 A
lot of poor people who are chubby, ill, spending megabucks on
doctors,
whine
" what can I do? I'm poor. I eat junk food
cuz it's cheap!" That is a shoddy rationale. It just won't wash.
The Big Mac meal is 4$ for one person. I can buy a WHOLE chicken
and a bunch of raw spinach for that price. I can feed eight
people at a fabulous, joyous meal, I cook up a pot of basmati
rice, we split a bottle of red wine and it becomes a memorable
party. YOU MISS ALL THAT when even one member of your family
spends 4bucks on a BIG MAC MEAL!
Like Junk food, snacks can take a serious
bite out of your life. CHIPS are extremely costly and 2$ worth
of trans fats is something you don't want to pay to have in your
life. Candy is costly although I find these big 8oz Hershey bars
on sale for 89c and I snap them up, nurse 'em over a week.. TV
DINNERS are mega costly. Good healthy FOOD is CHEAP. I'll prove
it here, today, right now so keep reading.
I do understand that poor people tend to chow down on a lotta
starch which creates
Alzheimers,
they tell us. It's indeed cheaper than vegies, fruits or meats
but you don't have to go that route. But using numbers, we'll
prove that going short on the costly stuff, finding it in
secret CHEAP WAYS....you can achieve a diet upgrade and even a
BUDGET upgrade.
We all know 4 bucks for a box of cereal,
(up to 5$ these days for Grape Nuts or Granola) is a per ounce
highway robbery! Most breakfast cereals including most oats but
not all, are costly and worse, clogging. We tend to get sniffles
from all the
gluten
in 'em. Upgrade to Bible bread! It's everywhere now. (WHole
grain soaked overnight, acid rinsed out,) drained, then ground
into dough.) At the supermarket here in Calif we get EZEKIEL 4:9
from Nature Valley or Nature sunshine or someone. and other
brands, bon marche ($3.60) at the Healthfood Store! No need to
eat white bread cuz it's half the price of dark breads, when it
makes you mucusy, sick and fat. Never put anything in your mouth
high on calories and low in nutrition. Especially if it has
toxic factors. Every chance to eat is a chance to invigorate the
body. It's time to get sick of being fat, and
upgrade all our usual food choices to the THINNING, healthfood
version.
THERE's PLENTY you can do about being fat,
sick and poor. FRUGAL healthful meals confer energy to jazz up
your entire life so you can earn more money. You're only as good
as the nutrients sailing around in your brain! Food upgrades are
not costly; they aren't even HARD. You won't have to bust your
budget or spend elbow grease to have health and frugality
combined, just make some wee changes.
DITCH POTATOES AND WHITE RICE. Get brown basmati rice at the
ethnic market. For a long while, my 99c store had two lbs of
brown rice for 99c. Brown rice has huge amts of minerals and Vit
B.
DITCH ordinary BREAD, ditch
ALL FLOUR
products and baked goods! (*Click on that URL, see why!) Buy
whole grains like millet, brown rice, and buy health food store
'flourless" bible bread made entirely of whole grain (soaked,
overnight, rinsed well, drained then triturated in a VITAMIX).
Try making your own bread now that grain has doubled in cost in
one year. Read
MAKE YOUR OWN.
Next, always toast your bread so it provokes saliva which is how
starches are digested. Chewing starches well so they are soaked
in spit, i.e. ptyalin enzyme, assures you digest grains & get
all those minerals into your BRAIN! Wheat just doubled in price,
In 2006, it cost 4$ a bushel, in mid 2007, it's 9$ a bushel. So
never more than now is it time to leap into bread making. It's
incredibly easy and fun. Many cooks find it the most addictive
of kitchen pleasures. I have not been able to find the true
FLOUR-less recipe online. Bible bread is described as a mixture
of grains, legumes, and I found recipes for it, but they entail
FLOUR. Perhaps you could find the grains in the recipe, hole,
and use a vitamix to grind the soaked, rinsed grain to turn it
into dough. Here are the recipes:
www.recipezaar.com/626
www.razzledazzlerecipes.com/cooking/bible-bread.htm
www.sunshinerecipes.com/biblebread.shtml
To get healthy is it necessary that we
SHOP ORGANIC? NOt unless cancer runs in your family and
pesticides are really dangerous! Washing produce well takes care
of most of the pesticide residues. A basin of soapy water to
dissolve the oils, then a rinse and a dry in rack, and into
fridge when dry!
