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Budgeting food |
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#1 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 22,076
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Budgeting food
Ok for at least the next month I have to keep my shopping really low to like £20 a week or less.
Any suggestions for maximum food for minimum costs? I got a bag of potatoes and going to use them as jacket potatoes and to make mash for bangers and mash. I bought ten eggs reduced to make pancakes and boiled egg with soldiers or boiled egg just for snack or fried eggs or omelet. Anything else I could use them for? I have rice in the cupboard. How do I make it interesting? Any places that sell food for less? |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 385
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Tin of tuna with your mash - fish cakes
Mince is cheap and versatile! Beans .... Toast |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Herefordshire
Posts: 22,810
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Try basic or Value brands, certainly if you like vegetables.
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#4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Ravenclaw Common Room.
Posts: 3,631
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Tuna pasta - tuna, sweetcorn, pasta, mayo and you can add cheese if you like.
Filling and not too expensive. Mince with beans, carrots and tinned tomatoes. All cooked together is nice. Serve with mash or boiled potatoes. Or you could use corned beef instead of mince. |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Kent, UK
Posts: 4,252
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Noodles are very cheap. I'd advise investing in some herbs, spices and sauces (Tabasco, soy sauce etc) to make your carbs more interesting.
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#6 |
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,111
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Quote:
Noodles are very cheap. I'd advise investing in some herbs, spices and sauces (Tabasco, soy sauce etc) to make your carbs more interesting.
Also, OP, grow your own herbs. It's easy to do, even if you don't have outside space. A few pots on a sunny windowsill do well. You don't have to grow from seeds. Just buy potted herbs from the supermarket. They are usually made up of several plants, so you only need to carefully separate them and re-pot them in separate pots. They will continue to grow if you water them occasionally, giving you a lot more bang for your buck. We do this with basil from the supermarket. One pot gives us several plants which last all summer usually. |
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#7 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Jackie's World
Posts: 15,321
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#8 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Up North
Posts: 58,791
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If you don't think you'd get bored then you could by masses of rice and pasta and live off it for months for relatively little money.
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#9 |
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 22,076
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Thanks everyone.
Some of these suggestions are very useful. Can't do much about growing stuff indoors though as I would need to buy the plant pots. Beans and noodles and Mince will go a long way for me. I've got some spices in my cupboard so just need to get some herbs for the noodles. £15 a week sounds plausible. Considering 5 of the 20 needs to go on my cat for his food. |
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#10 |
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 17,127
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Buy a chicken and have that roasted with all the veggies for dinner one day, take the remaining meat off it and use that for a curry for the next day, or a sauce for pasta or a chicken pie. Boil the carcass to make soup.
Depending on how many there are in your house/how big the chicken is, you will have meat for sandwiches, too. A chicken is a great thing to buy when money is tight, as you get a lot of good meals off a chicken, if you make it your business to use it properly. Lentils and beans are a great way of filling up for very little money. And they can be very tasty if you're clever with it and use a few different herbs and spices to make them a bit more interesting. If you're buying spices, they are always far cheaper in the Asian supermarkets than in Tesco or the like. |
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#11 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Jackie's World
Posts: 15,321
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To back up what Espresso has just said, see the What's for Dinner Tonight thread from a couple of weeks ago. I was sick of looking at chicken by the end of the week and I still have litres of soup in the freezer!
![]() As it happens I have just put a chicken in the oven for later 1.8kg for £5.99 from Asda. Sure it isn't corn fed and hasn't been to Spain on holiday etc but hey, money is tight for most people. |
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#12 |
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 22,076
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Quote:
To back up what Espresso has just said, see the What's for Dinner Tonight thread from a couple of weeks ago. I was sick of looking at chicken by the end of the week and I still have litres of soup in the freezer!
![]() As it happens I have just put a chicken in the oven for later 1.8kg for £5.99 from Asda. Sure it isn't corn fed and hasn't been to Spain on holiday etc but hey, money is tight for most people. |
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#13 |
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: The south
Posts: 452
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Quote:
As it happens I have just put a chicken in the oven for later 1.8kg for £5.99 from Asda. Sure it isn't corn fed and hasn't been to Spain on holiday etc but hey, money is tight for most people.
