Anonymous wrote:Make sure you buy in season produce! That keeps the cost down considerably.
Anonymous wrote:The way I deal with it is that my kids don't get quite that much choice--so one week it's blueberries and raspberries, the next it's grapes and strawberries, etc. They don't need 12 types of fruit to choose from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way I deal with it is that my kids don't get quite that much choice--so one week it's blueberries and raspberries, the next it's grapes and strawberries, etc. They don't need 12 types of fruit to choose from.
Me too.
I don't get how this solves the problem. It's about quantity of fruit consumed.
If I only bought one fruit a week, they would just eat more of that fruit that week. I'd just be buying more of that one fruit rather than less of several different fruits.
My examples might not have been great, but it solves the problem because you can only buy what is on sale that week and spend less than buying smaller amounts of several full-priced items.
Also, to the anti-coupon poster, I guarantee there are things that you buy that you can use coupons on, and you can use the money you save there to offset the cost of produce. Surely you use toilet paper, paper towels, shampoo, trash bags, aluminum foil, toothpaste....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way I deal with it is that my kids don't get quite that much choice--so one week it's blueberries and raspberries, the next it's grapes and strawberries, etc. They don't need 12 types of fruit to choose from.
Me too.
I don't get how this solves the problem. It's about quantity of fruit consumed.
If I only bought one fruit a week, they would just eat more of that fruit that week. I'd just be buying more of that one fruit rather than less of several different fruits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to find a good Asian market. I go to one up the street from me- a pint of blueberries is $1.29 vs $3.99, avocados are $1.20 apiece vs. $1.75 apiece. Vine tomatoes .99 cents/lb, grape tomatoes $1.29 pint.Not everything is cheaper than the grocery store but some of it is WAY cheaper and makes a huge difference.
+1. H-Mart is good and there are several in VA. The quality might be a bit worse (although I've seen some DISGUSTING produce at Safeway) but prices are so cheap, it's totally worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Try to find a good Asian market. I go to one up the street from me- a pint of blueberries is $1.29 vs $3.99, avocados are $1.20 apiece vs. $1.75 apiece. Vine tomatoes .99 cents/lb, grape tomatoes $1.29 pint.Not everything is cheaper than the grocery store but some of it is WAY cheaper and makes a huge difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The way I deal with it is that my kids don't get quite that much choice--so one week it's blueberries and raspberries, the next it's grapes and strawberries, etc. They don't need 12 types of fruit to choose from.
Me too.
I don't get how this solves the problem. It's about quantity of fruit consumed.
If I only bought one fruit a week, they would just eat more of that fruit that week. I'd just be buying more of that one fruit rather than less of several different fruits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone else pretty astounded by the amount they spend on produce for their young children? My 3 kids easily eat 90 dollars worth of produce a week. Blueberries, strawberries, mangos, green and yellow peppers, apples, corn (although thats pretty cheap), sweet potatoes, carrots, bananas etc all add up pretty quickly in this house. And Im not even talking whole foods premium here, do a mix between TJ and farmers market.
So, each kid eats $4.30 worth of fruit and vegetables per day?
Kids is expensive.