One thing I will pick up on sale at my huge Kroger Super
market is CHEESE. Whereas all artisan cheeses are 7$ an lb, the
Kroger jack cheese and cheddar are $3.50 a pound on their sales,
which are very regular. The trick is to pick it from under the
pile, in back, down, next to the fridge unit as cheese on top,
exposed to the market's air --especially the jack--, has gone
SOUR.
KEEPING CHEESE. Cheese left in the fridge goes bad, it
dries out, it gets green fur growing on it, so freeze it. Before
you do, cut off a slice for dinner, (to melt on veggies, to p ut
on toast squares,) but the BIG POUND BLOCK back in the freezer,
wrapped in plastic, cold as an ice cube!. An hour before you
want to give someone a slice, (teaches everyone to think ahead,)
thaw it, cut off what you need, refreeze. That $3.50 you spent
will LAST. THROWING away food is throwing away money.
BREAD is the staff of life. Really spectacular Bible breads
are now available at super markets. I find that if I shop at 6
a.m, the bakery gal is going thru the loaves, finding DATED
ones, stacking them in a basket for the mark down shelf. On the
day-old shelf, they're half price. One can buy BIBLE BERAD at
Whole Foods but we've all heard the joke:
Whole Foods,
whole paycheck.
The humor seems exaggerated, until you shop there or at some
other natural foods market. I don't know about you but pouring
my money into their cash register doesn't make ME healthy!
KROGER chain has BIBLE bread. THANK YOU GOD!
You can go to WHOLE FOODS if you have
discipline and frugal skills because if you don't know what you
can get products for elsewhere, you'll spend $100 bucks on an
impulse purchase of organic coffee beans when all you came in
for was their bulk grains and pulse, nuts and stuff, very
affordable. Or their cheap, real culture 32 oz yogurt, the great
eggs which beat all other shops in price. So where is it written
that we must buy their croissant, or have their pricey, artisan
cheeses or organically grown coffee beans? Less pesticide and
they charge more money? Go figure. I'll stick to my small list
of things that actually are cheaper at the WHOLE FOODS shop.
Eggs, Yogurt, bulk nuts, grains, Bible Bread, and get my fruits
& veggies elsewhere and make my own egg salad and skip croissant
and other flour foods altogether.
CARBS
give ALZHEIMER'S it turns out.
So continue to shop big chain super
markets. And they are the only shops to have BENT CAN shelves so
I like that about them. Coffee at $1.50 a can? Beans at 39c a
can? WOW! Cat food reduced to 20c? Then the coupon thing. Collect
those coffee coupons in the ads for the major super markets,
carry your folder with you in your shopping cart. Or in your
purse, a collection of coupon envelopes, (PAPER, CAT food, HUMAN
FOOD, COFFEE/ SHAMPOOS/ TOOTHPASTES, all organized.) Leave the
packet in the car so you can take it in to the store with you,
every time you go. When you see some brand is on sale, and you
also have a coupon, snap it up. I even snap up things on the
bent shelf and use coupons to get double down savings.
Start paring down your cravings. Where you can capture
a delicious resolution to a craving by baking it yourself, do
so. My neighbors tree had so many crunch apples that I have to
run out and get brown sugar and flour to make a pie. As I live
alone now, I cut the cooled pie into 12 slices, freeze
individually. Not a jot less tasty.
Upgrade what you snack on. Sure, you could bake
your own baguettes but flour is
not a healthy food.
So get Bible bread. Holistic Nut butters, and spread butter and
your homemade low sugar jam on it, and skip the white flour with
sat fats altogether. FRESHLY MADE
WHOLE FAT YOGURT!
YUM! Make it yourself. EZ!
Health food stores have Yogurt at
competitive prices & Bible Bread is also quite reasonable. So do
supermarkets, espec if it's with a COUPON or on sale. Even bread
can turn up on sale. I visit the 'half price' shelf for baked
goods as usually at dawn only, my market has a few loaves of
EZEKIEL 4:19 Bible bread that hit their expiration date. I
freeze them immediately so there's no problem there. But then if
it's full price, I freeze that too! Take slices that I need out,
toast them.
But if we didn't win the lottery, what to do about that big
slab of Garlic cheese we crave?. Well, I can go without SONOMA
JACK GARLIC CHEESE for weeks or months on end as it is mucus
forming and it tends to give seniors gout. Cheese is like wine;
it should be used rarely. And kept in the freezer, tightly
wrapped the rest of the time, but I wll buy it when there's a
cheese coupon out there! But lately I buy any cheese on sale and
smother it with smushed garlic from the press (on toast or corn
tortillas.) Why pay 7$ an lb. for SONOMA JACK? I used to, SONOMA
CHEDDAR, SONOMA SWISS. They're all WOW! But now I squeeze garlic
on 3$ KROGER chain cheese and DOUBLE WOW. Garlic was made for
cheese, ya know?
