this post was submitted on 14 May 2026
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My grocery bill is steadily climbing and I am not sure what to do. I make too much for SNAP. Any tips or tricks? It's just me in my household, so would buying in bulk be worth it?

Edit: I want to thank everyone for their responses. I have a lot to think about.

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[–] acutfjg@feddit.nl 8 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Rice cooker

Bought a nice one (zojirushi brand that has the little elephant), but I've read most rice cookers work well. I use it so often for different meals and it's been a game changer and money saver. Making rice is so simple now, and an easy cheap way to supplement a meal.

Rice eggs is a staple for us now: Make some rice, and when there's about 5 minutes left on time, throw in some scrambled eggs for a tasty protein.

Mine is microwave safe so was relatively cheap. Follow the 1-2-2-12 to perfectly cooked rice. 1 measure of 2 cups of rice, 2 of water, some salt, 12 minutes. Can reheat, Fri overnight leftover rice and side carbs with anything specially beans.

[–] Agent641@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)
  1. Buy a rice cooker. Not only does it make rice so much more convenient, you can make meals directly in it.

  2. Get a deep freezer, its useful for the points below. Honorable mentions go to a label printer and a vacuum bag machine.

  3. Buy in bulk, but repack your bulk goods as soon as you buy them. I use cleaned, cylindrical PET bottles but you can use vaccum bags, glass jars (purchased or repurposed) or food storage buckets. The reason you repack them right away is because bulk goods aren't as clean, sterile and impervious to atmosphere as you might think. There can be microscopic insect eggs in them, mould spores which will activate with the slightest moisture, and the packaging is often damaged in microscopic ways. I like to use PET bottles, washed, dried, and then pack an oxygen absorber into each one. Then I fill it with rice, small pasta, dried beans, chick peas, grains, lentils, etc. All these dry goods are way cheaper to buy in large qty. Once packed, I seal them, freeze them for 48 hrs, thaw them for 72 hrs to allow any dormant eggs to hatch, then freeze again for another 48 hrs. The oxygen absorber will collapse the PET bottle around the dried goods so you get a satisfied hiss when you open it. This way, when you get some rice, you're only opening a single 1 liter bottle which might take a month or so to use up rather than a 25kg bag of rice which will take a year or more to use up while it gathers insects, dust, rodents, mould, moisture, etc. Stored in PET bottles, these dried goods will last for 20 years or more. I also store sugar and salt this way, but I don't use an oxygen absorbers because these things don't really expire at all.

  4. You can buy bulk fresh vegetables (and even meat) and process it yourself. For meat, buy in bulk and portion it out into vacuum bags or ziploc bags. For fresh vegetables, buy them when they are inexpensive (usually when they are approaching the end of their shelf life, or from farmers market. I get a ton of very cheap veg from asian grocers near me) One of my favorite things to buy is butternut pumpkin for very cheap. I roast a couple of them, cut in halves, for a few hours. Then scoop out the flesh with a spoon, put it in ziploc bags, and freeze it into flat plates. When frozen, I break it up into chunks and keep them in a big tupperware in the freezer. I use them to thicken stews, pasta sauces, and make really quick soups. You can do something similar with any vegetable, whether you're blanching them and freezing broccoli florets, or making apple sauce, or diced carrots. This also makes meal prep much easier.

  5. Make more soup. Soup is really easy to make, but is infinitely variable. I have about 10-12 that I rotate through, but even if you're just trying to use up leftovers or deal with wilty veg, you can make a soup

  6. Learn how to make a bread that you like. I'm not suggesting you make loaves of whitebread, but you should try making a few different kinds of bread and find one that you like making and like eating. My go-to is foccaica, because its simple, easy, no-knead, and its not boring, it has salt and olive oil in it which makes any sandwich tasty. I make one a week, it takes about 30 minutes of actual work, and lasts me a long time. Sometimes I make mini loaves and use them for sandwiches and hamburgers. If you make your own bread with plain flour, which is the cheapest kind, it will cost you way less than storebought bread.

