Anonymous wrote:For those who aren't just trying to use grocery prices to score political points and truly are just managing your household budget, what have you been doing to make it work? What have you changed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow 10% of our food - eggs, fruit, vegetables
Make 25% of our food - bread, yogurt, crackers, chips, applesauce, fruit leather
Cook 85% of our meals
Shop at Whole Foods, Trader Joes, Costco and part of a CSA
You aren't very good at math are you?
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.
Anonymous wrote:For us it's less about finding a new place to shop (we sort of rotate between TJs, Whole Foods, Harris Teeter, and sometimes Target for certain shelf staples) but thinking about what we are eating and trying to default to things that cost less.
We have certain meals that involve only inexpensive ingredients, so even with higher prices, it's not too painful. Stuff like red beans and rice, spaghetti and meatballs, lentil curry, crunchy tacos, etc.
We avoid prepared foods and high budget items like bakery bread (we make bread at home and even with flour being through the roof, it's still relatively affordable).
And then there are things I just know from experience. It's worth it to buy meat and produce at WF because the cost is similar to other stores but the quality is better. But dairy and shelf staples are often more expensive at WF (unless its 365 brand) so we try to get a lot of those at TJs where their distribution model is keeping the price of things like pasta, beans, frozen food, nuts, and snacks lower than elsewhere. And then we know that HT and Target will often run specials on name brand items like breakfast cereal (which I loathe but is all one of my kids will eat in the morning so we still buy it) so we stock up on those when they are on sale.
We were given a free Costco membership as a gift last Christmas and I've bought a few things there where buying in bulk actually makes financial sense (I mostly think it's a racket but I get flour, olive oil, baking soda, and a few other staples there and it lasts a long time and does have a lower per unit price).
That's about it. We've been doing this for years now, first due to belt tightening pre-Covid when I got laid off, then during Covid when I paused my job search to take care of kids home from school, then post-covid to deal with inflation. I feel like the longer I do it the better I get at it, but it gets harder and harder. Bread flour prices just went up another 20%. Meat and eggs have actually come down a little from their peak, but produce, milk, yogurt, and cheese have all gone up.
The worst is when you have to buy something you don't normally buy and it turns out it now costs 3-4x what it used to. Halloween candy sticker shock is real ($10 for a bag with maybe 20 pieces of candy? And I have to buy two per kid just to have enough for their class?). If this goes on, I think the expectation that people can do stuff like that is going to have to adjust. We are okay financially and can spend $40 on classroom candy for halloween but I hate it. I am sure there are some people for whom that's just impossible. A lot of schools and kids activities rely on parents always being able to just foot the bill for little add ons. How can that continue? Most of us are not wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know this is off-brand for DCUM, but the regular item I have found hardest to manage is Diet Coke. Prices got stupid at "normal" grocery stores but also went up insanely at Costco. I started actually googling who is selling it as a loss leader (Target, Giant, and Safeway on my rotation of places to check) and stocking up.
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.
Of course they can. Clearly they don’t want to, so they’re buying on sale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're vegetarian at home and buy mostly at Trader Joe's and sometimes Whole Foods. But we also hardly ever eat out and don't drink (alcohol ever or coffee out, no sodas...) so that helps as well. We don't buy packaged snacks like granola bars, chips...
+1. The way we manage prices is by changing what we eat. We basically eat non-processed foods, and buy that in bulk. So most of my shopping is done at Costco, MOM's bulk bins, ethnic grocery stores, and TJs. While some of these prices are higher, I figure I'm saving in future health costs by eating healthier now.
Anonymous wrote:We're vegetarian at home and buy mostly at Trader Joe's and sometimes Whole Foods. But we also hardly ever eat out and don't drink (alcohol ever or coffee out, no sodas...) so that helps as well. We don't buy packaged snacks like granola bars, chips...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know this is off-brand for DCUM, but the regular item I have found hardest to manage is Diet Coke. Prices got stupid at "normal" grocery stores but also went up insanely at Costco. I started actually googling who is selling it as a loss leader (Target, Giant, and Safeway on my rotation of places to check) and stocking up.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow 10% of our food - eggs, fruit, vegetables
Make 25% of our food - bread, yogurt, crackers, chips, applesauce, fruit leather
Cook 85% of our meals
Shop at Whole Foods, Trader Joes, Costco and part of a CSA
You aren't very good at math are you?
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.
Anonymous wrote:For those who aren't just trying to use grocery prices to score political points and truly are just managing your household budget, what have you been doing to make it work? What have you changed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
I don’t think big box stores are absorbing costs.
On some items they are as bad as supermarkets.