Well for us it started by writing a menu or menu plan. I
listed every meal we liked to eat, oatmeal, cold cereal, spaghetti,
tacos, salad, etc. I took the next step and broke that list down
to dairy, meats, vegetables, frozen foods, canned foods, boxed
foods. Then I combined them on a calendar.
Monday ~ Breakfast ~ Oatmeal, canned peaches, milk, coffee
Lunch ~ Mac 'n cheese, frozen brocolli, water, koolaid
Dinner ~ Spaghetti, garlic bread, celery sticks, water, tea
And
so on. Now I started scanning the local store flyers. Pat
gave a great site for your local flyers:
http://www.mygrocerydeals.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=site.dspMemberLogin§or=dspSpecials
I
looked at all the sales and compared it to my menu plan or calendar
meals. If burger was on sale we had tacos, hamburger
helper, spaghetti, goulash, rice dishes, etc. If brocolli was on
sale we would use that both cooked and fresh. In your case with
twins on the way and two at home already I would check to see what
frozen meals you can buy that your family likes. Maybe a few TV
dinner type meals, frozen pasta meal, fish sticks, pot pies, ethnic
foods, Stouffers meals. Take Stouffers family pack of
lasagna. After serving your family you can cut it into servings
size pieces and freeze it for lunches or even another meal, stretching
your budget dollar and giving you some down time. Think about
breakfast for dinner, hashbrowns, scrambled eggs and sausage
links. Or pancakes, waffles and precooked bacon.
Always add a fruit, fresh, canned or frozen to your table.
Adding things like a plate of pickles, bread and butter, jams, olives,
sliced tomatoes, cheese slices, etc. to your table provides a nice
choice and more food for little work, saving on the budget.
Condiments are a great way to get everyone to eat how they are supposed
to and makes it look like you are serving a meal fit for a royal family
with little effort. : )
Think about casseroles, if you can make one you can make
3. Serve one for dinner and freeze 2 for later. Take some
canned baked beans and add cut polish sausage or hot dogs, top with
canned biscuits and bake till browned. Add some breads, cornbread,
crackers, bread sticks, etc. and you have nice fill~ins for little
cost on the budget and in time. Frozen pizza and calzones are
cheaper at the grocery than having them delivered. For something
different, cut the pizza into squares and add a new item, olives or
maybe a pineapple chunk. Make your deli your friend, for roasted
whole chickens, serve with instant potatoes and jarred gravy. Or
buy sliced ham on sale and make hot ham sandwiches with instant potatoes and dry mix pork gravy.
Make one dessert a week, cookies, cakes, puddings. Use your crockpot, electric frying pan and microwave all you can.
Now
that you have a plan, or one I suggested, set a budget of how much you
will spend for two weeks. Grab your list, your coupons, your
calculator and your wallet, leave the kids and hubby home. Shop
from your list not going over your alloted two week amount. When
you get home and unpack and relax, sit down and look over your
receipt. Mark the "extras" that were not on your list. Were
they truly needs or just wants. Make sure next time you shop you
elminate the wants, or at least trim them down. Now look at your
totals, one with the extras and add up the one without. The one
without is the target you are going to work towards.
The
following week again check the ads, see how much you have left over
from last weeks shopping. Only take that amount with you, plus
$20 for stock up items(staples, TP, cereal deals, deli meat or cheeses,
etc.), only buy needs. After 3 or 4 shopping trips you
should have a pretty good idea of what you will spend for your food
budget, always trying dfferent strategies to reduce it as you move
forward.
Remember always be flexible, and start small. It
takes a few shopping trips to get used to a budget and to learn the
difference between wants and needs. You need orange juice, so do
you buy oranges also or do you just want them? Could you leave
one behind and get the same benefit out of the one you did
choose? Or, do you need individual yogurts at say 50 cents
apiece or can you make do with a quart of vanilla yogurt and add your own
fruit? Can you make more cookies from a mix where you add eggs
and oil than say buying a bag of animal crackers?
With twins on
the way you are going to need alot of down time so make it easy on
yourself, dont prepare complicated meals. If you dont feel like
making a fresh salad, serve frozen vegetables. Soup and
sandwiches make a great meal as does chili and crackers or cornbread
from a mix. Have some grilled pb & jelly sandwiches for
breakfast, or hot rice and brown sugar w/butter. Dont be afraid
to make it simple and your grocery budget will soon reflect that.
: )
Anytime you have a question please just ask, we are all here learning as we go along and love to share!