Healthy eating on a budget
http://bariatricfoodie.blogspot.com/2011/10/bf-money-saving- meals.html
RNY Gastric Bypass 1-8-08 350/327/200 (HW/SW/CW). I spend most of my time playing with my food over at Bariatric Foodie - check me out!
I'll tell you what I only recently figured out. And yes, sometimes I learn things very slowly. People often say they can't afford to eat really healthy stuff, and it's true that organic produce usually costs more at the grocery store and veggie burgers often cost more than hamburgers and free range eggs cost three times as much as regular eggs from the chickens in little cages. But most of the time, what's the most expensive is the heavily processed stuff that's not good for us anyway.
Like, I might spend $2 on a can of good vegetable soup or $4 on a box of red beans and rice that I just have to add water to. But I could make 14 ounces of vegetable soup for much less than $2 and I could make red beans and rice with dried beans and rice for much less than $4 for the same number of servings. Sometimes when you first go shopping for ingredients to make a di**** looks like it's costing more because some ingredients you have to buy, you're only going to use a tiny bit of. But you usually can't buy 1/2 tablespoon of cayenne pepper in the store. You gotta buy the whole jar of it. So you might spend as much on that cayenne peppe as you would spend on the whole box of beans and rice - but you'll have cayenne pepper to use in all kinds of dishes for weeks to come. In the end, the price to make it myself is usually cheaper.
Plus it usually tastes better if I make it myself. And I can make it healthier because I'm not going to put all the chemical additives in it and there are not lots of chemicals in that bag of dried beans like there are in that box or beans and rice. And even if I want to use organic carrots and celery in my homemade soup, it will still come out costing less to make myself than to buy it already in a can.
Basically, the way to eat healthy on a budget is to make your own food, instead of buying things that you just add water to or just heat up. I think many people are intimidated by that idea because a lot of us were not taught to cook growing up. When my mother made dinner, that means she heated up frozen fish sticks in the oven or made mac n cheese out of a box. You know the kind with the orange powder that passes for cheese? I love that stuff.
But anyway. I always had the idea that cooking from scratch was really hard. Bake a cakie from scratch, not a mix in a box? Oh no, there was no way I could do that! Make red beans and rice from a bag of rice and a bunch of dried beans? Oh no, that would be too hard! Then I decided to try really cooking, and honestly, if you can read a recipe and know how to measure ingredients, it's not that hard. It takes some time, but it's not that hard.
Please note: I AM NOT A DOCTOR. If you want medical advice, talk to your doctor. Whatever I post, there is probably some surgeon or other health care provider somewhere that disagrees with me. If you want to know what your surgeon thinks, then ask him or her. Check out my blog.
RNY Gastric Bypass 1-8-08 350/327/200 (HW/SW/CW). I spend most of my time playing with my food over at Bariatric Foodie - check me out!
Please note: I AM NOT A DOCTOR. If you want medical advice, talk to your doctor. Whatever I post, there is probably some surgeon or other health care provider somewhere that disagrees with me. If you want to know what your surgeon thinks, then ask him or her. Check out my blog.
RNY Gastric Bypass 1-8-08 350/327/200 (HW/SW/CW). I spend most of my time playing with my food over at Bariatric Foodie - check me out!
Of course, if you buy from local farms you can only get the produce that's in season. But that's what's cheapest, too.It costs a lot to fly produce in from the other side of the country or from south America. Next year, I am going to try canning a few things so I can buy it cheap when it's in season and then have it for the winter. Canning is something else I always thought was really hard, but apparently, from what I've read, it's really not. You boil some jars, fill them up with your food, put lids on them and then boil them again. Even I can boil water!
Please note: I AM NOT A DOCTOR. If you want medical advice, talk to your doctor. Whatever I post, there is probably some surgeon or other health care provider somewhere that disagrees with me. If you want to know what your surgeon thinks, then ask him or her. Check out my blog.
RNY Gastric Bypass 1-8-08 350/327/200 (HW/SW/CW). I spend most of my time playing with my food over at Bariatric Foodie - check me out!
Also, I always had the idea that you needed to can huge amounts of food at one time. I don't know why I thought that. but you could can four jars of tomato sauce or any amount you wanted.
Please note: I AM NOT A DOCTOR. If you want medical advice, talk to your doctor. Whatever I post, there is probably some surgeon or other health care provider somewhere that disagrees with me. If you want to know what your surgeon thinks, then ask him or her. Check out my blog.
There is a really inexpensive source that I just LOVE. It is called, "The Ball Jar Blue Book of Canning". It is a paper back available in the canning sections of most supermarke for about $7. It makes canning so simple! I bought my ho****er bath canner at an auction for a fiver and have been going strong since. There are also lots of tutorials on youtube to walk you through it.
Start with something simple like pickles and you will be hooked.
One of my favorite low cost weekly staples in the kitchen is boneless, skinless chicken breasts. One of the two local supermarkets will always have them for about $2 /pd. I get the family sized package and bake them all at once. Then I refrigerate them and use them throughout the week in salads, for a quick on the go lunch or snack and then I can easily get protein in my daily food plan.
String cheese is also a staple in our house.
One note about low cost eating is that we do not eat the amounts we used to pre-op, so ultimately, you can spend a little more as the food is higher quality and you are eating less----it lasts longer.
And along with what Kelly was saying, today in the car the kids and I figured out that for $5.75 we could make 5 of their favorite coffee house breakfast sandwiches at home. The cost of this sandwich at the coffee house is $3.50 for 1! They were hooked on the homemade version.