Edit: I forgot to mention that the label printer is for labelling all your repacked food, meal prepped food, and vacuum bags with the date of purchase, date of packing, and expiry date. Super helpful.

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[–] Tiral@lemmy.zip 8 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I don't buy stupid shit like Starbucks. You can get better "coffee" much cheaper. I buy half a cow from a farmer every year. It's roughly $3.00/lb, but that includes 50lbs of ground beef, a couple dozen steaks, roasts, ect. All in I spend about $500 and it lasts 4 of us a year and it's about $2,000+ in meat were in buy it at a store.

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[–] SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 day ago

Dry goods. Bulk bags of dry rice, beans, lentils, corn grits. That stuff will last forever, and are healthy!

If you and some friends/family can pool your money together and afford it, buy a whole entire cow. Parcel out the meat, and freeze it. My family has been doing this for a long time now, and a whole cow, split between 3 households, lasts a little over a year.

Get into canning, pickling, etc. Don't let the fresh produce you buy at the store, or grow in a garden, just flounder in your fridge, preserve it!

I can a lot of salsa over the summer. Its easy, and it's easy to make in big batches that last awhile.

[–] jenesaisquoi@feddit.org 8 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)
  1. Don't eat out.
  2. Buy staples and spices and learn to make tasty dishes from them. Pretty much every culture on this planet has figured out super tasty and nutritious dishes from the staples that are available to them. Learn from them. (This will take time, as in it's a long term goal, but it's so worth it.)
  3. Don't buy processed products of any kind. Pre-processing terribly bad ingredients for convenience is how the food industry takes your money. Buy real food.
  4. If you can, don't buy meat. If you can't, buy as little as possible. It will be better for you, for your wallet, for the animals, and for the planet. But also don't buy any preprocessed meat replacement products (see point 3).
[–] ieGod@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 days ago

I eat out less, I order in less, I'm not going to events as much. I see the increases and it sucks but I'm fortunate enough that I can handle it. For now.

The restaurant prices are the real shockers to me. I'm trying to find some places to grab a burger for two in Toronto; not just a burger joint but a proper restaurant. I'm looking at something like $30 per person average before tax and tip, without fries. Lol. Like excuse the fuck out of me but... dining in it is.

[–] rumba@lemmy.zip 4 points 2 days ago

Investing, assuming you have some spare room for storage.

I own 2x50 lb bags of rice, 25lbs of dry black beans, 40 lbs of pizza flour, 50lbs of masa flour, 100lbs of AP flour. Bulk pasta.

At those bag sizes, the cost per serving is tiny.

Rebag all the flours, freeze the individual bags, then store them in Beren's cans. I fit most of that in 2 cans.

Buy and freeze protein when it's on sale.

Learn how to make pancake/waffle mix, pizza crust. bread, chicken breading.

Shop for perishables at Aldi or Lidl, Walmart if need be.

You save so much on non-perisable bulk that you can start out with one or two things and slowly grow you pantry to the point there you can afford to bulk buy easily, but you must save for it and reinvest.

[–] STUNT_GRANNY@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I feel pretty lucky in this regard, in that I've got family members who work at a grocery store, and they let me bum off their employee discount. It's only good for store-brand items though, and it only works while they're off the clock, so it takes some coordination for me to use it. Stacks with coupons though, which also helps.

Buying in bulk can absolutely be helpful, if you can shop at wholesalers or warehouse clubs, and take advantage of coupons and sales. Wouldn't recommend doing this for perishables though, if you're only buying for yourself. Might also be annoying trying to find space for everything at home.

[–] Mhsull@thelemmy.club 7 points 2 days ago

For dinners and lunches, buy grains like rice, bulgar, farro in bulk. International grocery stores sell big bags on the cheap. Buy protein in bulk at a store like Aldi. Simple meals are 2 parts grain, one part protein, one part vegetable. Sautee or roast and sauce.

Breakfast, buy oats. Lots of ways to do oatmeal/hot cereal.

