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Frugal $50 Weekly Shopper Tips

The best way to take charge of a food budget is to buy all groceries with cash. The debit or credit card makes it easy to spend more than planned. It’s not hard to eat well yet stay on budget. Read on to discover different ways a frugal shopper can live well with a $50 weekly cash food budget.

Cash is King!

A useful activity is to track food expenses for a month or two. Save every receipt for purchases at the grocery and convenience store. The cup of coffee & purchased with a gas fill up is part of your weekly expense. Include all meals out as well. Use a notebook and pencil or a spreadsheet to chart every penny. After two full months, you’ll see trends and where you spend the most. Pick a week to start and either withdraw $50 in cash from the bank or $60 from the ATM. Save the $10 for a surprise expense fund we’ll talk about in a later article.

If part of your social life includes a cup of coffee and muffin at a local diner every morning, maybe that’s where the $10 will be spent. But, it’s all you have for the week. It’s important to live well, but keep an eye on costs. Consider one or two days a week instead of the daily visit. Locally, Brookfield Orchards has a $5 pancake breakfast once per month. I look forward to that and squirrel away the funds out of the cash weekly to go. Look for opportunities locally to do the same. It’s fun to socialize, just keep to cash.

Stock a Pantry

It’s important to plan the meals for the week and refer to the grocery store flyer for specials. Build meals around what is in the pantry and on sale. Start to build a pantry weekly. A pantry will have pasta, rice, herbs, spices, cereal, chicken stock, crushed tomato, flour, sugar and eggs.

Bargain Bins Bonanza!

Some grocery stores have a specific sale bin with mark downs at 50% to 75%. This would be a first stop for the frugal shopper and may create a shift in purchases. Or, be a way to start that pantry. The local Hannaford Market in North Brookfield sales bin routinely has wonderful surprises such as organic rice, cereal, cookies, vitamins and more. One day, there were premium organic taco shells for $2.00, a dozen to a box. My best day was finding jars of California Sun-Dried Tomatoes Julienne Cut With Herbs, 8.5 to 16 oz retail $5 to $12 per jar at $1.25 and $3, There’s a foodie inside of me that raves at moments like this. Yeah! We’re gonna have a great Italian dish with these for weeks to come 🙂

The local Big Y in Spencer and Ware have a mark down shelf. The Spencer Big Y routinely puts out a clearance table with deep discounts on premium products such as honey, soup beans, seasonings, cat food, cooking oils, etc. The bargains are there, it’s up to the savvy shopper to check, check and check again. Investigate local markets and find those patterns for savings.

Budget Meal Planning

An example of a planned budget meal recently was based on pork chops at $1.99 a pound. Buy a package of three for $3.89. The pork is nice and thick. The pantry will have rice, low sodium soy sauce and breadcrumbs (homemade). Purchase $1.00 bag of frozen peas or corn. Marinate the pork chops in soy sauce and canola oil. Dip in breadcrumbs and bake. Prepare the rice. Prepare the peas. Dice the cooked pork chops. Save the bones for soup recipes. Blend together the rice, peas and pork. This meal will most likely expand to four or five servings. Living on a frugal budget sometimes means eating the same thing a few days in a row. Or, brown bag three meals and freeze the rest.

Dollar Tree Stores

Bargains can be had for routine household items at Dollar Tree stores. Click on the link to find the store near you. Everything is a $1. Check them out for routine needs such as toilet paper, dish soap, nasal tissue, etc.. Personal care products such as shampoo and soap are available. A real find was Palmer’s Cocoa Butter Formula Lip Balm, SPF 15 retail at $4. The grocery section often has name brand items such as Healthy Request® – Campbell’s Chicken Noodle. While I strongly advocate learning to make soup from scratch. This can be a pantry item and be a nice little meal when the dollars need to stretch a little more. I enjoy soy milk and have been delighted to find Eden Soy at $1 a carton. It normally retails for $3 to $4. Bring your own bags and enjoy a bonanza!

Coupons

A golden rule of frugal shopping is coupons. Always check for coupons. It’s so satisfying to watch the costs come down at the register. And, make sure you have a shopper’s store card for additional savings. Those $1, $.50 and $.30 cents off savings add up.

Frugal Choices

Several of my recipes on this blog are a combination of left overs and pantry items running low. I’ve learned to jazz up meals with herbs and spices included at the right moment. I always start soups with aromatics such as a shallot, carrot and garlic. This is the base and everything is added to it. While it would be wonderful to use a quality Olive Oil, and I only recommend Olive Oil directly from Italy or California, canola will be fine. It is tasteless and provides the cooking oil. Wesson brand sells for about $2 per bottle versus California Olive Ranch at $12. On a cash budget, it has to stay out of the cart. However, check that sales bin, you never know when the fancy oil will be there. I’ve picked up several bottles of quality toasted sesame oil for $2 per bottle.

