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I just can't get our food bill down...

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  • I just can't get our food bill down...

    No matter what I do!

    We are a family of 3. (dd is 4)

    I would like to spend well under $100 a week, but end up spending about $130.
    (including my weekly trip to the grocery store for "things I forgot", even with a list, i manage this one.)

    I plan a menu, I write my list, I shop at Super Walmart, we eat leftovers when possiable. What am I doing wrong??

    Is this actually a resonable amount for 3 people? It seems so expensive!!!

  • #2
    Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

    gosh that is wonderful. We are happy when we spend only 200 a week thats for a couple when our kids were at home they could really eat so we would spend almost 500 dollars
    a week

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    • #3
      Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

      We are a family of three (DD is 6), buy organic when we can, and spend about $460 a month on food, including dining out. (It's about $300 on groceries and $160 on dining, coffee, etc.)

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      • #4
        Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

        Are you clipping coupons and looking for the triple coupon days? You can save alot by doing that. Last week I bought $400 worth of groceries for $200.

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        • #5
          Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

          Originally posted by midlight21
          Are you clipping coupons and looking for the triple coupon days? You can save alot by doing that. Last week I bought $400 worth of groceries for $200.
          Coupons help us alot! We are a family of 5 (2 are teenage boys!) and I probably spend about what you do.
          Also look for outlet stores-we have a bread store and also a McKee (little debbie)

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          • #6
            Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

            It does sound a little high to me...I found that when I started varying where I shop, I saved more. Wal-Mart has good prices on a lot of things, but they don't run great sales like other stores do. I sit down on Sunday and go through all the circulars for the stores I visit (Tops, P & C, Wegman's (local stores), and Aldi's). Whichever store has the most things I need on sale, and the most things I can use a coupon on, that's where I go that week. I used to just go to Wegman's every week, but then it would be hit or miss as far as finding the things I need on sale. I have found that no place, even with sales/coupons, beats Aldi's for certain canned goods and even fresh fruit/veggies, so I go there when I need to stock up.
            Also, do you buy in bulk (esp. meat)? I buy the bulk packages, use what I need, and freeze the rest. Just make sure you read the labels to make sure the price is really cheaper per pound - I'm not sure that Wal-Mart prices are better for bulk like other stores are.

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            • #7
              Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

              These are the most surefire ways of getting your grocery spending down:

              Save money with coupons and grocery discounts and buy food for charity FREE with grocery coupons


              www.thegrocerygame.com (you have to pay, but try the $1 trial first)

              www.cairo.com (enter the items you need and they will tell you where there is a sale in your area)

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              • #8
                Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                I constantly have the same problem!

                I have found two or three ways to get the budget a bit lower, not as low as I would like, but lower than 130 a week (my former weekly cost, kindof cool it is the same!)

                1. Don't go get what you forgot, suffer or substitute, yes you can live without milk for a couple days (just how far away is a week anyway?) And lots of recipies turn out pretty good minus an ingredient or two (check my blog for some oops but worked!)

                2. Have two or three incredibly cheap meals that are FAST, fast is the key, cause no one wants to spend an hour on a cheap not so awesome meal! My two normals are ramen noodles (called spicky noodles by my family cause we add ground red peper to spice it up, at the least) and macNcheese with hotdogs and a vegetable. I suppose this doesn't qualify for great healthy meals, but once a week doesn't seem to be hurting.

                3. Eat dried beans once a week (ish) they are rather cheap and rather good for you just don't forget them beans!

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                • #9
                  Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                  What types of food are you buying? If something is high cost, even buying the least expensive version can make a dent. For example, some fresh fruit in season (mango), most fresh fruit out of season (strawberries), a lot of meat, chicken, and fish, convenience food, some vegetables (asparagus), soda. If you buy some of these items, I would evaluate whether you needed them as often. If you do, fine-you need to buy what you need to buy. But, if you can go meatless a night or two, or used some ground beef in a casserole instead of steak, go for it. Try bananas and oranges instead of grapes. Instead of a Crock Pot Meal pack, try one from scratch. Eat bulk rice instead of Minute rice, carrots instead of asparagus, tap water instead of soda. Frozen juice concentrate instead of Juice packs or cartons. Of these these are very specific examples but the idea is, don't even buy it at low cost if you don't need it, or if there is a substitute.. You may of course already be doing this.

                  My grocery bill averaged $100 (for my half) last year, or $23 a week. But, we ate out about twice a week. This does not include shampoo, toilet paper, etc. When I first planned my minimum wage challenge, I aimed for a grocery bill of no more than $290 a month for 2 people, or, $34 a week per person, to compensate for eating more at home/kless out. However, I think Il'll be able to do better than that; I think I'll actually be more around $240 a month, or $28 a person a week, without any sense of deprivation.

                  Good luck in your efforts!

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                  • #10
                    Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                    What meals are you eating?

                    You may want to go meatless.

                    We are a family of 5 and spend about $350 on food including eating out.

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                    • #11
                      Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                      It's not bad! Super WalMart may not have the best prices, though.

                      To really dig deep, take out all the supermarket ads your receive for the week (usually Sunday or Wednesday newspaper, or mail). Don't assume you are shopping at any of these places, but go through the ads and make a list of what strikes you at each store. Chicken 69 cents a pound this week, TP special? Stores offer loss-leaders each week to pull you into the door, and taking advantage of them WITHOUT buying everything else there can get your costs down. Also many stores compete, so run similar sales in the same week.

                      Look at your lists. How much are you paying for the same items at Super Walmart? Again, one store is going to have a few great deals, and make up for it by the things that aren't low priced but you buy anyway.

                      Princess, was it, completely right, do not let yourself go out for those little things. Find a sale on powdered milk and stock it; you can get by for a day or two; find the pantry basics on sale, stock them, and you won't end up paying high prices later. Especially true on spices.

                      Coupons. Add these to the sales, and watch your grocery bill fall. If you need help finding/using coupons, just ask.

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                      • #12
                        Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                        One tip of mine.............I don't ever go back to a store for something I forgot. I just pretend I'm my grandmother, stuck in the middle of North Dakota..........she would just make do. That's my best advice, make do with what you have. No going back, put the forgotten things on your next list.....and make do.

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                        • #13
                          Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                          The advice given about comparing prices to SuperWal-Mart was good, but you can take it a step further. At least around here, you can bring ads from stores that compete up to a 30 mile radius, and Super WalMart will match the price for exactly matched items. One trip, one store, everyone's doorbusters. Great for "cherrypickers"! It can make a huge difference, expecially around holidays. Great times to stock up include Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor day and Thanksgiving. In conjunction with a price list you can really determine when you are getting the best value for your money and stockpile then. Also it helps enormously if you are willing to experiment with different brands. I rarely find generics as inexpensively as name brands bought on sale with coupons. PM if I can help more...

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                          • #14
                            Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                            I have a family of 3 but my boyfriend is always over and we spend around 250 a month. If you get the coupons in the Sunday paper some food markets double the coupon like my store don't know if i can say it so i won't but we save around 30 dollars each time we go just with the coupons

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                            • #15
                              Re: I just can't get our food bill down...

                              You might look at the types of foods you are buying...is there alot of packaged or convenience foods? A good book I use is Not Just Beans...which has alot of simple, homemade meals that use basic and frugal ingredients.

                              I found a huge difference when I started baking from scratch...I rarely by packaged convenience anymore - unless it is deeply discounted.

                              Good luck!

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