I can't afford to buy the right food...

135

Replies

  • Cortneyrenee04
    Cortneyrenee04 Posts: 1,117 Member
    No.

    Cheap pizza: $8 for one meal OR you can spend $8 and get a couple days worth of dinners like rice/beans/eggs/frozen veggies.

    I've saved so much money eating healthier. Processed foods and sodas are so expensive.
  • SmartAlec03211988
    SmartAlec03211988 Posts: 1,896 Member
    I spend about $2.20 per meal eating healthy. On the flip side, I spent $3.30 per meal eating "unhealthy."

    Although it does depend on location, too.
  • DEEPU91
    DEEPU91 Posts: 74 Member
    you live in village it is more beneficial for you to maintain your health
    you could do agriculture of healthy vegetables and cereals and pulses and can spend time for little exercise
    but all you have to just keep motivated you self and keep inspired yourself
  • kim_m_kk
    kim_m_kk Posts: 61 Member
    aldi for vegetables - might not have as big a selection but so much cheaper
  • ladybuggnorris
    ladybuggnorris Posts: 276 Member
    edited February 2015
    My husband and I invested in TWO deep-freezers; one apartment-size in the house and a BIG one in the garage. We started shopping sales on frozen foods to fill them up. we also bought a pig and a half-beef from a local farmer (way healthier and cheaper than store bought). The freezers are both now full. In fact, we have started planning our meals from the contents because we have food sitting on top that does not fit inside and this will only work until spring thaw...lol. I plan all my meals for a month at a time. We go grocery shopping at Costco every Sunday and spend about $75. This is for eggs, dairy, and fresh produce. Everything else is coming out of those freezers. Typically vegetables are much cheaper in summer because they are in season (even frozen ones). We will eat a lot more fresh in summer and continue to stock up for winter.

    We have saved sooooo much money by just having planned menus alone. We are not buying anything unnecessary and nothing spoils and gets thrown in the garbage.
  • ladybuggnorris
    ladybuggnorris Posts: 276 Member
    Another thing that has happened since we started meal planning, is that we pretty much do not buy any aisle food at the grocery store any more. It is all outer walls. (Dairy, Meat, Produce)
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    Oh my goodness, what a little perspective can bring. I lived in a remote town, population six thousand, one grocer. The next closest shopping was five hours away by car. I shopped like the locals, making one large expedition to civilization for my bulk goods to fill my freezer and my pantry.

    I think you are more tired than poor. Cooking from scratch is much cheaper and healthier. Put aside the money you save from one sale towards a bulk purchase down the road. The more bulk staples you have on hand, the more flexibility you will have in your food choices.

    Cooking basics include how to make a roast and how to make a soup and stew from the roast leavings and drippings. There's several meals hiding in a single roast.

    Knowing how to make a basic white sauce so that dressing up rice or pasta is no longer a mystery.

    The other great skill is working with dried beans and lentils; soaking and simmering in endless ways. A cheap, fibrous, and protein-filled way to fill out your menu.
  • obscuremusicreference
    obscuremusicreference Posts: 1,320 Member
    In the fall many hunters clear out their freezers to make room for a new harvest. If you know any you may score some free/cheap deer burger. Also where I'm from, many hunters donate the meat to feed the hungry type programs. (Not wanting to start any PETA discussions here - just offering another source of good protein as an option.)

    Also you could fish - good activity with your kids too!

    Thanks for the advice hun but I live in England and hunting is very frowned upon by most people including myself :) I appreciate your comment though


    A couple Brits were arrested for poaching near me last year but alright. I think it's much more humane to take a deer that's been in the wild its whole life versus a chicken or cow that's kept on a feedlot.

