You aren't very good at math are you? |
|
I still just shop at Aldi. I avoid items with big price spikes - e.g. I made chili with ground pork instead of beef last week. Still try to eat tofu, beans, or chickpea pasta on a weekly basis although my kids are going crazy for meat lately.
That's about it. Yes my grocery bills have gone up, but they're still generally in the $120-150 range for 4 people. We did buy a Costco membership for paper and household goods that are frequently out of stock at Aldi, and occasionally stop at another store like HMart or Wegmans with a bigger selection, and it's those trips that push our weekly spending into the $200-250 range, so we just try to spread them out a bit. |
Seems fairly obvious that some of these are ingredients in meals, doesn't it? I'd actually be surprised that a household that produces their own eggs, fruit, and vegetables (probably not in the DMV unless you eat apples all year?) still buys 15% of meals outside the home. |
| Sams, Costco, csa share (until end of November), Aldi. But overall, eating less and trying to make do with what’s in the pantry. Frozen vegs and canned beans. |
If you added up those percentages and said it's wrong becausd it's over 100%, Its you who sucks at math! |
You are kidding? Right! |
|
What you need is to cook more, refrigerate and freeze more for seconds, buy at Walmart, Costco, Asian stores etc. However, grocery isn't where you save, you save on eating out, alcohol, clothing, travel, socializing, aesthetic services, using car for 10 years, getting a simpler house with less mortgage and maintenance expenses, etc.
|
| Biggest concern- what happens when the big box stores and companies stop absorbing costs of tariffs/taxes and raise their prices? Most are saying January is when we will see true prices. If it gets much higher, I will have to be very careful about what we buy and avoid waste at all cost. |
You can just quit as coke or beer aren't essentials of food pyramid. Your health would improve as well so extra saving on healthcare. |
I don’t think big box stores are absorbing costs. On some items they are as bad as supermarkets. |
Even with the price increases, eggs are a low cost protein - just not as low cost as they once were. |
| Walmart and Aldi are still quite cheap. I don’t love their produce, but usually we can get some basic items that are fine. I still fill that in at the farmer’s market because it’s way better. |
|
Now that we are getting into the colder part of the year, I am making stews and chilis and soups. I usually halve the meat and double the beans. I’ll also use less costly cuts of beef for something like beef stew - in the slow cooker it gets very tender.
We also do meatless twice a week. It’s cheap to make your own pizza at home. I have found it’s really easy to make your own tortillas and burrito/taco night is also a very cheap option. We have a breakfast for dinner night too - eggs are still a cheaper alternative. |
|
We buy less meat, and we focus on meals that can be made in bulk and frozen so we can have them again another day.
I no longer drink Diet Coke, but when I did I would take advantage of the BOGO sales at Harris Teeter for Coke products. I visit different stores depending on the prices//sales each store offers. Wegman’s, for example, has the cheapest family-sized boxes of Cheerios (I’m not a Costco member, so I don’t know if they are cheaper there). Walmart sells the cheapest butter in the brand I buy, as well as fish and frozen shrimp. |
| We spend $1600 a month for a family of 4. It was $1200 two years ago. |