Today, I carried my cheese coupon to the supermarket, found
all the California cheeses were 9$ a pound. My coupon was for
Progresso sliced packaged cheeses, but even a COUPON didn't get
me a lot of savings on packaged sliced cheese, if you calculated
the ounce price. So instead, I picked a big whole pound brick of
Colby CHEDDAR mixed with Jack like a ZEBRA cheese, from
Minnesota, cost $3.50 a pound, vowing to take good care of this
chunk of INVESTMENT CHEESE, so it wouldn't dry out once opened,
or absorb flavors. Went home and had two cheese quesadillas. To
get that flavor of the Fancy Sonoma Jack Garlic cheese, I
smashed a clove of garlic into them. A savory bellyfilling
triumph and as I never touched cheese with my fingers, just used
a sterile knife, and rewrapped it in a clean plastic bag and put
it in BUTTER section of fridge, that little door, however it did
not stay pristine. In a few days I had tad of mold WHICH WOULD
SPREAD so I cut it off, FROZE the sucker.) From this day
forward, I will freeze my cheese!
Now, I don't have to eat it all in a week! I may get another
20 meals of of it, grated on veggies, before that brick is
history. (By the way, only Mexican super markets have the pure,
yellow corn tortillas, no preservatives at all, no cellulose
which all other super market tortillas have, $1.99 for 3 dozen!
I separate it into 4 plastic bags, knot tightly, freeze three!)
Then I make a batch of salsa verde to dollop inside of my
quesadillas. Tomatillos, jalapenos and cilantro are cheap!
MY KOREAN SUPERMARKET has frozen pollock fillets at 99c, an
lb, in 3 lb bags. Take a fillet a day, make my
ORIENTAL SOUP
with SOBA NOODLES and Broccoli, using their
ORIENTAL SEASONINGS. Soba noodles are on sale there, 3 lbs for
5$ and that'll last me a month. I keep them bagged in fridge
rest of time. The sesame oil and soy sauce and maybe tiny slice
ginger root are the special seasonings.
Take the time to walk through this kind of
barrio ethnic market vs. always the WHOLE FOODS. Make a price
comparison then go to the SUPER MARKET CHAIN where they offer
double coupons. Don't just automatically go to the health food
store and plonk down 9$ a lb for cheese gratuitously. A man in a
recent study admitted it costs him $800 a month to purchase his
groceries from Whole Foods, (WHOLE PAYCHECK he called it, I got
that phrase from HIM,) and he's only buying for himself, his
girlfriend and an average-sized dog that he feeds like a #*&(
human. That's $200 a week between $28 and $29 a day for a man, a
woman and one satisfied pet. Who can afford that?
People are not thinking, they're just shopping and throwing
food into the basket over at the healthfood store and going
broke. According to recent statistics 73 percent of the U.S.
population consumes organic food and beverages at least some of
the time. What's more, the research shows that it's not just the
stereotypical highly-educated, high-income, Caucasian female who
buys organic. African Americans, Asian Americans and Latino
Americans are a fast-growing segment of organic consumers.
In fact, almost as many households with an annual income of
less than $50,000 are buying organic foods, as are households
with incomes higher than $50,000. This means that people who
earn less are still choosing more expensive organic products.
But that leaves a fundamental problem: How can you eat healthy
without going broke?
To find out, let's pretend we walk thru a few stores and
compare prices. Our mission: To see if a single person can eat a
healthy and predominantly organic or health food diet on 7$ a
day. That's $50 a week, $200 a month.
This means you have $2 for breakfast, $2 for lunch, $2 for
dinner, and $1 for a snack. With that reality check, we hit the
aisles.
Work the Healthy
Combinations -
Before pricing produce, consider healthy
combinations of food that help when on a tight budget. The first
is balance. About a quarter of your plate should be protein,
one-third veggies, and a quarter to a third starchy carbs. For
the rest, fill it out with any of the three, along with a
smaller amount of healthy fats.
Combining certain foods helps complete a
meal. One mainstay combination for this Healthy Eating on $7 a
Day mission is beans and a grain. But occasionally we can have
steak, chicken or eggs. (*Your veins will thank you for making
it occasional, too!)
Beans have great protein and good, complex, starchy carbs as
opposed to refined starch which is useless. Rice alone is not
going to banish hunger for as much time as it does when paired
with beans. Add a tiny piece of viand, you will assure yourself
of a whole amino acid meal but if there's no meat in the
house, it's fine to combine a grain and vegetables, topped
off with a plant-based protein like almonds or tofu. (Yogi
Bhajan says AUROVEDIC DOCTORS skin the almonds. Soak two hrs,
peel skin off, throw away , that water is astringent, now.