Cooking for yourself is the cheapest way to eat. My wife and I spend around $120 per week for all the meals for a family of 4 because we can cook.

[–] BigBananaDealer@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

pushing my bank account to its limit lol

[–] Tattorack@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago

Dumpster diving.

You'll be distressed to find out how much shit your local supermarket throws out.

[–] thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)
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[–] exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com 14 points 2 days ago (2 children)

When I had no money and no time, I relied heavily on a rotation of the following meals, with current 2026 costs in my expensive city:

  • Chili Mac: 1 lb dried pasta ($1.25 for 1600 calories, 54g protein) boiled in salty water (let's call salt and water basically free), a can of chili ($2.50 for 540 calories, 32g protein), 2 oz of shredded cheese ($1 for 220 calories, 12g protein), 0.25 oz of hot sauce ($0.25 for flavor but negligible calories/protein). Total: $5, 2360 calories, 98g protein.
  • Stir fried chicken and broccoli on rice: 1 lb chicken thigh ($4.50, 600 calories, 87g protein), 1 lb broccoli ($1.50, 150 calories, 9g protein), 1 lb rice ($1.50 for 1600 calories, 32g protein), $0.50 of condiments/seasoning. Total: $8, 2350 calories, 128g protein.
  • Ramen with enough stuff to make it not suck: 1 package of Shin Ramyun ($2 for 500 calories, 10 g protein), 2 eggs ($0.30, 150 calories, 12g protein), 4 oz frozen edamame ($2, 90 calories, 9g protein), 2 oz scallions ($0.20, let's round down to 0 calories and 0g protein). Total: $4.50, 740 calories, 31g protein.
[–] raynethackery@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Just as an aside, chicken breasts are actually cheaper per pound than thighs at Walmart.

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[–] mrcleanup@lemmy.world 12 points 2 days ago (2 children)

While pretty much everyone here is taking a moment to talk about beans, peas are higher in a lot of nutrients and a lot easier to digest (I think they are tastier to). You can often get them frozen in bulk if you don't want to deal with dried and they can disappear into a lot of recipes.

Consider backing up your rice dishes with peas if you aren't a bean fan.

[–] BeardedBlaze@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

Chucked a handful of frozen peas into spaghetti sauce during the cooking process for the first time last week. Was surprised how well it worked, that's going to be a permanent addition.

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[–] starlinguk@lemmy.world 48 points 3 days ago (2 children)
[–] Malyca@lemmy.zip 9 points 3 days ago (4 children)
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[–] backalleycoyote@lemmy.today 12 points 2 days ago

Bulk on the dry staples. I’ve found that a good hack for saving on having to buy on storage containers is buy the giant pickle jars and then reusing them for beans, rice, and oats. I break down my prices per ounce, so while most of my food comes from Winco, there’s a few things I get at Albertsons on occasion because their overpriced foods are less likely to sell and end up on exceptional markdowns. I hit food banks.

I’m fortunate to have a lot of growing space and ramped up my casual, for fun garden to an actual food producing garden. I’m planting in waves, little fast growers like radishes in the boxes the tomatoes are starting in. Eventually the tomatoes will block but I can get a few cycles of the radishes before that happens. Also built a coop and have four lovely little hens that should start laying in a couple more weeks. The trade off is that all of this takes a lot of time.

I bought quality pressure cooker and make giant batches of beans that can be divided and frozen. About every three weeks I have to cook a batch but they work as burrito filling, nacho topper, taco salad fill. I do a lot of stir fries with frozen veggies and ramen or brown rice I made in the pressure cooker.

Bread machines are a frequent find at thrift shops. People buy them, never use them, dump them, so they’re brand new but 1/10 the cost. You can get fancy with them or just spend about 10min getting the ingredients assembled, set it and forget it. It’s been one of the best investments I’ve made.

[–] biggerbogboy@sh.itjust.works 3 points 2 days ago

I have tended towards making very simple, quick, healthy and hearty breakfast meals, since those make or break the day for me if I have the wrong thing.

