Anonymous wrote:First- I hope that you ate the hummus anyway. It's no big deal to eat it.
Second- I am sorry. We had a financial turn recently too, and I am scrambling to cut our grocery bill by a lot. It's hard and it makes me quite upset when my son wastes food.
Third- you need to go to a thrift store and pick up some clothes. I dropped some things off a few months ago and noticed a family walking out with name brand clothing for a song.
Fourth- Homemade, from scratch food is only less expensive if it's something that is relatively cheap to make and you eat a lot of it. I think people who suggest it may not know what it's like to worry (truly worry) about money. (e.g. "everyone has a $10 bottle of olive oil, tahini is only $5, just pull out the $200 food processor or spend 30 minutes mashing chickpeas when you just wanted to sit down...")
OP, my mom was a single mom with almost no money. The stress and worry of something going wrong (car repair, furnace, medical) cannot be overestimated. I remember my mom freaking out when she had car trouble. Once, I broke my arm and insurance didn't cover all of the costs- my mom flipped out. It was awful to be a child with a broken arm and my mom screaming about we couldn't pay the bill. I hope your ex isn't the loser my dad was.
I hope your ex is in similar straits, and if not, I hope he has plans to help more because your DD had to eat your dinner and snacks tonight so she wouldn't be hungry.
Anonymous wrote:
Except in a two person household where one is a little kid, it would go bad before it can be eaten. It's cheaper too buy the finished product. As a single moms with a young child, I quickly learned that it often cost less not to make homemade because the cost of ingredients was more than a single finished product.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
I was going to say the same — having had to count pennies before, learning to cook more items really helps and hummus is a great recipe to master because it is both more delicious and way cheaper if you make it yourself. Good luck!
It costs more to buy those items separately than to buy a container of hummus. Sure, you can use them for other stuff, but when the idea is to reduce what you spent at the store today, it's not helpful.
It’s cheaper because you get a lot more hummus.
Except in a two person household where one is a little kid, it would go bad before it can be eaten. It's cheaper to buy the finished product. As a single moms with a young child, I quickly learned that iit often cost less not to make homemade because the cost of ingredients was more than a single finished product.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
I was going to say the same — having had to count pennies before, learning to cook more items really helps and hummus is a great recipe to master because it is both more delicious and way cheaper if you make it yourself. Good luck!
It costs more to buy those items separately than to buy a container of hummus. Sure, you can use them for other stuff, but when the idea is to reduce what you spent at the store today, it's not helpful.
It’s cheaper because you get a lot more hummus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
Is it even cheaper if you buy the ingredients rather than the premade?
Tahini is the only ingredient with a more-than-negligible cost and even that is cheap.
Olive oil is $8+ a bottle, Tahini is $4+ a container, chick peas are $0.50 - $2.00 depending on if they are dried or canned, a lemon is around $0.50.
Total cost to make would be $13-$15 at the cheapest. Premade hummus is less than just the olive oil. Are you familiar with the concept that it costs more to be poor?
Yes but only if you’ve always been poor. There is no reason to think OP doesn’t have olive oil already. Totally normal pantry ingredient for DCUMers.
If the OP's budget is tight enough that hummus is a luxury item and she is skipping dinner because her child wants a second portion, she isn't buying expensive olive oil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
Is it even cheaper if you buy the ingredients rather than the premade?
Tahini is the only ingredient with a more-than-negligible cost and even that is cheap.
Olive oil is $8+ a bottle, Tahini is $4+ a container, chick peas are $0.50 - $2.00 depending on if they are dried or canned, a lemon is around $0.50.
Total cost to make would be $13-$15 at the cheapest. Premade hummus is less than just the olive oil. Are you familiar with the concept that it costs more to be poor?
Yes but only if you’ve always been poor. There is no reason to think OP doesn’t have olive oil already. Totally normal pantry ingredient for DCUMers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
Is it even cheaper if you buy the ingredients rather than the premade?
Tahini is the only ingredient with a more-than-negligible cost and even that is cheap.
Olive oil is $8+ a bottle, Tahini is $4+ a container, chick peas are $0.50 - $2.00 depending on if they are dried or canned, a lemon is around $0.50.
Total cost to make would be $13-$15 at the cheapest. Premade hummus is less than just the olive oil. Are you familiar with the concept that it costs more to be poor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not to scold you but hummus is cheap and easy to make. Tahini, chickpeas, oil oil, lemon juice.
Is it even cheaper if you buy the ingredients rather than the premade?
Tahini is the only ingredient with a more-than-negligible cost and even that is cheap.