Eating skins is bad for your gut.)
To kick up the aminos, use nuts or eggs on the salad. On the
side you would either have whole grain bread, or a cup of bean
soup, or hummus which is garbanzo bean dip and which costs l0c
an oz, and comes in 79c cans at the Iranian or Asian market.
(You add your own garlic/ lemon). Buying your own sesame butter
and using bulk garbanzos brings it in even cheaper.
Pair vegetables with inexpensive fish. Tuna is 49c a can at
99c store. Meat is out, at least on a regular budgetary basis,
for the $7-a-day shopper. Most meats and fine seafood are too
expensive. Which brings us back to the produce aisle.
Veggies and
Fruits-
Eat dairy and fish once a week, meat about
twice a week, but clearly, on $7 a day it's got to be much more
of a plant-based diet because if we go look at the prices in the
meat department and the fish department, even in smaller
portions, a lot of those foods are pretty high dollar.
We suggest vegetables and rice as a
breakfast choice. They are balancing, they make your brain work
better, they alkalize your system, they help with stress, And
they have a natural sweetness.
Vitamin- and mineral-packed organic broccoli at $2.99 per
pound, or approximately 60 cents a serving is affordable but at
my local ethnic market, broccoli is 50c. lb now. I load up. I
could blanche and freeze it, but I bag it, use it daily. The
discipline is...when you bought three lbs of broccoli, you
promise yourself you will serve it daily! Lots of butter, garlic
and lemon so everybody adores it, cut stems right in when I chop
and season.)
In January, in CALIF at least, one can put out a lot of
broccoli seedlings started in a flat on TABLE on south side of
house.
(GARDEN INDEX)
so I expect broccoli this year for free! And free broc seeds for
YOU! Read CHANGE THE WAY
WEGET
OUR FOOD,
an article. When you shop for this costly veggie, you don't need
a whole pound. Buy a single stalk and don't worry about stalks,
peeled cooked with the rest, they are just as delicious as the
tops. Maybe MORE SO! So use the stem. A lot of people throw the
stem away. Sometimes it is too fibrous, but they skin up tender
& a lot of the nutrition is in the stem.
Check the price of organic cabbage, at
$1.49 per pound. That's half the price of organic broccoli, and
it gets the nod. So do carrots, at 99 cents per pound. But hit
the ethnic market (Asian, Iranian, Korean, ) Carrots are 33c on
sale, 50c regularly. I like the 1-lb bags as I lift a dozen to
feel which is heavier and always get a bag that's 1 1/2 lbs in
weight that way!
Nutrient-dense chard, spinach and kale, all are organic and
more expensive at $2.49 per pound, but they're economical
because a little goes a long way. Buy these items at an ethnic
market, you'll pay a third of that price.
An organic head of organic red-leaf lettuce is $2.49, or
approximately 62 cents per serving. 89c at an Ethnic market. l0c
a serving. On sale, Romaine is 50c. Always weigh the object in
your hand to get the heaviest one. Cabbage greens, carrots,
chards are all fabulous cooked in broth with tofu chunks, sesame
oil, chile and are popular "peasant foods" in third world
villages,for that reason. We move on to root vegetables and the
starchy group.
Root veggies: turnips, rutabagas, potatoes, yams (33c an lb,
on sale at barrio market, now in Autumn,) and above ground we
have winter squash type starches. We wouldn't compare these to
broccoli. I would compare them to starches like rice, only they
bring more minerals into play. Green vegetables have less
calories and more antioxidants. The root vegetables grow in the
dark, under the ground but have vitamins and minerals which rice
does not. Have some of both daily. If you eat potatoes, be sure
to eat the nutrient-rich skins otherwise they're just diabetes
food.
We turn to organic fruit. Exotic fruits would seem to be out
but where I live in California, some Mexican immigrants with a
little start up cash, (Rumors fly on how they got it!) created a
chain of supermarkets called "Vallarta". And when V. has a
special on big, red papayas, 33c an lb, I run over fast and get
a couple of these big guys, a dead ripe red one for the front
part of week, a greener one that will ripen in five days. These
big, fleshy fruits becomes a blended drink. Spoon out flesh into
blender; scoop till you hit skin. Add a chunk of banana to
sweeten the drink & add the juice of one lemon, to give it sour
power, blend into a drink or pudding. WOW!
Sometimes you add coconut. Sometime milk, even ice cream or
dates. Whizz away!