One breakfast I have is 150g hummus, around 50g of feta and a large whole grain wrap (cut into pieces and microwaved to be like chips), with the batching I use lasting around a week. I get a $6AUD 1kg tub of hummus per week (and usually have a spare as rollover if there isn’t enough in the tub I take from,) $4 250g feta block, and a $4 pack of 8 large whole grain wraps.

I’m likely not accurate with the pricing, since I don’t tend to concentrate a lot on the pricing since I've found this breakfast good value, but it tends to come to ~$1.90 per serving.

It’s also why I tend to do intermittent fasting a lot (for usually at least 7 hours), as it is very filling.

Not saying you need my solution, since finding your own solution would allow it to be integrated better into your routine, although inspiration is also great (the wrap idea was from my sister for instance).

[–] Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works 42 points 3 days ago (3 children)

Only buy in bulk what you can and WILL eat before it spoils. Staring into a cupboard that's empty except for a huge box of something that seemed like a deal but now makes you gag is .... a life lesson.

Since it's just you, buy cooking vegetables frozen in bags, so you can take out one serving and don't have to hurry to eat up the broccoli wilting in the fridge. Unlike canned, frozen veg keep their nutrients. Which you do need. Being unhealthy isn't frugal.

[–] djdarren@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago

Only buy in bulk what you can

This is the Sam Vimes boots theory in action.

Not criticising you, and you're not wrong. However, buying in bulk suggests a) having the money to do, and b) having somewhere to store the bulk items.

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[–] Gigdragon@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

Get a long, narrow planter or two. Potting soil, and grow onions, garlic, and potatoes (based on where you live) get grow lights if you can. Onions last longer, but potatoes grow easier.

Rice and beans. Tomato sauce/paste for stretching and altering it.

[–] aramis87@fedia.io 28 points 3 days ago (3 children)

I have a farm share (CSA). At the start of the year, you pay up front for a share; in return, you get boxes of veggies during the season. Since the farmer is paid up front, they don't need to borrow money from the bank and hope for a decent harvest to repay the loan, so there's less pressure on them: they know their farm will still be around next year. And you get boxes of veggies that were picked within the past 24 hours, so they're all incredibly fresh. You'll get some stuff you can find in the grocery store (ex: roma tomatoes, bell peppers) but since all the middlemen have been cut out, they last a long time (I've had heads of lettuce last like a month); and you'll get some that's either heirloom varieties (too fragile for handling by the supply chain feeding grocery stores) or unusual (ex: pawpaws, ground cherries).

I'm going to say up front that a farm share isn't for everyone; it takes some adjustment and a bit of work to make it work well, but for me it's worth it. I'll note that I'm single (so it all falls on me) and vegetarian (so I can sometimes eat a lot of veggies).

Each farm chooses how to operate, so I can only speak in generalities. To accommodate different family sizes, some farms offer boxes of different sizes/prices; others offer a half-share, so instead of getting a box every week for 20-26 weeks, you get a box for 10-13 weeks (you choose which weeks you want a box). You can also find a friend to split the cost and content of a share, either splitting each box, or alternating pickup weeks.

Some farms will pre-pack the boxes for you; others will put the veggies on a table and let you choose among them; for example, this week's share might be something like "choose 3 zucchinis/eggplants; choose 2 lbs of a bunch of different types of tomatoes; choose 4 varieties of hot peppers", etc. Some farms you have to pick up at the farm itself; other farms have distribution points in outlying areas, will let you pick up at local farmers markets, or have home delivery for an additional fee. Some farms have work shares: instead of paying for a share, you can choose to work like 4 hours a week during the season and get a box of veggies each week in return. Most farms have pick-your-own availability for veggies that may not be to everyone's taste (okra, herbs), where some people may want extras (tomatoes, peppers, beans), or where personal taste is important (flowers).

