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Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

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  • Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

    Hello,

    I have recently found myself in a position where I have to support myself. I am a single guy in an apartment. Through budgeting I have determined that I can support myself on a grocery budget of $150 per month. (Remember, this is for one guy.) The problem is, I have never cooked/bought food for myself and have absolutely no idea how to do this and stay healthy. My idea was "30 packs of Ramen noodles, once a day, and a multivitamin to survive."

    Can someone please help me create a grocery list that a human can survive on for a month with, perferably as cheap as possible. I love water, and have no issues drinking water - so I don't need soda or junk food. I don't mind using multivitamins for supplements, and eating simple lunches every day at work.

    Please help!

    Thanks in advance.

  • #2
    Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

    ROCK!! It's funny dude, I'm exactly the same way..(single, 75 every 2 weeks, at least now I have a kitchen (although my oven doesn't work)...You're better than I am though! I need to have a case of soda in the house...although beer too for dates..

    What is your kitchen setup? Are we talking about ample freezer space, oven, stovetop, microwave, etc? Let me know then I'll be happy to help you out! Don't want to recommend something that might not be that good to store...or that you have to cook immedately...

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

      I'm a bit embarrassed to admit this (not so much here as to my other friends that just wouldn't understand), but I've sort of become a coupon guy. If you don't mind what you eat and shop with coupons for whatever is on sale, you can eat quite a bit for not a lot of money. I come up with some pretty interesting meals since my cooking sucks and half the time I have no idea how to cook what I have, but there is never an issue of not having stuff to eat. Check out Flashs blog - she is a coupon queen.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

        Originally posted by locolorenzo24
        ROCK!! It's funny dude, I'm exactly the same way..(single, 75 every 2 weeks, at least now I have a kitchen (although my oven doesn't work)...You're better than I am though! I need to have a case of soda in the house...although beer too for dates..

        What is your kitchen setup? Are we talking about ample freezer space, oven, stovetop, microwave, etc? Let me know then I'll be happy to help you out! Don't want to recommend something that might not be that good to store...or that you have to cook immedately...
        I have a Microwave, Oven, Stove and Frig with Freezer. Here's what I did yesterday, but I am still VERY new to this and need help..

        I bought 15 Hamburger Helper Packs (Which has 2 or 3 dinners for me).

        I bought 7 lbs of ground beef.

        I split the ground beef up into single pounds of meat and froze them.

        I bought some milk/freezer bags and cheap tupperware storage.

        When I want a meal, cook the whole box of HH and eat 1/2 or 1/3 of it, put the next in the fridge for the next day or two.

        I have dinner for a month for around $50.00. Still more than I wanted to spend, and not a lot of variety - but I will live. I am sure I can do better than this.. anyone?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

          Who has cooked for you in the past that would understand what foods you enjoy? Your parent perhaps? I would start with asking the person(s) to give you some basic ideas.

          But I recommend that you learn to use a lot of either rice, potatoes, pasta, beans, or whatever carbohydrate food is common in your style of eating. A lot of satisfying basic cookery is built around these things. If you like them all, so much the better. It will greatly extend what you can eat cheaply.

          If you get at the public library a cookbook on frugal cooking or look up websites on it, you can find lots of info. Read through the posts here and you should get some ideas.

          Whenever you eat with other people, give some thought as to what ingredients are probably in the dishes you are enjoying. Think about whether you could duplicate the dish at home. Even ask the cook for their recipe. It is a great compliment to the cook to ask for a recipe. They will probably be really happy to tell you how to make the dish.
          "There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid

          "It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

            A crockpot is a great tool for frugal cooking.

            An inexpensive roast and a few seasonings, potatoes and a vegetable and dinner is ready...left over roast makes great sandwiches, taco's, bbq beef, etc.

            Soup...water, chicken stock, hamburger, some veggies and some tomato (paste, sauce, etc), pasta if you want.... a big batch of this is great for days!

            I cook bonless chicken in olive oil and seasonings and keep it in the fridge...cut it up on salads, make teriyaki rice bowls, burritos, etc.

            English muffin pizzas are great....

            There are so many healthier ways to eat than HH. And most don't take much more prep work.

            Heck, the crockpot is so forgiving...even if you forget to defrost...just put the meat in beffore you leave for work....and it is done when you get home.

            Good luck!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

              This web site was recommended to be as I am on kick to figure out how to feed myself for $50.00 a month by cooking from scratch. Not there yet, still trying to figure it out. But this web site has some good cheap recipes and you can then cook and store.

              Great prices on a large selection of domains. Find the pefect domain for your new startup.