Fruit is expensive --especially organic apples. Fruit is a
luxury. You can find a bargain when you buy bagged apples,
pre-packaged in plastic bags, the organic ones at $2.50 for a
pound and a half, or 25 cents each, and pears for about the same
price. But want a real bargain? Hit the 99c store or the ethnic
market which has 3 lbs of fujis or braeburns for 99c. Can't beat
a dime an apple, same price as in the DEPRESSION!
Bananas are a good choice at 99c store, too: three pounds for
99c. I always feel the various bundles, pick the heaviest. Do
that with all pckgs of carrots, bags of tortillas.
JUICES in bottles are costly. They aren't quite REAL, either.
They're pasteurized, and loaded with CORN SYRUP so I have a
trick. I buy them only if there's a hefty coupon and then I cut
the juice with real grapefruit juice. My bumper sticker says "I
brake for garage sales," but I also brake for grapefruit trees
around my California barrio which strew fruit on lawns. Every
time I return from market I've got a dozen grapefruits or lemons
bouncing around the front seat. I juice them quick and throw
this sour power juice into my Strawberry/kiwi/ concord type
juice bottles. Like a California dope dealer, I 'cut' the juice.
It's way tastier, way more alive and I feel holier than if I
were drinking straight supermarket juice. Not to mention the
cash I save!
FLAVORINGS/ SPICES
- Garlic and onions are my fave food spices.
I eat them in everything savory. Scrambled eggs, refried beans.
The 99c Store gives us 3 lbs of onions for 99c. Sometimes the
Arab, Iranian, Mexican or Korean supermarket has onions for 25c.
an lb. These markets send me technicolor circulars weekly. I
keep those in my purse or coupon holder or on floor in car.
There I shop the specials. Maybe I'll buy bags of six garlic
heads for 99c. If any start to sprout, they get planted
immediately. All your usual cooking spices are bonmarche at the
99c store. Why pay 8$ a jar at supermarket? The red savory
mixture is of course something you make yourself: cayenne/
paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, celery seeds, turmeric,
thyme.
Chile sesame oil is my fave flavor in
stews, soups, salad dressings. It is cheap at the Asian market.
My local Korean market is huge, full of fabulous things. There's
an Asian market a few miles from here that has a wall of fish
swimming! They fly it in to California from CHINA in tanks of
sea water!
At Health food store, Avocados are costly ($2 each), my
Iranian market has them for 50c each. Pre-mixed salads
($5.99 per pound) are over my head. The concept is bewildering.
How hard is it to wash new heads of salad in the sink, drain and
bag? Since the SPINACH poisoning case, that wonderful, high
mineral green stuff is 50c a bunch at the little markets. I
always pick the biggest, heaviest bunches, weighing one after
the next in my hand. My ethnic super market has green peppers
at 59c, an lb, ($3.99 per pound at WHOLE FOODS). I wash pepper
carefully, get all poisons off. AND always, garden with your
food. How? YOU CAN GROW the center part of SPINACH in your
garden! Fingernail clip off all outer leaves and plant the
center with its little red root and your garden will be full of
spinach! Same with onions, garlic. We use the mother plant as a
bulb or cutting! Same with berries. Get the ruined boxes out on
the dumpster, squish them in water, and "plant" the squished
berries in potting soil in flats. You get thousands of berry
plants! Squish a tomato into a glass of water. Next day, take
those seeds and strain, air dry.
You could go broke at WHOLE FOODS eating Tomatoes ($1 for
one). Sales at ethnic markets procure them for 59c, an lb but
this week, our local Mexican market chain, "Vallarta" has 'em
33c an lb. Don't fridge the little gems. Arrange in a bowl in
sight. They are meant to sweeten up at room temps! Rot in the
cold! And why buy organic canned tomato sauce at $1.69 for 14
ounces? I buy the tomatoes for 33c an lb, fry in real olive wi.
real garlic, onion and get a pound can of organic sauce 16 oz
for 40c!
Oranges, at WHOLE FOODS PAYCHECK are $3 a pound, this doesn't
make sense to me. I drive a mile to market on back streets,
sight citrus trees scattering fruit, find lemons, grapefruits,
tangarines, oranges all over the ground. I've memorized where
the trees are. You can't do that in MINNESOTA I'll admit but you
may have an ethnic supermarket where you get a fair shake.
Seafood, Dairy and
Meats- FERGAWDSAKES,
Don't buy fish at WHOLE FOODS. Just check the prices as you
breeze by the seafood section toward the dairy section (where
FRESH YOGURT with 4 cultures is cheaper than anywhere else, even
an Iranian market, 32 oz costing $1.99). At WHOLE FOODS, Wild
salmon is $18 per pound. If you have that kind of money, use it
to buy stock in the
99c store!