I've been with a bunch of different farms over the years (I've moved several times; and sometimes I've joined a farm that isn't a great fit for me). For the past couple years, I've been getting my own box instead of splitting a share, and I've opted to get a 10-week share (I choose the weeks). One thing I like with the 10-week share is that I'm not facing fresh veggies to work with every week; sometimes a weekly share can seem overwhelming!

Most people make some adaptations to make a CSA work for them. It's taken me a while, but I've finally come up with a set a recipes for stuff that I like, that uses the veggies I tend to get, much of which stores well; and I have a pattern of processing that works for me:

Each week, the farm sends out an email ahead of time, letting you know what's in season and sometimes with a rough idea of how much to expect ("this'll be the last week for blackberries, but we have lots of tomatoes!"); that helps me plan what to do ahead of time.

On weeks that I have a share, I go to the farm, do the PYO (it's included in my share, and my starving Irish ancestors would be upset if I didn't get them!), and choose the veggies for my box. When I get home, I wash everything, then sit in front of the tv, watching my guilty-pleasure shows and processing the veggies - as applicable, I trim, peel, slice, dice, mince, etc. As I finish each veggie, it goes into a sealed bowl or a Ziploc and goes into the fridge. I also have a spare bowl for scraps - ends and peels of onions and carrots, trimmings from peppers and leeks, etc. Those join other scraps in a big Ziploc in the freezer; when I have enough scraps, I use it to make veggie stock. And there's another bowl for stuff I can't use, that either goes in the garbage or a compost pile (I've stopped composting in recent years).

On Saturday, I spend a couple hours cooking, usually 2-3 big dishes or 4-5 smaller ones - it depends on my mood and what's in season. Then half the food gets portion-sized and frozen; the other half gets eaten over the week or so following. While cooking, I may pickle some veggies. Pickling is easy: you put your chosen veggies and spices in a jar, heat up your pickling brine, pour the brine over the veggies, and seal the jar. During a season, I may pickle dilly beans, beets, giardinieri, garlic, onions, cucumbers, etc; I may eat them out of the jar or use them as ingredients in future dishes.

[continued in next comment]

[–] aramis87@fedia.io 18 points 3 days ago (2 children)

On Sunday night, I sit in front of the tv, once again watching guilty-pleasure shows, and I use whatever veggies are left over to make salads. Each week I try for a mix of styles so I don't get bored: for a couple salads I may toss in some nuts and berries or apple pieces to make it a bit sweet, while others I'll put in extra peppers or onions to give it some zing. Any lettuce goes on top so it doesn't get soggy over the week; crunchy stuff like croutons goes in a snack Ziploc on the side so it stays crunchy (ziplocs get rinsed and reused every week, and some recycled year to year). Dressing goes in an old pill bottle along the side. I make ten salads: one for each lunch and dinner for the week.

In front of Sunday night's tv, I'll also make little veggie snack-packs: veggies in a Ziploc (add a little water to keep them fresh), some of them with an old pill bottle of dressing or dip on the side After I've finished, any veggies that haven't been used cooking, salads or snack-packs, they get frozen to be used in future meals.

Herbs tend to come in small bunches during the season and it can be annoying to process small amounts each time. I've settled on cleaning and chopping them up each week (in front of Friday nights tv), then freezing them. At the end of the season, I'll take them out of the freezer and dry them and add them to my spice cabinet.

Once or twice a year, I'll spend a couple hours making freezer jam, which is insanely simple: mash the berries, add sugar and pectin, stir, put in containers, leave them on the counter for a day, then move to the freezer. I can use the jam for sandwiches, cake filling, topping for pancakes and waffles, or give them out as stocking stuffers over the holidays.

And once a year during high tomato season, I'll spend a Saturday afternoon processing tomato: I'll make and can some salsa, make and freeze some marinara, boil down a bunch of tomatoes into tomato paste (freeze them in ice cube trays, then move them to ziplocs; you can use them as-is or dilute them into soup, sauce or puree).