Once you get into the pattern of $50 cash, the bargain hunter mode sets in.

I hope these ideas help you think outside the routine of one stop shopping. By knowing the pattern in the store, it can help make eating enjoyable but affordable. If you have ideas to share, leave a comment below.

11 Tips to Knock Out Seasonal Cold & Flu

    1. Get a Flu Shot – Every year, the vaccine may not be 100% effective. However, a 10%, 30% or 60% edge against influenza helps! Most health insurance plans pay full cost.
    2. Take Oscillococcinum – this over the counter homeopathic remedy is best taken at onset. I always carry a dose. You know your symptoms, whether it’s tickle in the throat, stiffness in the ankles or ache in the lower back, that’s when you take it.
    3. Elderberry syrup twice a day. Available at local health food stores. A weekly teaspoon dose during cold season may help your immune system to stave off cold viruses
    4. Food Cure ~ A small meal of, hot black tea (Lipton), Brazil nuts, orange, good quality yogurt and two ibuprofen tablets 200 mg. I’ve taken this combo for years when I feel symptoms and find it effective for knocking out a cold.
    5. Garlic soup – A well known folk remedy for illness. Recipe available on this link
    6. Hot bath with 1/2 cup Epsom salts, 1/2 cup baking soda and Rosemary essential oil. Take a bath at night before bed to relax your muscles and visualize the virus flowing down the drain. Only use one or two drops of rosemary essential oil. It will increase your blood circulation and help you feel warm inside. Plus the fragrance may open your sinus passages
    7. Warm, thick, soft, clean socks. Wear them in bed too. Keeping the feet warm is key
    8. Ayr Saline Nasal Spray. Keep the sinuses moist and open with an over the counter remedy. Available at CVS or Walgreen’s
    9. Wash your glasses! If you wear eyeglasses, wash them in warm soapy water. Think of how often you touch your eyeglass. You also touch doorknobs, the office copier and other objects that may have a virus on it. You just transferred the virus close to your eyes. Viruses love to enter your body this way. By washing the entire eyeglass, it may flush those germs down the drain
    10. Stay home the next day. If you work outside the home, and have saved sick time, use it. Sleep in, eat a breakfast of hot oatmeal, banana or mango and tea. Take your elderberry syrup and rest. If you feel up to it, and it’s warm in the afternoon, take a 15 minute walk outside
    11. Use Your Own Pen! While on the job or out doing chores, use your own pen to sign anything. Touching a passed around pen is a overlooked way to pick up germs. One rub of the nose and you may risk exposure to the nasties. In fact, it wouldn’t hurt to soak a cotton ball in rubbing alcohol and go over often used objects like wall switches, faucet knobs, door handles, refrigerator doors and more. Think of all the surfaces that are shared and touched in the home or workplace. It’s okay to put a barrier, such as a napkin, between your bare hand and things we all touch.

Be your own best friend! Take care of you!

“Stewing Over Mysteries” at the Publick House

The Publick House Historic Inn, Sturbridge, MA was the setting for The Friends of the Joshua Hyde Library 9th annual “Stewing Over Mysteries” dinner, Wednesday January 23, 2019. Good cheer and good fare were in abundance. The evening was an outstanding success as folks exchanged lively conversation with each other and a master storyteller. A sellout crowd of 80 people packed the Tap Room celebrating William “Bill” Martin and the release of his latest novel, “Bound for Glory.”

Friends President, Donna Englander, introduced the guest of honor as “king of the historical thriller.” Martin is a successful historical fiction writer with eleven published books. The principal protagonist, Harvard educated antiquarian, Peter Fallon, appears in six novels. The characters premier was in, “Back Bay”, a New York Times bestseller in 1979.  Martin specializes in bringing American history to life with such novels as “Citizen Washington”, “The Lincoln Letter” and “The Lost Constitution”.

The newest, “Bound for Glory”, takes place in 1848 during the California gold rush. Readers join a group of Bostonian’s as they set sail for the Pacific coast, navigating around Cape Horn in South America to the goldfields of California. Martin said the novel is adapted from a screenplay he penned in 1974  titled “ The Mother Lode”. The screenplay won him a Hal Wallace Screen Writers Fellowship at the famed University of Southern California Film School. Martin, a Harvard graduate, completed his M.F.A. in 1976. Continue reading ““Stewing Over Mysteries” at the Publick House”