Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$100 per week of eating out. Hhi is $120k. My 3 & 6 yrs old ask to eat out all the time.
How is this possible? 4 people eating out on $100?
What are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spend about $500-600 a month on eating out.
We are a family of 4 (two small kids). We eat out a LOT and spend $40-80 per meal.
I've tried cutting down on our eating out budget and it just means that the expenses are transferred to the grocery budget. Whether we cook or eat out our expenditure is the same.
I forgot to add our HHI is about $95k
I am not judging you for eating out a lot, but you know that a $40 trip to Nando's doesn't translate to $40 worth of rotisserie chicken, sides, bread, and soda, right? No way. If it's an even exchange, then you must be grocery shopping at the Whole Foods salad bar, which I consider to be eating out.
We neither eat at Nando's (or any chains) nor buy our groceries from the Wholefoods salad bar. Nor do we eat rotisserie chicken. We are vegetarian and cook from scratch (nothing processed). I also am not hung up on buying organic. I track all our expenditure carefully and shop well but I still don't find a negligible difference when we eat out less in our overall budget for food.
Also, btw, it sounds like you are judging. Just saying.
Totally judging. And missing the point -- her assessment that rotisserie chicken and soda somehow makes a superior meal is laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spend about $500-600 a month on eating out.
We are a family of 4 (two small kids). We eat out a LOT and spend $40-80 per meal.
I've tried cutting down on our eating out budget and it just means that the expenses are transferred to the grocery budget. Whether we cook or eat out our expenditure is the same.
I forgot to add our HHI is about $95k
I am not judging you for eating out a lot, but you know that a $40 trip to Nando's doesn't translate to $40 worth of rotisserie chicken, sides, bread, and soda, right? No way. If it's an even exchange, then you must be grocery shopping at the Whole Foods salad bar, which I consider to be eating out.
We neither eat at Nando's (or any chains) nor buy our groceries from the Wholefoods salad bar. Nor do we eat rotisserie chicken. We are vegetarian and cook from scratch (nothing processed). I also am not hung up on buying organic. I track all our expenditure carefully and shop well but I still don't find a negligible difference when we eat out less in our overall budget for food.
Also, btw, it sounds like you are judging. Just saying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$100 per week of eating out. Hhi is $120k. My 3 & 6 yrs old ask to eat out all the time.
How is this possible? 4 people eating out on $100?
What are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:About 15 years ago, maybe more, my son got a part time job working at a high class/read expensive gourmet burger place. The owner was a family friend. This place was packed during the day and at night. Always had people in lines waiting to get in.
My son told us to never eat there. Though they passed health inspections he said all of the workers had filthy habits, came to work sick and some had bloody, pus filled open sores on their hands working on prep with and without gloves. A few years later I heard the place was shut down because a worker had HepC and exposed anyone that ate or worked there to it. Free testing. How sweet.![]()
The day my son told us that was the day I never ate out again.
When I feel like I think I want something out, I eat cereal.
Just read today
Poll: Sick Employees Insist on Serving Up Food
http://www.foodsafetymagazine.com/news/poll-sick-employees-insist-on-serving-up-food/