How much time is all this? I find it helps to reframe things and count them toward other goals or desires. The hour I spend doing PYO on alternate weeks isn't "farm-share time", it's counted toward my weekly exercise goals. Time in front of the tv isn't counted either, as I'm catching up on guilty-pleasure tv (without the guilt, since I'm actually working, lol). The couple hours batch-cooking on alternate Saturdays, I would likely to have been batch-cooking anyway. That really leaves like 1.5 to 2 Saturdays each year, where I'm making jam, making and canning salsa, etc.

Price-wise, I'm paying $400 a year for a ten-week share, but again I re-frame it: I eat the fresh meals over the summer and fall and the frozen meals over the winter and spring, plus there's also whatever I've pickled, canned, jammed or frozen. For me, it's really a year-round benefit that works out to about $7.70 per week for farm-fresh (often organic) ingredients and homemade meals spiced to my personal tastes. It provides over half the food I eat each year, which means the rest of my food budget stretches further. And I'm eating healthy foods, not highly-processed stuff.

For me, the key has been coming up with a set of recipes for the ingredients I'll get, for dishes that I'll enjoy, and that preserve well - usually frozen. I only have the normal freezer-on-top-of-fridge, but by the end of the season, it's crammed with lasagna, French onion soup, eggplant Parmesan, scalloped daikon, strawberry pancakes, blueberry muffins, stuffed tomatoes and peppers, zucchini boats, butternut squash bread, seven-layer casserole, chili, etc.

I'll admit this isn't for everyone: you need to adjust your habits to what's in season instead of what you buy from the store, you need to find recipes that work for you, you need to spend time cleaning, processing and cooking the veggies. But for the people who do adjust, it can save money.

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[–] tar@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)
[–] MonkRome@lemmy.world 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

It really depends on circumstance. Do you have a broad pallette, do you cook, do you have access to land or community garden to grow pricer food per calorie (lettuce, fruit), will you lower your meat intake, can you reduce meals on the go or nights out?

There are a lot of ways to reduce your food budget, the biggest is refraining from eating out. Probably followed by more meals without meat, which is healthier anyway. Americans eat way too much meat. If you are a creative cook you can make the food you have on hand go further, instead of letting random ingredients go to waste.

[–] jenesaisquoi@feddit.org 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)
[–] MonkRome@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Ahh thanks, didnt notice. Not a word I use enough to notice the difference, pallette/palate. I also have a phoneme disorder that makes recognizing the difference difficult.

[–] jenesaisquoi@feddit.org 4 points 2 days ago

It's not just you, English spelling is a disaster. Other languages are mostly or completely consistent. Only in English is "Gloster" spelled "Gloucester" and "kernel" "colonel", while "lead" and "lead" have different pronounciations, depending on whether you mean the heavy metal or leadership.

[–] Vex_Detrause@lemmy.ca 14 points 3 days ago

Start with a goal of no food waste. If you manage your food inventory like rations in a bunker then the savings on wasted food can help offset the expense.

Together with inventory management is preserving your food. Not jarring your stuff or pickling. Utilizing your fridge and freezer to limit food waste is good at saving you money.

Learning to cook and tapering your food expectations helps a lot with savings. Also learning that cooking with vinegar or acid can extend cooked food just like sweeter food lasting longer.

Or get a partner that came from poverty and learn how to cook(/s).

[–] Drusas@fedia.io 5 points 2 days ago

Learning to cook and making your meals based on whatever protein is on sale does wonders for affordability without putting you in depression territory (rice and beans, rice and beans).

[–] AoxoMoxoA@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago

Rice , rice cooker , various sauces , dried beans, peanut butter, making bread is cheap and easy ( I haven't gone there yet but its coming). I don't buy shit else unless it's on sale.

I don't really make a grocery list anymore other than fruit, veggies, tofu etc and buy non perishable items on sale when I see them and got a serious stock pile going of decent stuff .

I like going to middle eastern and asian food markets where things are a little cheaper and ingredients seem better.