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#14 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Scotland
Posts: 7,801
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Quote:
Thanks everyone.
Some of these suggestions are very useful. Can't do much about growing stuff indoors though as I would need to buy the plant pots. Beans and noodles and Mince will go a long way for me. I've got some spices in my cupboard so just need to get some herbs for the noodles. £15 a week sounds plausible. Considering 5 of the 20 needs to go on my cat for his food. (I grew 10 large sweet peppers last year, from one I bought reduced for 25p).
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#15 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Jackie's World
Posts: 15,321
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Quote:
Aldi free range whole chicken £4.99 for 1.5kg which, I think, works out the same price per kg. I can feed two people three or four meals using one of these.
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#16 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 2,353
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Tinned beans and tinned tomatoes are cheap. When I make a shepherd's pie or spag bol I use Quorn, no one can tell the difference and it's much cheaper. We really like veggie lasagne as well, with lots of layers and crozzled bits on top. You can do it with the cheapest pasta, not necessarily lasagne.
Lambs liver is really cheap, delicious and nutritious. We like chicken thighs cooked with onions, garlic, mushrooms, peppers and a tin of tomatoes. Season your thighs liberally with salt, pepper oregano and smoked paprika. Gently fry off your onions, add your garlic and then the tomatoes. Bring to the boil and then add your thighs. Cook for 20 minutes, then add your chopped peppers and cook for a further 20 minutes. Serve with rice. I buy cheap veg from Lidl. I always plan my meals and shop with a list. That way I virtually never throw food away. I can't abide throwing food away. |
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#17 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 573
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I live off sauce and carbs meals eg tomato pasta sauce, curry, sweet and sour, oyster sauce stir fry etc!
Don't buy meat, bulk meals like these out with vegetables. You'll save so much money and it'll be healthier too! Here's a couple of things I have quite often:Half a pepper, half a red onion, couple of spring onions, handful of chopped mushrooms, a small carrot grated, cook in frying pan in oil and soy sauce while boiling noodles. Throw in the boiled noodles and some oyster sauce (or sweet and sour sauce). Half a pepper, half a red onion, handful of chopped mushrooms, slices of about 1/3 of a courgette, a few chunks of aubergine done in the frying pan and then 1/3-1/2 of a jar of tomato pasta sauce, serve with whatever pasta you want. All of these are for one so I end up eating the same thing a few times a week so that my veg doesn't go bad, that's the only problem!
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#18 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: County Durham
Posts: 78,632
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Quote:
Try basic or Value brands, certainly if you like vegetables.
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#19 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: County Durham
Posts: 78,632
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Quote:
I live off sauce and carbs meals eg tomato pasta sauce, curry, sweet and sour, oyster sauce stir fry etc!
Don't buy meat, bulk meals like these out with vegetables. You'll save so much money and it'll be healthier too! Here's a couple of things I have quite often:Half a pepper, half a red onion, couple of spring onions, handful of chopped mushrooms, a small carrot grated, cook in frying pan in oil and soy sauce while boiling noodles. Throw in the boiled noodles and some oyster sauce (or sweet and sour sauce). Half a pepper, half a red onion, handful of chopped mushrooms, slices of about 1/3 of a courgette, a few chunks of aubergine done in the frying pan and then 1/3-1/2 of a jar of tomato pasta sauce, serve with whatever pasta you want. All of these are for one so I end up eating the same thing a few times a week so that my veg doesn't go bad, that's the only problem! ![]() |
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#20 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 4,293
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Use your local grocer for fruit/veg if you have one, miles cheaper than the main supermarkets and I find the stuff lasts longer as well.