Tilapia, is $7.99, even at Supermarket Chains it's soared 8
times to that price now. Fish is out, unless you
1) hit the ORIENTAL market. Asians demand fresh fish be
flown in. Many stores have huge aquariums on teh walls, and they
catch it live! My market has fabulous frozen fish. I buy a bag
of fillets for $1.59 an lb, POLLOCK is the cheapest of all the
fish they offer. DELICIOUS.
2.) VALLARTA Mex market chain has whole TILAPIA on sale
at 69c an LB. I buy ten fish, a pound each, freeze 9. Fry them
whole, eat the skin and pull the tiny bones out of my mouth. I
don't fillet the little guys!
3.) KROGER foods was once a meat wholesaler before they
bought West of Rockies' biggest super market chain. They bring 2
lb bags of fish in by the hundred. Fairly inexpensively, too. 2$
an lb, bagged whiting fillets! HALIBUT is not that cheap though.
WHITING is fabulous, though.
4.) Canned sardines are not pricey at the 99c store.
Sardines are a great way to get omega 3 oils, of the essential
fatty acids needed in your diet. They're also high in calcium as
bones are consumed. Whole Foods has 'em at double the price,
offering a tin for $1.79. But that's 89-cent for two servings. I
am incapable of eating a sardine --however I appreciate
anchovies as a seasoning agent. You grind an anchovy into
pizza sauce or olive salad dressing, it tastes double good
and nobody knows you even used a fish. That's what ANCHOVY
PASTE is for. I distrust the tin element in the tube form they
sell so I'd advise: buy your anchoves fresh or salted at Asian
market, tight wrap them in plastic, freeze the whole bunch like
cigarettes. Take out one fishie for a new blender jar of salad
dressing, grind into the mix, or mortar/pestle it into paste and
slowly add olive oil if you're making a jar of dressing. NOBODY
will know why your salad dressing tastes so amazingly good.
HINT: Never let a child under age of 13 see you do it! If they
knew little fishes were ground into .......too weird!
In the dairy area of WHOLE PAYCHECK, we
discover that organic milk costs 50 cents per cup, but flavored
milk that is packaged in single servings, sweetened and marketed
to children costs $1.29 per cup. At 99c store, price drops to a
dime a cup for homogenized, full fat milk. We find plain organic
yogurt less expensive than sweetened yogurt, and after much
searching, $1.99 a 32 oz container. You'll find an 8-ounce
package of mild cheddar cheese for $2.99, or approximately
37-to-50 cents per serving. As we leave, we price tofu at $1.90
for 19 ounces, or 47 cents per serving. I wouldn't live on tofu,
but you can have one to two meals of it a week, in soup.
MEAT:
There are no organic meats within our price range. So who
cares what the animal ate during his lifetime? He's dead. What
does it matter? We poor folks eat meat so very occasionally, we
can dare to BUY NON-ORGANIC MEAT! Small fryers are on sale a
WHOLE FOODS for $1.59 per pound. At those high prices, what
you're paying for the bone is exhorbitant. (Although My
neighbor's dog Blinky Ramirez is a veritable garbage disposal
and triterates chicken bones of their knobs, spitting out shafts
which are dangerous.) By steering away from RED meat, I get my
protein cheap. I go to the KOREAN market and pollock is $1.59 a
lb, delicious fish! The only cheap one they offer. And at
Vallarta ethnic markets Pollo is often 49c. an lb, and when it
is, I walk out with 20-lbs. I rewrap these chicken leg quarters
in small plastic bags and freeze 2 or 3 quarters thigh/legs to a
bag. Bones don't bother me when they cost me 49 an lb. Anyway,
Blinky is the garbage disposal dog who comes in under the fence
to beg. He gets the bones, chews them up and digests them like
an Insinkerator with four legs and a waggy tail!
Want to eat beef bottom roast at $5 a lb
over at WHOLE CHECK? Beef is $1.49 at the ethnic super market.
I will fry it lightly in garlic, add water and stew it at low
temp with tons of vegies, curry powder, garlic, cilantro and
serve on rice or simmer it with vegies for soup to stretch it
out. Buy several pounds of whatever viand is on sale and freeze
it in small pckgs for later.. Ground turkey thigh at WHOLE
PAYCHECK is no deal at $2.99 per pound. At the supermarket I pay
99c for a plastic bullet of triterated turkey burger weighing a
pound. Great in chili or meatloaf or enchiladas or --if you like
work, -- in CHILE RELLENOS w. onions/ raisins (called picadillo.)
