Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Roast a whole chicken and a few chicken quarters (wing and thighs attached)
Leftovers become - enchiladas, chicken salad and chicken noodle soup, fajitas
Ground chicken - Greek meatballs and orzo, lettuce wraps (sometimes more expensive then ground beef), white chicken chili
Lean ground beef - chili, nachos, meat sauce, tacos, lasagna
Eggs - egg sandwiches w/cheese, omelets, boiled egg added to salads w/ leftover cooked meats, use them for homemade baked goods like banana breads and various muffins
Salmon - relatively inexpensive fish serve with roasted sweet potatoes and broccoli
Lamb rib chops - not great for leftovers but easy for a one night meal
We eat a lot of beans, lentils and couscous
Thank you. You make all this happen for family of 4 on $250?
My friend survived a catastrophic health event at 50 that only 5% of people survive. He’s a bit better now but will never be able to work again. His wife has MS and is very reliant on a wheelchair now, and one of their teens is fighting cancer. His unexpected medical event wiped out their meager . savings. Trying to help come up with a simplified meal plan with him. They live out of state.
It ultimately depends on where you shop for groceries. I assume a pantry with basic spices. You’ll also have to look at the flyers that come in the mail to determine where to shop for what. When something they like is on sale, buy it and freeze it. I suggest Aldi for fruit, vegetables, dairy, cereal and bread, much cheaper than most markets. They sell lunch meats and pulled rotisserie chicken (excellent for chicken salad) they even have salmon and ground chicken. I tend to buy my meat products from Safeway. It’s doable but it requires some thought. Aldi’s has a great option of buying on line then they bring it to your car.
Anonymous wrote:There is a whole free online cookbook for this https://leannebrown.com/good-and-cheap-2/
Anonymous wrote:Forgot to add that they probably qualify for financial assistance and they should reach out to their county social services office. Both the husband and wife and their son as well would qualify for individual benefits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Roast a whole chicken and a few chicken quarters (wing and thighs attached)
Leftovers become - enchiladas, chicken salad and chicken noodle soup, fajitas
Ground chicken - Greek meatballs and orzo, lettuce wraps (sometimes more expensive then ground beef), white chicken chili
Lean ground beef - chili, nachos, meat sauce, tacos, lasagna
Eggs - egg sandwiches w/cheese, omelets, boiled egg added to salads w/ leftover cooked meats, use them for homemade baked goods like banana breads and various muffins
Salmon - relatively inexpensive fish serve with roasted sweet potatoes and broccoli
Lamb rib chops - not great for leftovers but easy for a one night meal
We eat a lot of beans, lentils and couscous
Thank you. You make all this happen for family of 4 on $250?
My friend survived a catastrophic health event at 50 that only 5% of people survive. He’s a bit better now but will never be able to work again. His wife has MS and is very reliant on a wheelchair now, and one of their teens is fighting cancer. His unexpected medical event wiped out their meager . savings. Trying to help come up with a simplified meal plan with him. They live out of state.
It ultimately depends on where you shop for groceries. I assume a pantry with basic spices. You’ll also have to look at the flyers that come in the mail to determine where to shop for what. When something they like is on sale, buy it and freeze it. I suggest Aldi for fruit, vegetables, dairy, cereal and bread, much cheaper than most markets. They sell lunch meats and pulled rotisserie chicken (excellent for chicken salad) they even have salmon and ground chicken. I tend to buy my meat products from Safeway. It’s doable but it requires some thought. Aldi’s has a great option of buying on line then they bring it to your car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Roast a whole chicken and a few chicken quarters (wing and thighs attached)
Leftovers become - enchiladas, chicken salad and chicken noodle soup, fajitas
Ground chicken - Greek meatballs and orzo, lettuce wraps (sometimes more expensive then ground beef), white chicken chili
Lean ground beef - chili, nachos, meat sauce, tacos, lasagna
Eggs - egg sandwiches w/cheese, omelets, boiled egg added to salads w/ leftover cooked meats, use them for homemade baked goods like banana breads and various muffins
Salmon - relatively inexpensive fish serve with roasted sweet potatoes and broccoli
Lamb rib chops - not great for leftovers but easy for a one night meal
We eat a lot of beans, lentils and couscous
Thank you. You make all this happen for family of 4 on $250?
My friend survived a catastrophic health event at 50 that only 5% of people survive. He’s a bit better now but will never be able to work again. His wife has MS and is very reliant on a wheelchair now, and one of their teens is fighting cancer. His unexpected medical event wiped out their meager . savings. Trying to help come up with a simplified meal plan with him. They live out of state.
Anonymous wrote:Roast a whole chicken and a few chicken quarters (wing and thighs attached)
Leftovers become - enchiladas, chicken salad and chicken noodle soup, fajitas
Ground chicken - Greek meatballs and orzo, lettuce wraps (sometimes more expensive then ground beef), white chicken chili
Lean ground beef - chili, nachos, meat sauce, tacos, lasagna
Eggs - egg sandwiches w/cheese, omelets, boiled egg added to salads w/ leftover cooked meats, use them for homemade baked goods like banana breads and various muffins
Salmon - relatively inexpensive fish serve with roasted sweet potatoes and broccoli
Lamb rib chops - not great for leftovers but easy for a one night meal
We eat a lot of beans, lentils and couscous