eating healthy when you're flat broke?

hi peeps. so i'm struggling with finding healthy choices that i can afford. i find myself VERY tight on cash lately and my work does not have a fridge or microwave or anything for me to pack lunches or bring leftovers from home. so i find myself tempted by the ever present dollar menus that surround me all day. anyone have tips for eating healthy on an extremely tight budget?
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Replies

  • daisymae850
    daisymae850 Posts: 127 Member
    Try Aldi and get the packages of frozen Talipia Filets, they are like $3-4 for the whole bag and there are like 6 or 8 in the bag. Can you bring an insulated lunch bag? If so bring salads from home or low calorie lunch meat on low calorie bread.
  • lizplaster
    lizplaster Posts: 10 Member
    you can definitley do it! My advice is to plan in advance. Get an insulated lunch bag with the icepacks that you keep in the freezer overnight then place in your lunch pail. You won't need a fridge for that. I pack a sandwich every day along with string cheese and some carrots. I do most of my shopping at Sam's Club which helps you save money.

    You can eat healthy on a diet, it just takes planning.
  • Shelby1582
    Shelby1582 Posts: 191 Member
    I also agree with an insulated lunch bag so you can bring your lunch instead of eating out. I am also surrounded by fast food so I bring leftovers from the night before or pick up My Fit Foods if I can afford it. I always keep nuts, fat free triscuits and stuff to make peanut butter jelly sandwiches at work also.
  • lqichick
    lqichick Posts: 162 Member
    Yeah, it can be costly. 4- apples cost me 5$ the other weekend. Then I walk down a cracker aisle and here are two boxes of Special K cracker chips for the same. 4 servings v's at least twice that much. i still chose the apples.
  • JeffseekingV
    JeffseekingV Posts: 3,165 Member
    I'm not much help but I'll try.

    Oatmeal. Filling, low calorie and cheap

    Salads can be inexpensive and with only minimal amount of cooling.
  • Britterboo22
    Britterboo22 Posts: 300 Member
    well im sortof on a budget.
    I eat mostly fresh veggies and fruits.
    ALSO ricecakes. love love love them
    Granola bars.

    Last time i went shopping i got a ton of things under 20 dollars.
    ALSO i usually eat a healthy breakfast and snacks but eat whatever were haviing for dinner just portion control
  • Fjcookie
    Fjcookie Posts: 48
    You can bring salad and/or peanut butter sandwiches.
  • whierd
    whierd Posts: 14,025 Member
    Bring a small cooler.


    BOOM!
  • toaster6
    toaster6 Posts: 703 Member
    More and more dollar stores offer groceries now.

    http://health.yahoo.net/experts/yourbestfitness/99-cent-diet-could-it-work-you

    For work lunches, you can take lots of fruits, veggies, salads, and some bread as those won't need to be heated or cooled.
  • GoClaireGo
    GoClaireGo Posts: 8 Member
    1. Good high fiber bread with PB and honey/jelly
    2. Apples (can usually find for $1/lb) are cheaper and more filling than chips
    3. Homemade soups/chili with lots of beans instead of meat - I do this a lot if I have sprung for veggie produce and they are near their date. I chop up any carrots, onions, tomatoes etc and put them in a chili
    4. Tortillas with pinto beans and salsa; side of fruit or carrot sticks
    5. Whole wheat spaghetti with sauce
    6. Vegetable stir fry can be really cheap if you buy a big bag of rice and frozen veggies and makes a lot of meals

    *Definately try to spring for the lunch box and ice pack. It is worth it!

    Sorry most of my suggestions are vegetarian but I think it is cheaper.
  • silvergurl518
    silvergurl518 Posts: 4,123 Member
    www.poorgirleatswell.com
  • MissFitee
    MissFitee Posts: 106 Member
    Well.... uncooked beans are extremely cheap. Just cook a biiiig batch and freeze in portion sizes.

    As for what to bring to work. Is it possible to bring prepared frozen meals that can be eaten cold and then just let them defrost slowly through the day...
  • AmykinsCatfood
    AmykinsCatfood Posts: 599 Member
    Get an insulated lunch bag and a small ice pack to keep things cold. You can usually find these things at the dollarstore and they allow you to bring salads, milk and cereal, cold pasta salads, sandwiches.. just about anything really that needs to be chilled until lunch time.
  • Good question. Im going through the same! Though I struggle with this at home!
  • Cockney365
    Cockney365 Posts: 52 Member
    I'm a student on an £800 a month bursary with bills of about £1000! Don't ask me how that works, it very rarely does. Anyway I don't know if you have them where you are, but I make my lunches for the week in one go with those chicken-in-a-bag meals, on a Sunday night. Colman's Season and Shake, at the moment my current favourite is Cajun Chicken. In the oven, 45 minutes later and Bob's your uncle.

