10 Ways To Cut Your Food Bill
As prices rise faster and faster, one Fool shares his top tips for saving on food bills.
Foodstuff prices are powering inflation at the moment. Potato prices have reportedly jumped 16.5% while other vegetables are up by a huge 21.2%, with fish, eggs and milk also showing steep rises.So here are my own inflation-busting top tips for battling food bills -- every one tried and tested!1. Plan ahead!When you shop, try to base your shopping list around a planned series of meals. That way, you lessen the odds of impulse-buying food that you don't need, and that might go off. What's more, planning ahead increases the chance that you'll deliberately seek out a cheap meal.Check out The Fool's Living Below Your Means discussion board and our Recipes and Cooking board for low-cost recipe ideas! Here's an interesting, if quirky, post about menu planning, for example.2. Look for 'reduced for quick sale' itemsThe exception to this 'meal planning' principle are meals planned around 'reduced for quick sale' (RFQS) items. Get into the habit of making the RFQS counters regular stops on your shopping trips, and develop an eye for a bargain. Meat, fish and most chilled or ready-cooked meals can usually be frozen -- but so can bread, pastries and rolls.Real RFQS aficionados need lots of freezer space -- so make sure yours is running economically (do regular de-frosts!) -- and not cluttered with stuff you're not going to eat. So, either eat it, or (as a last resort) throw it. Freezer space is too valuable to waste!3. Eat the seasonsTake a look at the eat the seasons website and weekly e-mail service that tells you what's in season, and provides handy recipe ideas. My own top tip: make even bigger savings on 'in season' produce by buying from a greengrocer or market stall, not a supermarket.4. Cheap meatBuying cheaper cuts of meat can make a real difference to the weekly shop. This is a good post on cooking cheaper joints in general, and here and here are two threads with ideas on cooking one of the cheapest cuts going: breast of lamb.Cheaper cuts of meat typically need to cook for longer, and those Fools without Rayburns or Agas might like to look at slow cookers -- another perennial favourite on the Living Below Your Means board. Here's one of many posts on this topic.5. Cut out the middlemen!Farmers' markets offer good quality food at better prices than you'd pay elsewhere. If you can't get to a farmer's market, at least buy a sack of potatoes at the farm gate. (Hint: most farms sell half sacks, too -- and if you don't pass many farm gates, you'll sometimes see sacks of spuds offered for sale at places like truck stops, country petrol stations and the like.)6. Buy in bulkBulk buying can offer genuine savings, especially if you share out the produce among friends and neighbours. Sacks of rice, for example, are absurdly cheap from Asian grocers -- simply divvy up the sack to make substantial savings.7. Free foodFood doesn't get much cheaper than free. Nettle soup is real favourite in our household -- here's a short thread on the subject.Meanwhile, TV chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall is a firm favourite on several of our boards -- this is his nettle soup recipe for those who like their recipe quantities a little more precise! This detailed post gives lots of information about free food from the wild in general.8. Grow your own!Our greenhouse and garden keeps us supplied with runner beans, broad beans, tomatoes, chillies, beetroot, radishes, courgettes and squashes. The gardening board is a good source of advice for novices and experts alike.9. Look for 'deep discounters''Deep discount' retailers Aldi and Lidl are a firm favourite in our household. The prices are generally excellent, and the quality surprisingly good. German housewives, where both chains hail from, won't put up with poor quality! If you're an Aldi or Lidl fan, you'll know what I'm talking about -- if not, check it out!And if you can't get to a deep discounter, be adventurous at the main chains and check out their "value" ranges -- especially for staple foodstuffs where the 'value' has been created by pitting suppliers against each other, rather than through low-cost recipe engineering. Rice, butter, tinned tomatoes; basic commodities like these are often just as good in the value range, and the savings can be considerable.10. Be ambitious!Here's a post about feeding a family on less than £30 per week. Here's another one, aiming at £35 for a week! For more ideas, pop into your local Oxfam charity shop or similar -- they often have books on soups, casseroles and even cooking with leftovers.And here's a bonus tip: check out Asian cuisine. While you're at the Oxfam shop, look to see if they have any books on Indian vegetarian cooking -- oddly enough, our local shop often does. Cheap and nutritious meals can be very readily made from pulses, vegetables and spices. If Oxfam don't have one, try the public library or car boot sale.Happy Eating!More: Save Money When Shopping! | A Few Shopping TipsComments
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