Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I generally just make a note when I’m at the stores. For example, on average, bananas as .44 a pound at aldi. That’s about as cheap as you’ll get them especially when you can find other cheap fruit. It’s also very, very easy to get in and out of aldi as opposed to parking and getting in and out of a Safeway. So if I’m near an aldi, booming in for produce, makes it worth it for me. Is it worth it for bananas? No. Is it worth it for bananas and various produce? Yes.
Sorry, I didn't mean to imply that I would go to Aldi just for bananas. I was just using that as an example of one item of many.....So say I'm Aldi...what should I buy and what shouldn't I buy? I can't remember all the prices from all the stores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if you can reduce or stop buying certain kinds of processed food as these items are relatively expensive. Oatmeal instead of cold cereal, bulk flour and yeast for the bread machine instead of buying loaves of bread, etc.
Also, shop your fridge and pantry when planning meals - incorporate whatever you need to use up.
This is OP and this is one of my biggest struggles. It’s empty and I think it’s psychological. I NEED to have stuff in there for a rainy day.
Anonymous wrote:Our approach is to eat mainly vegetarian and cook from scratch. The food is so cheap--though that's not why we do it. We spend about 350/mo for 4 people (including a voracious teen boy), but we have taught and enlisted our kids to cook so we have time to make a lot more than many families. But I think it's more habit than time as we have conveniences like an instant pot that make cooking easy.
We shop at a combo of costco, amazon delivery and super hmart.
We buy bulk grain (quinoa, brown rice, steel cut oats etc.) and dried beans in bulk.
We buy bulk flours, yeast, baking powder and bake our own breads and treats.
We buy frozen fruits and veggies of basics from Costco.
We always have fresh: spinach, onions, shallots, garlic, ginger, mushrooms, red cabbage, sweet potatoes and then whatever is on sale and looks good of other veggies and fruits so we can make a great salad, stir fry, casserole or egg dish on a moment's notice.
We buy bulk popcorn and vary the toppings as our most common snack.
We have dried fruit, seeds, nuts on hand to add a nice varied touch to salads, oatmeal and stir fries. We buy the surprisingly good Costco Kirkland EV organic olive oil as our main fat. We always have some good quality olives and sundried tomatoes on hand too.
For non-vegetarian parts of diet we buy one kind of nice cheese and fresh fish--usual salmon for the week that we use as a touch to several meals. We also always have eggs, tofu and greek yogurt on hand.
We drink water mainly (well and coffee and wine...).
I really thoroughly enjoy all our food!
Anonymous wrote:My question on this is how to track what is cheaper where? So for example....you need bananas....do you get them at Aldi, Costco, Trader Joe's, or Giant with a coupon? Replace bananas with anything you need to buy....eggs, TP, paper towels, apples, milk, etc etc. The unit pricing changes regularly I would assume, so how do you know where to buy certain things? Any helpful hints on this? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Aldi? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Costco?
Anonymous wrote:I generally just make a note when I’m at the stores. For example, on average, bananas as .44 a pound at aldi. That’s about as cheap as you’ll get them especially when you can find other cheap fruit. It’s also very, very easy to get in and out of aldi as opposed to parking and getting in and out of a Safeway. So if I’m near an aldi, booming in for produce, makes it worth it for me. Is it worth it for bananas? No. Is it worth it for bananas and various produce? Yes.
Anonymous wrote:My question on this is how to track what is cheaper where? So for example....you need bananas....do you get them at Aldi, Costco, Trader Joe's, or Giant with a coupon? Replace bananas with anything you need to buy....eggs, TP, paper towels, apples, milk, etc etc. The unit pricing changes regularly I would assume, so how do you know where to buy certain things? Any helpful hints on this? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Aldi? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Costco?
Anonymous wrote:My question on this is how to track what is cheaper where? So for example....you need bananas....do you get them at Aldi, Costco, Trader Joe's, or Giant with a coupon? Replace bananas with anything you need to buy....eggs, TP, paper towels, apples, milk, etc etc. The unit pricing changes regularly I would assume, so how do you know where to buy certain things? Any helpful hints on this? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Aldi? Is something ALWAYS cheaper at Costco?