    That said, I thought you all had more of a social net? If you're struggling with food, can't you call your council and try to get assistance? Whole foods are pretty cheap (especially compared to frozen pizzas), but if you're struggling to put food on the table, you should not be ashamed to ask for help.
  • MindySaysWhaaat
    MindySaysWhaaat Posts: 401 Member
    When I have rice, I basically put anything and everything with it. I've scrambled eggs, put ground beef, chicken, pork chop...usually it is some kind of meat. If you don't eat meat, I know you can put stir fried veggies or tofu with rice and it pairs pretty well.
  • azulvioleta6
    azulvioleta6 Posts: 4,195 Member
    "Easier" and "can't afford" are two completely different things.

    It sounds like you need to learn to cook on a basic level.
  • DawnieB1977
    DawnieB1977 Posts: 4,248 Member
    I'm in a financial crisis at the moment. I have two children and a partner and it's easier for me to grab a cheap pizza or frozen fish fingers.....
    It's not good for me but I just can't afford to buy more. Could I have my portions and work out more?

    Yes. But where in the world is frozen pizza and fish cheaper than frozen vegetables, dried beans, pasta, eggs and rice?

    We'll see I as a live in a TINY village in the middle of nowhere we have asda which to most people is wall mart. Pizza is a quid (about $2) frozen veg packs are a quid ($2), then you have to buy the extras so it doesn't taste like *kitten* and water like most frozen veg does :) so yes pizza is cheaper and more convenient in the one shop I have

    Can you get online deliveries where you live? We do Sainsburys online shopping. I don't live in a tiny village though.
  • 9bars
    9bars Posts: 40 Member
    https://web.archive.org/web/20130525131953/http://cheap-family-recipes.org.uk/

    Prices will be out of date now,but this is a cheap UK family meal planner. A girl called Jack blog would be another one with free cheap recipes.

    http://agirlcalledjack.com/
  • wizzybeth wrote: »
    Great ideas here. It really does take some thought, time, and a little creativity. In the long run a frozen pizza may be "cheaper" but the toll on your bodies may not be worth it - if you are not getting enough nutrients to keep your body healthy.

    I like that :) it does make me awful but sometimes I'm just exhausted.... I'm going to start doing my meals in advance and see how it goes
    "Easier" and "can't afford" are two completely different things.

    It sounds like you need to learn to cook on a basic level.

    I can cook! I do Sunday roasts, pasta dishes, fish dishes but they all seem to be high calorie and the ingredients I use aren't something I can just pop to the shop for near me
  • No.

    Cheap pizza: $8 for one meal OR you can spend $8 and get a couple days worth of dinners like rice/beans/eggs/frozen veggies.

    I've saved so much money eating healthier. Processed foods and sodas are so expensive.

    Not sure where you shop but I have never ever paid that much for a pizza unless it's from a take away place or restaurant. Frozen food vs a £1 bag for f frozen veg is a lot cheaper
  • mymodernbabylon
    mymodernbabylon Posts: 1,038 Member
    It's a British blog but you can get some inexpensive ideas here: http://agirlcalledjack.com/category/recipes-food/

    She's a woman who learned how to feed herself and her child on next to nothing and still stay healthy.
  • Valtishia
    Valtishia Posts: 811 Member
    We tend to pricematch and occasionally some coupons. Its convenient for my family as we also take public transit. Pricematching has saved us the most in terms of time (only have to go to one store) and money (not having to pay full price for most things). We save a minimum of $50 per week doing this and we get to eat healthier. Apples can run as high as 2.69/lb here. There are always apples on sale somewhere for .99/lb (sometimes even less.. I got them a couple weeks ago for .67/lb), I bring my flyer and I pay that price instead.
  • DawnieB1977
    DawnieB1977 Posts: 4,248 Member
    Potatoes are quite cheap, you could do homemade potato wedges, or jacket potatoes, or make a shepherds pie with loads of veg in it, or sausage and mash and veg.

    Also you could make a big stir fry with chicken and get cabbage, carrots, bean sprouts etc. You can get frozen stir fry veg in Sainsburys, but I'm not sure if it works out any cheaper.