              Good luck, and just dive in and start trying new things. Learn to cook simply takes practice and the fun part of it is you cook what you like. So you know you'll like it.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                Originally posted by nahirean
                I have a Microwave, Oven, Stove and Frig with Freezer. Here's what I did yesterday, but I am still VERY new to this and need help..

                I bought 15 Hamburger Helper Packs (Which has 2 or 3 dinners for me).

                I bought 7 lbs of ground beef.

                I split the ground beef up into single pounds of meat and froze them.

                I bought some milk/freezer bags and cheap tupperware storage.

                When I want a meal, cook the whole box of HH and eat 1/2 or 1/3 of it, put the next in the fridge for the next day or two.

                I have dinner for a month for around $50.00. Still more than I wanted to spend, and not a lot of variety - but I will live. I am sure I can do better than this.. anyone?
                No offense meant by this... I was young and ate ramen noodles and fish sticks to get by before...

                But that's a terrible way to eat! Do you know how much sodium (among other things) is in a serving of Hamburger Helper? Cheap (fatty) ground beef (or worse, 'hamburger') everyday? Wow. I'm no nutrition nut but that plan is a quick track to a coronary.

                The suggestions to learn how to eat on-the-cheap with foods made from scratch (and from actual food) is by far the better route.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                  do you like pizza? might not be the most nutritionall sound food, but it is easy.
                  find a coupon for pizza dough in a can (or if you have a kitchenaid or lots of time, make it, is easy and relaxing)

                  Roll the dough thinner in ovals -roughly, no one but you is looking (one batch of mine makes 6 calzones)

                  top with sauce (buy it with a coupon, or make some from a can of tomato sauce and spices, borrow moms if you live near her .) then with cheese and pepperoni, or mushrooms and peppers, or sausage or spinach or whatever floats your boat.

                  close in half (like a half sandwich) twist and squish the edge poke witha fork, bake 450 for 10 to 15 minutes.

                  wrap extras in foil and freeze, eat one or two for now.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                    Thinking back to college...
                    Ramen noodles: 9-11 cents each
                    Mac and cheese: 35 cents-you can skip the milk if you need to

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                      Originally posted by PrincessPerky
                      do you like pizza? might not be the most nutritionall sound food, but it is easy.
                      find a coupon for pizza dough in a can (or if you have a kitchenaid or lots of time, make it, is easy and relaxing)
                      Good idea.

                      Also, Jiffy makes a pizza dough mix that sells at Wal-Mart for .33c, the Great Value store brand pizza sauce is also cheap. The cost comes in with the meat toppings and the shredding cheese but this can be mitigated by careful shopping, etc.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                        Originally posted by poundwise
                        No offense meant by this... I was young and ate ramen noodles and fish sticks to get by before...

                        But that's a terrible way to eat! Do you know how much sodium (among other things) is in a serving of Hamburger Helper? Cheap (fatty) ground beef (or worse, 'hamburger') everyday? Wow. I'm no nutrition nut but that plan is a quick track to a coronary.

                        The suggestions to learn how to eat on-the-cheap with foods made from scratch (and from actual food) is by far the better route.
                        I agree! I've never cooked for myself before! I literally need someone to hold my hand.. and say "Buy this, buy that.." etc.. I am cooking up some Ramen now. I didn't think Hamburger Helper was THAT bad..

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                          Originally posted by Joan.of.the.Arch
                          Who has cooked for you in the past that would understand what foods you enjoy? Your parent perhaps? I would start with asking the person(s) to give you some basic ideas.

                          But I recommend that you learn to use a lot of either rice, potatoes, pasta, beans, or whatever carbohydrate food is common in your style of eating. A lot of satisfying basic cookery is built around these things. If you like them all, so much the better. It will greatly extend what you can eat cheaply.

                          If you get at the public library a cookbook on frugal cooking or look up websites on it, you can find lots of info. Read through the posts here and you should get some ideas.

                          Whenever you eat with other people, give some thought as to what ingredients are probably in the dishes you are enjoying. Think about whether you could duplicate the dish at home. Even ask the cook for their recipe. It is a great compliment to the cook to ask for a recipe. They will probably be really happy to tell you how to make the dish.

                          Thanks for the response. I love all of the foods you mentioned! With the possible exception of pasta.

                          Help!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                            Ok, coming from the same situation as you, at 75$ every 2 weeks....here's a average shopping list for me.... Also, where do you shop? Where can you go? You drive, take public transportation, etc? give us some details...

                            Produce:
                            Onion
                            Green Pepper
                            Bagged organic spinich
                            whatever veggies sound good/on sale (corn, asparagus, etc......)
                            Mushrooms
                            Tomatoes.
                            (You can easily make some good salads and eat for 2/3 days on one bag)
                            Also, you can look up any veggie you might have a problem cooking on the internet.