Scrambled egg is good for brekkie as its filling and releases energy slowly, it keeps you fuller for longer. Plan your meals and stick to it, don't be tempted with offers or reduced stuff. Cook a few things for the freezer if you can, we do a lasagne (bbc good food cheese and bacon lasagne, cheap and tastes great) and get 6/8 portions out of it), a chili and a spag bol - that's a good few meals sorted. Home made soup costs next to nothing and can be frozen as well, all you need are spuds, veg (carrot, leek, whatever you can get really) and pearl barley - serve it with a warm baguette. Veg or lentil curry, loads of recipes on line. Egg fried rice is quick, cheap and easy - you can add any meat + a few green beans/peas to it and its a full meal. Stir frys, do a veg one if money's tight or just pick up a small amount of chicken or beef from your local butcher - cheaper than the supermarket. They key is to just make a menu and stick to it, write a list and stick to it - don't get distracted by special offers, if it ain't on your list you don't need it! |
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#21 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: County Durham
Posts: 78,632
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Quote:
Use your local grocer for fruit/veg if you have one, miles cheaper than the main supermarkets and I find the stuff lasts longer as well.
Scrambled egg is good for brekkie as its filling and releases energy slowly, it keeps you fuller for longer. Plan your meals and stick to it, don't be tempted with offers or reduced stuff. Cook a few things for the freezer if you can, we do a lasagne (bbc good food cheese and bacon lasagne, cheap and tastes great) and get 6/8 portions out of it), a chili and a spag bol - that's a good few meals sorted. Home made soup costs next to nothing and can be frozen as well, all you need are spuds, veg (carrot, leek, whatever you can get really) and pearl barley - serve it with a warm baguette. Veg or lentil curry, loads of recipes on line. Egg fried rice is quick, cheap and easy - you can add any meat + a few green beans/peas to it and its a full meal. Stir frys, do a veg one if money's tight or just pick up a small amount of chicken or beef from your local butcher - cheaper than the supermarket. They key is to just make a menu and stick to it, write a list and stick to it - don't get distracted by special offers, if it ain't on your list you don't need it! |
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#22 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,111
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Quote:
Thanks everyone.
Some of these suggestions are very useful. Can't do much about growing stuff indoors though as I would need to buy the plant pots. Beans and noodles and Mince will go a long way for me. I've got some spices in my cupboard so just need to get some herbs for the noodles. £15 a week sounds plausible. Considering 5 of the 20 needs to go on my cat for his food.
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#23 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 385
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I'm going to do a shop for myself on a budget of £15 today ill post my buys later. Plus it'll be sainsburys (asda is just too far!)
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#24 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: The Sunny Side Of The Street
Posts: 40,106
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Quote:
Thanks everyone.
Some of these suggestions are very useful. Can't do much about growing stuff indoors though as I would need to buy the plant pots. Beans and noodles and Mince will go a long way for me. I've got some spices in my cupboard so just need to get some herbs for the noodles. £15 a week sounds plausible. Considering 5 of the 20 needs to go on my cat for his food. |
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#25 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The Deathstar
Posts: 15,401
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Get a kilo of mince & split it into two portions then with those two portions make up some meals like.
Cottage Pie Bolognese Chilli With the Bolognese if your local supermarket hasn't got jars on offer then make your own. (A couple of cheap cartons of Passata, Basil to taste, Garlic about 3 cloves, Tomato Puree for thickener). Every household should have Basil & Garlic in the cupboard. With splitting the mince into 2 portions, you can easily get 2 to 3 meals out of each portion, bung them into Tupperware containers & freeze them for a rainy day. All the above meals are cheap as hell to make & should you get low on money, then you have got a ready made meal in the freezer, but the only difference is that you know exactly what has gone into it. Same goes for left over meat from a roast, make a curry out of it. It is really easy to budgeting food & if you don't mind mucking about in the kitchen then you can get a lot more for your money. If you got a 99p store near you, then have a look at their food section as it is quite remarkable, stuff like sardines, mackerel, fray bentos pies, Spam, Corned beef etc etc. All household brand names along with some unknown names that taste equally as good their expensive counterparts. Add some tomatoes / lettuce etc etc & you can make some nice salads up. In the Spring / Summer I have mainly salads during the week switching between meat & fish each day, then I have a roast on a Sunday. In the Autumn / winter months, I do more cooking, like the meals mentioned above along with curries in bulk which are normally cooked in the slow cooker. |
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(I grew 10 large sweet peppers last year, from one I bought reduced for 25p).