    We often do a chicken stew with kale, carrots, onions, sweet potato, parsnip etc. It lasts a few days and we also purée it for our baby. You could do soup too. I've made minestrone before, it's nice and filling.

    Risotto is also nice, just add loads of veg again.

    I personally don't think healthy eating is more expensive. Even when I was at university I didn't eat unhealthily and I didn't have loads of spare money to spend on food. Probably because I'd spent it in the bar lol.
  • Alluminati
    Alluminati Posts: 6,208 Member
    Mmmm beans and rice
  • jgnatca
    jgnatca Posts: 14,464 Member
    I can't imagine any roast or pasta dish that would be higher calorie than a pizza slice. Unless you are going off on the portions somehow. Yeah, potatoes as someone else mentioned are inexpensive and easy to prepare. Smaller portions means more (cheaper) meals out of the same cut too. Small remote village means more planning when you go out of town for your big shopping trips. Small bargains adds up to more bulk buys as you go along.
  • paulaviki
    paulaviki Posts: 678 Member
    I'm in a financial crisis at the moment. I have two children and a partner and it's easier for me to grab a cheap pizza or frozen fish fingers.....
    It's not good for me but I just can't afford to buy more. Could I have my portions and work out more?

    Yes. But where in the world is frozen pizza and fish cheaper than frozen vegetables, dried beans, pasta, eggs and rice?

    We'll see I as a live in a TINY village in the middle of nowhere we have asda which to most people is wall mart. Pizza is a quid (about $2) frozen veg packs are a quid ($2), then you have to buy the extras so it doesn't taste like *kitten* and water like most frozen veg does :) so yes pizza is cheaper and more convenient in the one shop I have

    One pizza might be £1 but that's one meal. A £1 bag of frozen veg would do many more meals than that and asda's fresh veg is cheap as well. You can get a head of broccoli for 49p, a cabbage for 58p etc. A 500g pack of mince is £1.99. They do a 500g bag of pasta for 29p, and tinned tomatoes for 31p.

    You are busy pizza because it's convenient not because it's cheap. You could feed your family way better food for the same cost overall but it requires effort in terms of thinking about what to buy and actually cooking.

    Google a girl called Jack. She fed herself and her son for next to nothing but didn't eat convenience food at all.
  • debrag12
    debrag12 Posts: 1,071 Member
    Do you shop at co-op or spa by any chance? Totally over priced.

    I would invest in some money and do 1 delivery from ASDA a month to stock up on store cupboard/frozen items then maybe do small weekly shops for essentials. 1kg bag of veg is £1, tinned veg starts at 15p. 5k rice is £13. It can be done with little budgeting
  • melimomTARDIS
    melimomTARDIS Posts: 1,941 Member
    Eat what you already eat, just less.
  • Vailara
    Vailara Posts: 2,468 Member
    There's nothing terribly wrong with fish fingers, as long as you count the calories or use portion control. They do have fish in them, at least! Porridge oats are cheap and healthy - I buy the supermarket value ones, and use them for porridge, but you can use them in other ways too (for bulking out savoury dishes, as a coating for fish, toasted and mixed with yoghurt, flapjacks - if you can cope with the calories!, etc.).

    If you're able to store potatoes for a few days, you can use them to make "healthy" oven chips. Just cut them into chip shapes and coat with a tiny bit of oil, seasoning to taste, herbs, etc. Onions, peppers, carrots, tomatoes, cucumbers and mushrooms are quite cheap and low calorie, and you can use them to bulk out things like bolognaise sauce, curries, stirfries, etc. I find that if you make things like curries and stirfries, the meat seems to go a little further. I use a lot of tinned tomatoes - they used to be very cheap but not so much now, unfortunately. The same goes for tinned fish. I'm not a big fan of frozen veg, but some is better than others (frozen peas are great!).

