sauce or cheapish stew that comes in cans is a delicious and cheap and nutritious meal. I recently bought 5 cans, 24oz, of beef stew for 1.40 each at Aldi.


    You can do this! Good for you!!
  • MrsDrk
    MrsDrk Posts: 153 Member
    I don't have a ton to add to this except, I totally understand the small freezer situation! You can freeze soup in freezer baggies- they freeze completely flat and you can stack many this way. You can thaw them by just plopping the frozen baggie into a pot of rolling boiling water and give it a few min to finish.

    If you haven't yet, try Skinnyms.com and http://www.skinnytaste.com/ for recipes. I have made a lot of the soups on skinnytaste and omit spices if I do not have them on hand because those can be VERY pricey. I have 3 kids and a husband to feed and we ate for a week just doubling one of those soup recipes. They loved the potato stews, anything with cheese, and the chicken pot pie soup. All the recipes are low cal, low fat, and some are gluten free- if that is what you need.

    The key to eating healthy on a tight budget is just plan, plan, plan and take one day a week to cook for the rest of the week (or two!). It is VERY possible to eat well and at a lower price tag than eating junk.
  • MyPaperBleedsInk
    MyPaperBleedsInk Posts: 240 Member
    Coupon, coupon, coupon.
    It'll make your food stamps go further. As a cashier, I see soo many people on food stamps buying unhealthy junk, and if I know the people personally and know that they're trying to be healthy, I hear the main excuse being that healthy food is expensive. And no, not all of it is. And if you coupon, it definitely helps.
  • anemoneprose
    anemoneprose Posts: 1,805 Member
    All the advice is good - just want to say, you can make a little meat go a long way, and it can help make bean dishes, soups and salads more filling. Stews (curries, etc) are beloved by people everywhere for this reason.

    Eg - 200 grams of ham (about 7 oz) can be put into 4 meals (50g each). With that, I threw 1 portion into a mushroom soup. Another portion went on top of pasta with asparagus. Got a sandwich and omelette out of the other two; could have thrown it on top of a salad.

    If you make a (chicken, beef, pork) roast on Sunday, you can have it in sandwiches, salads etc for a couple of days. (Or freeze a bit and do the same, so you're not sick of the taste, and have more ready-made options later.)

    A crock pot isn't essential, I've never used one.

    Second freezing single-serving soup in baggies - takes up hardly any space.

    For vegetables, I think frozen's cheapest, usually, but check coupons.
  • redheaddee
    redheaddee Posts: 2,005 Member
    If you have a yard, a garden is both cheap and exercise. Seed packets are $1-1.50, but if you are in an apartment, pots and dirt will cost you a wee bit more. Worth the initial investment by far! I have planted kohlrabi for example, which is easily $2-3 or more per root. ME = $1.25 for a seed packet from Lowe's, which will easily produce a dozen roots.
  • lilacsun
    lilacsun Posts: 204 Member
    I didn't see this yet, but Oatmeal for breakfast is a great stable. Filling and healthy.

    I add a tablespoon peanut butter and it gives me a lot of protein and keeps me full until lunch. I like to shop at walmart for produce. I do price matches with store ads from stores within 50 miles. They even match Aldi and Save a Lot prices for vegies and fruits. Anything on sale in the other stores weekly ads. Just look up walmarts price match and coupon guidelines and follow them. I write my price matches on paper: store, product, price. Separate my matches tell the cashier I have price matches and read them off one by one as they ring them in. Weekly ads for most stores can quickly be found on line just type in store name weekly ad. You can clip coupons and use them with price matches also. Good luck:-)
  • meshashesha2012
    meshashesha2012 Posts: 8,329 Member
    most stores accept ebt cards (regular grocery stores, Trader joes and whole foods included) and unfortunately i've seen that some fast food places do as well :cry:

    many farmers markets do as well and you can buy things like seeds

    i primarily shop at Trader joe so back when i was unemployed and getting help it was perfect because the price is pretty cheap. their frozen chicken thigh for $7 is a great deal.
  • Food stamps or not its all about working with a $200 budget doesn't matter how you pay for it :)

    My favorite grocery store is Kroger every $100 you spend you get 10¢ off gas

    I get the store brand because its usually cheaper and they do a lot of 10 for 10

    They have Purdue chicken breast with different seasonings individually packaged so you can thaw what you need its about $6
    If I were you I'd just look around and think of "Meals"

    I hope this helps a bit
  • I don't know anything about how food stamps work, since I'm canadian, but this might help:
    http://www.foodnetwork.com/healthy-eating-on-a-budget/package/index.html
    :)

    It's just a set amount of money you get to spend on food every month. For me it's $200.00 every month
  • Food stamps or not its all about working with a $200 budget doesn't matter how you pay for it :)

    My favorite grocery store is Kroger every $100 you spend you get 10¢ off gas

    I get the store brand because its usually cheaper and they do a lot of 10 for 10

    They have Purdue chicken breast with different seasonings individually packaged so you can thaw what you need its about $6
    If I were you I'd just look around and think of "Meals"

    I hope this helps a bit

    Jazmyn, I love Kroeger, sadly I don't have one near me. I live in Pennsylvania. When I worked at Cedar Point in 2008, I shopped there nearly every week
  • To everyone:

    Thank you so far for all of your suggestions. As I have been busy doing other things this evening I have not been able to keep up with all the posts, but I will go through them. Keep them coming!

    Again, it is a $200.00 budget for just myself (no girlfriend, no kids) every month.

    Thanks again,
    Adam
  • maremare312
    maremare312 Posts: 1,143 Member
    mfpcopine, I'm perfectly content asking people on here. I'd rather get information from those that are or have been in this situation and are using this site instead of relying on google. If I wanted to rely on Google for all of my information about weight loss, I wouldn't have joined this site.

    I made a reasonable suggestion; I'm not going to apologize for it.

    Honestly, any question on this website could be answered by telling the OP to google it, so that's never very helpful.
  • I love nuts and seeds. If you do not have a health food store near you, then you can always buy the bags at the local grocery store. 1/4 a cup would be a good serving size and while it may not seem like much, it fills you up fast and stays with you. If the sodium is too much for your daily intake, then simply wash off with water. works for me anyway
  • VelociMama
    VelociMama Posts: 3,119 Member
    Dry beans and rice go a LONG way and are nutritious and cheap. Try to shop sales as much as possible (buy one-get one deals and stock up on non-perishable foods). You can even stock up on perishables that you can freeze or can for later use (bread, veggies, fruit, and meat). Bread can be refrigerated or frozen then used later. It lasts much longer this way. To defrost, just let it sit on your countertop until room temp.

    I second the suggestion of investing in a slow cooker. You can make a lot of food without a lot of effort and either freeze or refrigerate the leftovers for meals later in the week.

    When I was in college, I was living on a pauper's budget for food too.