✌️

[–] BurgerBaron@piefed.zip 7 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (6 children)

Dried, Canned, Frozen, Fresh in that order of preference for us anyways. Off-screen half size chest freezer we've finally just finished the frozen sour cherries from the backyard tree last year that's now budding for spring. Besides that it usually has a bunch of frozen baked potatoes from my backyard again, pork cuts that were on sale, Mennonite colony DIY chicken. Vacuum packing keeps away the freezer burn. I have the choice of three discount grocery/markets near me where I can buy fresh produce it's just b-grade/misshapen. I've been slowly adding more backyard planters too but I focus on fruit tree/berry bushes since I'm a shite veggie gardener. Too lazy for the upkeep so just hardy stuff that I can't easily kill from neglect in our short growing season, hardiness zone 3B. Potatoes are easy at least but we ran out half way through winter.



Bonus: This week's slop pots. Metal pot used textured vegetable protein: https://i.postimg.cc/xdm5S0c8/signal-2026-05-14-144201.jpg

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Nutrition is expensive, and controlling waste is crucial. So yes, if you can get a price break on anything essential, consider freezing and pickling (veggies) what would otherwise spoil. In general, try to learn about how different vegetables and meats will keep.

Rice, beans, and potatoes are great staples that last a while and are good for you.

Lower-end "potted meat product" and similar canned meats may be less expensive per ounce than full cuts. That said, it's usually full of sodium and is usually only good on sandwiches and things like that.

Some grocery stores sell cooked rotisserie chicken as a loss-leader (discount). That said, cost-compare against whole birds in the freezer section just in case. Besides, you can't beat home-made roast chicken, and it's fairly easy to do.

I was broke-as-a-joke back in the 2000's. So the following advice may have aged like the milk I bought back then:

  • Obviously, go down-market on your grocery store chain. Cost-compare if your time/energy budget allows it.
  • Learn how to cook what's cheap. What's not imported and in season is usually (not always) in this category.
  • Avoid box-mixes (e.g. hamburger helper). Buy raw ingredients and consider seasoning packets or bulk seasoning to make the same dishes.
  • Bologna, souise loaf, and pickle loaf (if they even still make that) can be cheaper than non-processed cuts
  • Bananas and corn are subsidized as fuck. There are likely others. As a result, they're artificially cheap.
  • Regularly check the store circular (those newspaper things nobody reads) and jump on limited store specials and BOGOs.
  • Tofu can be pretty cheap IF you buy it at an asian grocery store; there may even be bulk options. Making these can be a chore, but a huge bargain if you buy soybeans in bulk. It also freezes okay too, but it does change the texture (some recipes use this).
[–] melsaskca@lemmy.ca 13 points 3 days ago (20 children)

I'm an old guy. I usually go to my local grocery store when the kids get out from school for lunch. It gets really crowded in there and everyone is looking at the kids with suspicion while I'm shoving cans of beans and lunchmeat into my haversack.

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[–] EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com 5 points 2 days ago

Plant-based diet. I still see inflation but avoided the worst of it

[–] Hapankaali@lemmy.world 17 points 3 days ago (6 children)

Not really financially constrained, but I also don't spend a lot on groceries as I just don't like wastefulness. Some tips:

  • No alcohol.
  • No tobacco.
  • No branded products.
  • No soda. I drink mostly tap water, though considering you're American that might not be a viable option.
  • I eat quite a lot of bread, though again it might be difficult for you to get edible bread.
  • Frozen vegetables are good, decently healthy and easy to buy in bulk.
  • Rice and dried pasta are cheap and easy to combine with the above.
  • Modest amounts of animal protein, if any. Cheap alternatives include tofu and peanuts.
  • Since you're alone, you can cook for two or three days and save some time and money. One option is to cook for two servings but alternate, so that you eat the second serving 2 days after. That way you don't have to eat the same thing twice in a row.
[–] Nemo@slrpnk.net 18 points 3 days ago (5 children)

I drink mostly tap water, though considering you're American that might not be a viable option. it might be difficult for you to get edible bread.

Stereotypes about America get weird.

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