Eat Well, Spend Less: Wk. 3 Round-Up
I hope this series on grocery shopping and cooking for families proved to be a valuable topic worthy of discussion here on GoodLife Eats. Below you’ll find a round-up of the last 3 weeks of posts.
If you’re interested in this series continuing on a monthly basis, I’d love to hear from you. Please let me know if there are any topics you’d like to see addressed.
Don’t forget to check out the Grocery Gift Card Giveaway at the end of this post!
Week 3 – How I Grocery Shop to Save (on Time and Money)
How I grocery shop is probably a little different than the average person just by the nature of being a food blogger. I’m constantly preparing new foods, doing a little recipe development and research, plus feeding my family.
I can’t always “shop the sales” when I need an ingredient, but I can shop for my groceries at the places that give me the best bargain – both monetarily and time.
I’m not saying that the way I grocery shop is the ONLY way. My real message is that you have to shop the way that is best for your family. If you have time to run all over town to find the best deals each store has to offer, then so be it! Or if couponing is your thing, then clip those coupons. Look at your time, your resources, and your budget and find out what is best for you.
For more on how I shop for our family plus some smart grocery shopping tips, check out my Week 3 Eat Well, Spend Less post: How I Shop to Save.
Week 2 – Budget Recipes and Meals
I’ve found that I can be pretty resourceful when it seems that there is “nothing” in the house to eat. In reality, there’s quite a lot when you take a look through the pantry items. Very few of us actually have “nothing” in the house.
Really, what I think we mean by that is that there is “nothing” that we want to eat. Or “nothing” that is obvious to make. We just need to get a little creative with our meals.
For more Budget Recipes and meals, check out my Week 2 Eat Well, Spend Less post: 5 Favorite Budget Meals (5 for breakfast, 5 for dinner and a bonus 3 for dessert).
Week 1 – Pantry Staples
Why Homemade?
Homemade version offer unlimited customizations specific to your family’s needs and desires. I ventured into this realm out of necessity. Many of the items we love to eat just aren’t an option for Logan with his peanut allergy. I had to start making more and more from scratch.
And through that process, I found that Logan’s difficulty eating has been helped some (not cured) by encouraging him to help me prepare these homemade alternatives.
For more on DIY Recipes for Homemade Pantry Staples, check out my Week 1 Eat Well, Spend Less post. You’ll find ideas for how to get started and some of my favorite DIY Pantry Staple Recipes.
Tara says
like you on facebook
Tara says
follow Kroger on twitter and tweeted
http://twitter.com/#!/huffychic/status/63015882103848960
Tara says
I enjoyed the Budget Recipes and Meals.
Renee says
I loved the homemade versions for cooking staples.
I also loved the discussion on dry beans.
April W. says
The thing I learned today from the series is that the top 5 most expensive items aren’t only exclusive to my area. I’d thought cheese might be less expensive elsewhere. Comparatively speaking, I guess not.
Megan says
The best thing that I took away from this series was the encouragement that eating well for less can be done!
Shannon says
I follow Kroger on FB.
Shannon says
Having a meal plan helps tremendously!
Jessica-MomForHim says
Trying to use more beans!
Darla says
I am trying to focus on shopping less, using from my freezer and pantry and being more diligent about meal planning.
Kristy says
I love the homemade pantry staples list – that is going to be put to great use!
But the biggest take away for me was the knowledge that is okay not to be a coupon shopper right now, especially when I was not able to save the price of the paper each month. I can still feed my family healthy cheap meals.
Heather M. says
Making a lot of foods from scratch, beans, yogurt, etc.
Tina says
I love your website. I learned to check the pantry and create meals with ingredients that I have in stock
Sara Dickinson says
I am currently working on a price database for the stores that I shop and the most common items I buy so that I can pair my coupons with sale items for the best price possible.
Heather Spooner says
I’ve learned to keep an inventory of my pantry, so I don’t overbuy.
Suanna says
I enjoyed seeing what goes on in other parts of the country.