                            Meatremember, eating for one, you can eat the same for 3/4 meals...
                            Usually a whole frozen chicken or a chicken breast pack....(around 2/3 bucks)
                            A lb of sirloin as it's 93% lean......(a little pricey, but you can get it for around 3 bucks)
                            I occasionally buy a rotisserie chicken...it's fast, already cooked, and good addition to a salad for 4/5 bucks.
                            A pack of turkey brats or sausage
                            some cut of fish
                            Also, look into the roast idea. A good sized one can feed you for 4/5 days, just make sure to have something else on hand when you get sick of eating it after 3 meals....

                            Dairy:
                            Milk(usually 1/2 gallons cause whole ones go bad before I finish)
                            Cheese (1-2 bar varieties, and a bag of shredded for salads, toppings, etc....)
                            Yogurts (good for on the go mornings and snacks)
                            Ice cream (Once in a blue moon)

                            Drinks
                            Case of diet pepsi
                            water, water, water....gallons at .59 a piece
                            orange juice
                            Make iced tea for the summer/hot tea for winter
                            anything else you like

                            Canned/pantry staples
                            2-3 cans of kidney beans, tomatoes, tuna in water
                            Box or 2 of whole wheat pasta.
                            Frozen vegetable bags
                            Wild rice boxes
                            Whole wheat crackers

                            Bread:
                            Whole wheat,
                            french bread to make french bread pizzas

                            Snacks:
                            usually eat cheese, yogurt, crackers, or nuts, or a small portion of dinner....
                            Also, have chips and salsa once in a while.
                            Microwave popcorns good too.

                            The key is to think ahead a little. You can come up with some great ideas if you just strech it a little farther and experiment. After posting all this, I have some meal ideas that are my go to ones....I'll try to send them to you.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Frugal grocery newbie needs some serious help.

                              Originally posted by locolorenzo24
                              Ok, coming from the same situation as you, at 75$ every 2 weeks....here's a average shopping list for me.... Also, where do you shop? Where can you go? You drive, take public transportation, etc? give us some details...

                              Produce:
                              Onion
                              Green Pepper
                              Bagged organic spinich
                              whatever veggies sound good/on sale (corn, asparagus, etc......)
                              Mushrooms
                              Tomatoes.
                              (You can easily make some good salads and eat for 2/3 days on one bag)
                              Also, you can look up any veggie you might have a problem cooking on the internet.

                              Meatremember, eating for one, you can eat the same for 3/4 meals...
                              Usually a whole frozen chicken or a chicken breast pack....(around 2/3 bucks)
                              A lb of sirloin as it's 93% lean......(a little pricey, but you can get it for around 3 bucks)
                              I occasionally buy a rotisserie chicken...it's fast, already cooked, and good addition to a salad for 4/5 bucks.
                              A pack of turkey brats or sausage
                              some cut of fish
                              Also, look into the roast idea. A good sized one can feed you for 4/5 days, just make sure to have something else on hand when you get sick of eating it after 3 meals....

                              Dairy:
                              Milk(usually 1/2 gallons cause whole ones go bad before I finish)
                              Cheese (1-2 bar varieties, and a bag of shredded for salads, toppings, etc....)
                              Yogurts (good for on the go mornings and snacks)
                              Ice cream (Once in a blue moon)

                              Drinks
                              Case of diet pepsi
                              water, water, water....gallons at .59 a piece
                              orange juice
                              Make iced tea for the summer/hot tea for winter
                              anything else you like

                              Canned/pantry staples
                              2-3 cans of kidney beans, tomatoes, tuna in water
                              Box or 2 of whole wheat pasta.
                              Frozen vegetable bags
                              Wild rice boxes
                              Whole wheat crackers

                              Bread:
                              Whole wheat,
                              french bread to make french bread pizzas

                              Snacks:
                              usually eat cheese, yogurt, crackers, or nuts, or a small portion of dinner....
                              Also, have chips and salsa once in a while.
                              Microwave popcorns good too.

                              The key is to think ahead a little. You can come up with some great ideas if you just strech it a little farther and experiment. After posting all this, I have some meal ideas that are my go to ones....I'll try to send them to you.
                              I live in New Jersey, and I have a "Superfresh" close to me. That's where I got all the Hamburger Helper. I also have a "Shoprite" near me as well. I drive my own vehicle, but hate spending money on gas.. as you can tell I am on a very tight budget. There's also a "Asian Food Market" very close to me.

                              I'd also like to state that I would rather not spend $150.00 a month. $100 or less is even better. It's just me!

                              Comment

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