Very tasty stuff. I cook it with carrots and give it to the
cats, too. POULTRY fat is not nearly as hard-tallow as beef, so
is kinder to your veins.
Forget WHOLE FOODS for meat. You are better off shopping the
specials at Major SuperMarket chains. When liver goes down to
89c, and Chicken quarters to 59c, and blade cut steak is $1.29
and pork shoulder is 79c, buy a lot. Cut into smaller pckgs,
freeze them.
On this diet, you don't need to worry about overeating carbs
because you are not going to be able to afford to. Chips are way
too costly and they've toxic, oversalted, full of harmful canola
oil. But if you must chip, add dip. You can get yourself into
CHIP trouble if you don't put protein with your starch meal.
Read
ENTER THE ZONE.
*clickable URL. The Zone books are summarized there. They
suggest a balance that is important. Never let carbs dominate.
What is going to be tricky is getting adequate protein because
the protein sources are the most expensive, but that's where you
are going to get your minerals.
LAST, MINERALIZE THE WHOLE BUSINESS.
Get good sea salts. Hit Oriental grocery and get seaweed
to add to your meals a couple of times a week to improve your
mineral intake. Dulse and kelp, are expensive at WHOLE FOODS, (dulse,
for example, is $4.99 per bag) a sprinkle of seaweed over a
stir-fry could amount to only 31 cents. But hit the big ASIAN
market, you find these items for pennies. Along with oyster
flavored soy sauce (for tofu in brown sauce, with shitake
mushrooms.) the dried shitakes, real aged tamari soy sauce and
other goodies like fresh fish! And dashi (bonito flakes,)
absolutely necessary for oriental soups. And chile sesame oil,
totally needed for any meat or fish dish!
The
All-Important Bulk Aisle-
WHOLE FOODS always had a bulk aisle, the
backbone of affordable food shopping. Here you get nuts at lower
prices than big supermarket chains, organic almonds and cashews
at an unheard of low price, $3.99 per pound. I find walnuts,
shelled, at an Iranian market for $3.65 a pound, nibble them
with dates instead of candy.
Check out the flax, sesame and sunflower
seeds. These are used to make vegie burgers grinding them a bit
then adding onion, celery, mushroom, bell pepper. Moderation is
the key to eating nuts affordably. You have to find them for a
good price and use them n your snack and meat dishes along with
other things.. Dont just grind away at the bag of nuts as if it
were popcorn. It's ten times the calories! One meal you might
say I need two tablespoons of nuts to help fancy up things.
Stringbeans amandine. Vegieburgers based on almonds and toasted
sesame seeds.. Cookies with walnuts in the batter.
Price out bulk organic brown rice ($1.39 per pound),
remembering that at the 99c store it's 50c an lb Buying basmati
at an Arab market you'll pay 70c an lb for that buttery, nutty
variety of rice. A l0 lb bag is about 6.99 right now. At WHOLE
FOODS, whole wheat pasta ($1.99 per pound), is pricey but
probably better for you than the refined pastas available at
other shops.
Oats while high in gluten, are useful if you make your own
cookies or keep fresh cream and cinnamon in the house for
steaming hot breakfasts. (89 cents per pound) Cornmeal (59 cents
per pound) helps you throw together healthy pancakes, muffins.
We see dried beans that translate to 30 cents per cup once
cooked, and lentils at 22 cents per cup. After some searching,
we find whole grain or multi-grain bread that costs 20 cents per
slice. Brown rice and pasta are about the same if you buy bulk
versus prepackaged, but bulk oatmeal and cornmeal are much
cheaper.
Splurge
Suggestions- CANDY ANYONE?
Get dried
fruit, on sale at ethnic markets, dried figs, dates. Get
HEALTHFOOD store unsulphured apricots, cherries. Throw a mix of
these fruits into blender or food processor with some lemon
juice and lemon rind, coconut meat, (cut out of a real whole
coconut, a buck each at ethnic markets). You get a pasty candy
dough. You can add walnuts, chopped almonds toasted for one
flavor, blanched for another...Roll finished ball in coconut
flakes which you make yourself with food processor. Wrap in
candy papers, or wrap in plastic. Tissue paper. Store in glass
jar. Call them pinatas. Make a rule, no more than two a day and
none in the two hours before dinner!