    400g chicken (I buy frozen for about £3 a bag and defrost them)
    175g brown rice, (£1 for 1kg)
    1 onion (45p)
    200g cherry tomatoes (not essential, a squirt of ketchup will suffice if the tomatoes aren't on special offer!) (£1 for 100g)
    some water (gratis)
    The Season and Shake sachet (£1 maximum)
    1 pepper (bought in a bag, £1.20)

    Total cost: £6.65 for 4 meals. Makes four servings which is my Monday to Thursday lunch sorted. I eat it cold when I am at uni, I just take it in a cool bag with the frozen packs in to stop it from recooking in the lecture theatre. The sachets themselves range from 50p to £1.20 and I tend to stock up when they are on special offer, 2 for £2 normally, and there are others like Maggi So Juicy etc. It may be processed, it may not be clean/paleo/whatever but it's a good combination of carbs, protein, vegetables and with mostly fresh food, or as close to as I can get it. Works for me anyway! I make sure I drink plenty of (free) water, flavoured with slices of lemons and limes (currently 4 for £1 at Tesco) and an apple or orange to increase my uptake of fresh stuff. You can always add half a bag of salad if you feel like you need more food for lunch (I personally don't, on 1700 calories a day)

    Hope this is helpful!
  • gracetillman
    gracetillman Posts: 190 Member
    Look for sales -- every grocery store puts out a weekly sales flyer and there are ALWAYS healthy options included -- usually some good produce buys. I also look for when they mark down meats. I picked up organic ground beef last week for $3.50 a pound. My freezer is my friend to stock up when I find excellent deals. I try to buy one or two extra if I can.

    I shop at an Asian grocery store which carries ripe produce at inexpensive prices compared to regular grocery stores.

    You can also buy one of those little thermos insulated containers to bring hot food to work. For a couple of hours they will keep it pretty hot. I bring warm leftovers to work all the time and don't need to microwave it.

    I make sandwiches using whole wheat bread or whole wheat sandwich rounds -- with an ice pack in the lunch box they are fine.

    Sometimes I make a tuna sandwich with the packages of tuna and a lite mayo pack (usually extra from Chick Fil A) but do not require any refrigeration.

    Cheese is inexpensive if you can find it on sale.

    You can do it but it will take a little more planning.
  • kpk54
    kpk54 Posts: 4,474 Member
    Call me old school but my Mom would pack my Dad a lunch every night in an old metal lunch pail to take to his midnight shift @ the foundry. I'm sure there was no refrigerator, microwave or stove where he worked back in the 50s and 60s. To make it more interesting sometimes he would bring a half sandwich home: wilted lettuce, mayo and bologna, chipped ham or egg salad. I'd have it for breakfast on my way to the bus stop. Wow. I loved those warm, leftover "sammiches" with the wilted lettuce. Same was true of everything else Mom may have packed in his old lunch pail. Recycled to keep us all fed. My brother and I are still alive to talk about it.

    All said, a lunch cooler with an ice pack is a reasonable idea. I'd bemore worried about what is in the ice pack just in case it springs a leak.
  • hmg90
    hmg90 Posts: 314 Member
    I was tight last week and had to make some changes:
    - I eat a lot of eggs anyway, and they aren't too expensive.
    - Frozen vegetables. Green beans are very low calorie and very cheap too.
    - I'd make porridge of just oats and water. Not very exciting, but keep you full.
    - Soups.
  • Yeah, it can be costly. 4- apples cost me 5$ the other weekend. Then I walk down a cracker aisle and here are two boxes of Special K cracker chips for the same. 4 servings v's at least twice that much. i still chose the apples.

    Wow, way to be constructive. Can you use those 5 apples as full meals 3 times a day? Fail of a post


    Anyways OP, I understand where you are coming from. I have found that it can be expensive if you buy all the fancy "diet food" but it is reasonable when buying the basic. Veggies, fruits, turkey meat, skinless chicken etc can all be reasonably priced. You can make stir fry, salads etc out of these things. Just watch for sales.

    Good luck :)
  • kristinL16
    kristinL16 Posts: 401 Member
    I'm going to be in a similar work situation. I am starting a new job where I will be on the road most of the day. When I had this type of job previously I gained 20 lbs due to developing bad eating habits (stopping at the gas station to go to the bathroom and buying a cookie and soda; Dollar menu at McD's, etc). I am trying to come up with different options this time around and may also need to adjust my mind set as to what a meal consists of. It helps to have a thermal bag (a must, IMO) and there are Thermos containers of various styles and sizes that are great for holding warm leftovers. I also saw a lunch sized crock pot container at Target the other day. Apparently you put the food in it, take the holder to work and plug it in then it will be warm by lunch. That won't work for me since I will be in the car, but the thermos could. Some ideas for lunches and snacks that I have come up with are:

    -wraps (turkey, veggie, tuna)
    -leftover soup in the thermos
    -salads
    -yogurt
    -almonds
    -fruit/veggies
    -any other portable snack

    I know that doesn't sound like much and I need more options to avoid getting bored. I also tend to have a hard time thinking of a meal of consisting of various snacks, but that might be the way to go.
  • Thank you so much for the information Smiley. I look forward to looking at those.
  • corsayre8
    corsayre8 Posts: 551 Member
    Coolers are your friend!

