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That's A Stretcher! |
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Some ways I have trimmed the budget (we used to spend $125-$150 a week!): I know this doesn't work for everyone.
Cut back and then stopped drinking pop on a daily basis ($5 a week saved). A case of pop lasts us over 2 months.
My husband gets two 6 packs of Henry Weinhart's root beer a year, and we buy pop probably twice a year beyond that. If we have it, we drink it, and we don't need the corn syrup and junk anyway, not to mention the extra expense.
Stopped buying "pre-packaged" foods (meals you just stick in the micro or oven) except for occasional frozen pizza and/or chicken nuggets. No more hot pockets, banquet meals, etc. We are healthier, too, now! ($10 to $15 saved)
We pretty much never buy these now, and find them too salty, sweet, insipid. When we want cookies or cakes, we make them. I'm even planning on experimenting with crackers and graham crackers.
stopped buying deli lunchmeat except on good sales. We eat leftovers for lunch instead of sandwiches ($5 saved)
This is a huge one, too. We buy cheese in blocks, so we don't use the deli for that, and it takes a sale and a coupon for us to get meat at the deli. However, if you have a Grocery Outlet near you, you can often find those meats for very little money.
Snack items were cut back to occasional bag of plain chips or pretzels (mainly for lunches) ($3-4 saved)
I think we've bought snack crackers, pretzels and chips about 10 times in the last year.
Cut back on boxed cereal; ate more oatmeal ($3 saved)
We make pancakes and waffles on the weekends in triple batches and freeze the extras with parchment or wax paper between them in a freezer bag, and toast them during the week. We cook oatmeal or grits, eat eggs and toast, and I make my own cereal (granola and a fake grape nuts) that we eat for quickie breakfasts.
Cut back on alcohol ($10 saved). We still occasionally splurge on a bottle of wine but I get the $6 bottle rather than a $10-$15 bottle. DH does drink beer but only 1-2 on the weekends so a case lasts quite a while.
I'm the only one who drinks in our house, so we buy alcohol pretty rarely. We've splurged a few times, but mostly get $2-10 bottles of wine. Liquor lasts forever in the house.
We do a lot of these things. We shop for fresh food instead of packaged. I make just about everything we eat, including bread, cookies, cakes, snacks, mayonnaise, yogurt, pickles, relish, jams, jellies, preserves and cereal. By doing that, we are able to buy locally raised meat, wild caught local fish and shellfish, organic, pasture fed, raw dairy, lots of organic produce, etc. We're still able to keep our grocery budget under $700 (that's our holiday budget, usually we spend around $650) pretty much every month for our family of 7 (we're adding number 8 next Tuesday), including food, paper products, cleaning supplies, diapers and feed for the chickens and ducks, too.
We raise chickens for eggs and some meat, ducks for eggs, honeybees for honey and we're trying to grow some of our own herbs, vegetables and fruit. We also glean. Blackberries grow abundantly where we live, and we pick them to eat, to make jams, preserves and syrup, to freeze for winter, to make pies, muffins, etc. We also know of two parks where you are allowed to pick fruit for free, blueberries and crabapples, and we use those in much the same way. We have a trade going with a friend who raises organic veggies, I give her eggs, she gives us produce. Same thing with a friend who has an orchard, we leave one of our hives there to pollinate and he gives us fruit. I do most of our shopping, and shop the loss leaders, in season. So, we get produce in season on sale, and are able to get much of it organic. I stock up on staples, freeze meats and put just about everything to work. What we can't eat goes in a bag in the freezer for the stock pot, if it can't be used there, it goes to our chickens and ducks, and if it's something they can't eat, we put it in the compost for our garden.
We are fortunate to have several sources for locally grown meat, some of it pasture raised, some of it organic. It is not any more than the regular price at the grocery store, and sometimes is less. When it is on sale, I buy lots and freeze the excess. We buy in bulk, since we are a larger family, and use Cash and Carry to get the kind of deals people get at Costco without paying for the membership. Also, our grocery store offered a credit card that gave double reward points in their loyalty plan, as well as giving us a 15 cent discount per gallon of gas based on how much we spent. We put everything on it, bills, student loans, and pay it off each month, which gives us rebates of about $90-100 each quarter that we can use to shop at the grocery store where we do most of our shopping.
Cash and Carry, Grocery Outlet, a local market which has high quality, but expensive, goods, yet has great loss leaders which we take advantage of and Trader Joe's, if you can believe it, are where we find our best deals outside of our less expensive grocery store. The secret of shopping Trader Joe's and not spending too much is to buy ingredients rather than packaged goods; they have great prices on dried fruit, nuts, maple syrup, condiments, frozen veggies, cheeses, dairy, pasta and such. The Cash and Carry and Grocery Outlet are near where we go to church and have bible study, so we hit them when we are already in the area. I make a twice a month trip to TJ's, shop only weekly at our grocery stores, and time my purchases from farmers and fishermen locally to be on the same days, as well as being on days I'm in the area already.
I have given up going to all the different grocery stores. I shop at one major grocery store, one small market, locally. I menu plan and do grocery lists, and make sure I do one big trip a week instead of lots of little trips. This saves us on gas as well as on impulse purchases.
Sorry this is long winded, but this is the biggest area I save us money. Most of our bills are fixed, but saving on groceries and on gas helps, as that is something we can control somewhat. Oh, and I also make our laundry detergent, fabric softener and many of our cleaning supplies. This takes pennies on the dollar and only a little time for a huge payback. Many recipes and ideas can be found on my blog, too.
Regards,
Ranee
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/