    Pork is often cheaper than other meat. Peanut butter is quite good value for the amount of nutrition, I think. So are eggs. When I was struggling with money years ago before I was dieting, I used to make a LOT of quiches with onion, bacon, cheese, veg, etc. The pastry was cheap and filling. But I wouldn't recommend if you're dieting! You can still use eggs to make omelettes, frittata, souffles, etc.

    The suggestions about pulses are great, but I personally haven't had a lot of success with getting children to like them!
  • HockeyGoalie35
    HockeyGoalie35 Posts: 84 Member
    Even if you have to buy the cheaper, unhealthier stuff, you should still be able to stick to your calories. I have the opposite problem - I stuck to my calorie goal at uni by eating microwave meals all the time, it was easy. Now my boyfriend wants to cook properly and every home-cooked meal seems to be twice the calories of its microwave equivalent!


    AWESOME JINX COSPLAY...

    OP you can make a weeks worth of awesome stir fry for a 16 dollar pizza. fresh peas, corn, bell peppers,onions, garlic, some soy sauce, lean beef, frozen shrimps, grilled chicken tenders. I've been saving about $400 a month making sure i cook all my own food, even though i can sometimes spend14 hours at work.
  • segacs
    segacs Posts: 4,599 Member
    It is almost never cheaper to eat pre-packaged takeout than it is to cook healthy meals.

    It is, however, easier, which is why I think your choice of phrasing in your original post is relevant.

    There are lots of great suggestions on this thread. I'll just add that if you're using your financial situation as an excuse not to put in the extra effort, then that's on you.
  • drabbits3
    drabbits3 Posts: 140 Member
    my husband was unemployed for 11 months of last year and I have two teenaged boys. who eat a LOT of food. I understand BUT think hard about what you are teaching your kids and what you are setting them up for as adults--if they acquire a taste for cheap, quick, unhealthy foods aren't they going to be in the same fat mess that a lot of us were in that made us come here??? aren't they going to have a lot of the same health issues as grown ups that a lot of us are trying to undo and avoid? we ate more rice and beans and egg dishes than I care to remember when we were broke. dry beans keep in the pantry indefinitely and they require virtually no effort--soak them overnight, drain that water and boil the next day--maybe two hours??--until they are soft. done. serve over brown rice, a little salsa on top. eggs--scrambled, in sandwiches, frittatas--add whatever veggies were on sale-done. apples, bananas and oranges are generally pretty cheap too. listen--it gets boring eating the same stuff over and over but boring beats fat and unhealthy. baked potatoes stuffed with veggies, sweet potatoes stuffed with veggies, vegetable soups with added rice or pasta or some other grain. it is totally possible to eat well on a tight budget. don't use that as your excuse. you have to take the exact same public transport to buy the junk food as you do to buy the healthy stuff.
  • Malteaster
    Malteaster Posts: 75 Member
    You can bulk mince out with grated carrot, it makes the mince go further and cuts the calories.

    Roast Chicken can be stretched for two to three days. Roast dinner on day one, chicken stir fry/risotto on day two and the carcass can be boiled up for soup.

    Have you looked at A Girl called Jack's blog, she is very inspirational cooking on a budget, and most recipes could be adapted. There is also Frugal Queen's blog which cooks on a budget.
  • fat2strongbeth
    fat2strongbeth Posts: 735 Member
    I find that the least processed foods are less expensive. Buy meat on sale and freeze. Buy fresh fruits and veggies that are in season and less expensive. Frozen/canned veggies, canned beans, dried beans, etc are often on sale.
  • hollyrayburn
    hollyrayburn Posts: 905 Member
    In the fall many hunters clear out their freezers to make room for a new harvest. If you know any you may score some free/cheap deer burger. Also where I'm from, many hunters donate the meat to feed the hungry type programs. (Not wanting to start any PETA discussions here - just offering another source of good protein as an option.)

    Also you could fish - good activity with your kids too!

    Thanks for the advice hun but I live in England and hunting is very frowned upon by most people including myself :) I appreciate your comment though

    Because that fish wasn't hunted before they froze it?
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