    Also as for healthy foods on a budget - beans, brown rice, eggs, and fun a local farmer's market for seasonal fresh fruits and veggies. All wholesome, healthy and filling.
  • skymel14
    skymel14 Posts: 31 Member
    Thank you very much to everyone who responded- I learned a lot from this post and I will check out some of these links. :)

    If anyone is willing to help me figure out how to eat on a tiny budget (I live in Maryland, USA) then Friend me and help a woman out! :)
  • margelizard
    margelizard Posts: 89 Member
    I try and keep our household on a $60 per week grocery budget (there is just my husband and I in the house). The budget includes all household stuff like toothpaste, TP etc etc, so there isn't always $60 to go toward food. My top tips would be:

    1. COOK MORE! We used to go out a couple of times a week, but it gets really expensive really quickly. So we try to home cook most meals. We eat a lot of soups (chicken, lentil, vegetable etc etc). I try and switch it up, but generally most of our soups contain a lot of carrots and potatoes and some kind of protein. You can also make in huge batches and freeze extras for lunches and dinners during the week.

    2. Try not to waste food: If you are buying a bunch of stuff for salad, try and make sure you plan enough salads during the week to use up the food you have bought.

    3. Write a menu for the week and stick to it! Write up your dinners and lunches and assign them to specific days. Yes, it's really boring and not very spontaneous, but if you plan ahead, it makes it easier to stick to what you have outlined. It also allows you to see where you can cut ingredients or share larger ingredients between different dishes in order to cut down on waste.

    4. Buy seasonal produce. Your local grocery store will likely have specials on items that are in season. $5 for 4 apples? Kinda expensive. $1 for 5 kiwis, not so bad. Being aware of seasonal stuff will help you plan menus better and drastically reduce your grocery bill.

    5. Collect coupons when you see them. Don't be tricked into spending more money on something you wouldn't normally buy i.e. a sale on 3 boxes of crackers for the price of 2. Seems like a good deal, but if you don't usually buy any, this "sale" is just eating into your budget.
  • AbsoluteNG
    AbsoluteNG Posts: 1,079 Member
    Eggs and sandwiches. That's the cheapest you can go to be healthy.
  • PattyRain
    PattyRain Posts: 104 Member
    I have a thought about dry beans. I haven't done this before, but from what I have worked with beans I think this would work. Soak the beans overnight. Drain and rinse in the morning. Then put them back on the stove with and bring it up to boiling water. Add your seasonings. Then place it in a thermos. I'm thinking by the time you eat lunch it would be cooked. try it out on a Saturday first to see if it works.

    I always buy my fruit and veggies when they are on sale. There are a number of apples out there and it seems one variety is always on sale. That is the one I buy (unless it is red delicious which I can't stand).

    With the insulated lunch bag or cooler you might want to check out Salad in a jar - http://www.salad-in-a-jar.com/how-to-make-salad-in-a-jar-2
  • KANGOOJUMPS
    KANGOOJUMPS Posts: 6,474 Member
    u could just munch on celery all day......
  • vals83
    vals83 Posts: 63 Member
    I'm unfortunately going to repeat what a lot of people have already said.

    1. insulated lunch bag.
    2. Dollar stores are starting to carry a lot of produce.
    3. become one with your ads and start hunting down best deals.
    4. Avoid high carb food because they wont keep you full as long. Pack in that protein. It'll seem more expensive but you'll be consuming less. Always cook dinner so you have lunch for the next day.

    Try getting use to eating cold food. Construction men all of the world do it every day.
  • MightyDomo
    MightyDomo Posts: 1,265 Member
    Salads in a jar! They aren't the healthiest as they can be packed with sodium and fat but that are a great lunch idea that is portable, doesn't need any heating and you can throw meats, cheeses, legumes and whatever else in and make your own dressings. Lettuce is relatively cheap and lots of cheaper meats are better in bite sizes :)

    You can always go for soup and use a thermos, they can keep food hot for 6-8 hours on a standard thermos so you can definitely warm up the soup and put it in the thermos and have it for lunch still warm and ready to eat! Soups are also a pretty cheap solution, also high in sodium normally depending on if it is homemade or store bought but if you make it yourself of course you can tailor it to your needs!

    Those are just two things that I can think of, they are cheaper options and definitely fit your needs. Hope you find the right solution for you :)