Have an ice
cream maker? -
Make a custard, with milk, eggs, little salt, some sugar. Cool
it down. Then add a carton of real cream, whiz it up with some
fresh nectarines. Throw into those FREEZER-containers with the
little SPIN WHEEL as you have to keep spinning it as it freezes
to keep it creamy, non granular. Press finished ice cream into a
carton, keep in freezer ready to go. Kosher salt required for
chipped ice if it's an old fashioned churn means a trip to the
store! CHIPPED ice hard to find, too!
Tip for
Healthy Family Eating on a Budget-
To feed a family of four, stretch out the protein by making
chopped meat into soups, stews and chili. Try a WHITE CHILI one
night to make things interesting. Chopped turkey with yellow
jalapenos for heat. White beans and double douse the recipe with
millet all of which will cook up white. Try meat loaf another
week. Then steam peel chilies, stuff them and try Egg batter (chile
rellenos). Serve fried beans, corn tortillas with that.
The
Budget-Breakers: Foods to Avoid-
Which foods should you avoid no matter how
much you want to spend? Crackers, chips, sweetened drinks,
convenience bars and juice (if you don't cut it with real
grapefruit,) is like pouring money down a hole. All cost a lot
and are barely nutritional. If I have a coupon, I will buy 64 oz
of juice but I rationalize, I can easily juice citrus and add
that juice to each glass. Lemon and grapefruit really perk up
JUICY JUICE and bring the cost down. And so do coupons. I never
go near juice without a coupon.
NEVER buy Crackers; they price out at $1
per ounce! Instead, take a cup of your whole grain flour, throw
some melted ghee and sea salt into it, a little vegie water, a
few tbspns of sesame seeds, a 1/3 tsp of SESAME OIL, roll into a
ball. Fridge a half hour. ROLL THIN, throw on a baking pan in
hot oven. QUELLE CRACKER. A few pennies an ounce. Store in big
jar wi. tight lid! (Thrift store has 'em) And this cracker has
ReAL TASTE!
~^~^~^~^~~^~^~^~^~~^~^~^~
TYPICAL WEEK ~^~^~^~^~~^~^~^~^~^~^~
Breakfast:
Tofu (20 cents), veggies (pennies), brown rice (20 cents)
or Oats (30c) cream, (25c) honey. (pennies)
or 2 Eggs (18c if from 99C store) and hashed brown potatoes (30
cents) Homemade sausage done with 79c. an lb pork shoulder you
mince with a knife (Don't want pig in MY blender!)....seasoned
salt, fresh sage.
Snack: Two dates (5 cents), 12
almonds (22 cents)
Lunch: Raw spinach salad, home made garlicky olive oil, 20c,
two corn tortillas, (5c)
Dinner: Fryer chicken ($1), veggies ($1), brown rice (20 cents)
Day 2:
Breakfast: Oatmeal (20 cents), 12 nuts (22 cents), raisins (22
cents), dates, cinnamon. REAL CREAM
or WHIZZY Milk (50 cents), protein powder (20 cents) and some
banana
Or Eggs (39 cents) and veggies ($1) Bacon has gone sky high. So
grind up sausage from a single chop of pork.
Lunch: blade steak 4 oz (60c on sale) Spinach salad, 20c.
Snack: One organic apple (25 cents), dollop of organic peanut
butter (14
cents)
Dinner: Turkey chili ($1), lentils (22 cents), veggies ($1),
stock from
fryer chicken (50 cents), whole wheat berries (5 cents)
DESSERT: ICE CREAM
Day 3:
Breakfast: Cornmeal (14 cents), tasty pumpkin/ sunflower seeds
(30c), nuts (22 cents), real, raw honey (10cents) Make it into a
corn batter, heat butter in a heavy skillet, fry up their
breakfast.
BAG Lunch: Chili beans from last night, inside your salad
roulades, with cream chese inside. (50c.)
Snack: Veggies (20c), homemade hummus (90 cents) as a dip.
Dinner: Salad (62 cents) with chicken ($1), veggies ($1),
dressing lemon/garlic your homemade seasoning salts and olive
oil ($1)
Day 4:
Breakfast: One egg (39 cents if organic, 10c if from 99c store),
whole grain toast (20 cents), piece of
fruit (25 cents)
AT HOME Lunch: Beans (30 cents), rice (20 cents), veggies
(50c)
Snack: Carrots,(pennies) cheese piece (50 cents) Wrap cheese
in romaine or spinach which was buttered lightly with your
homemade ranch dressing. YUM!
Dinner: Half can sardines (89 cents), pasta (49 cents),
tomato sauce (16
cents)
Day 5
Breakfast: Veggies (90 cents), brown rice (20 cents), sliced
cashews (22
cents), sprinkle of cheese (50 cents)
Lunch: Hummus (90 cents), whole wheat bread (20 cents),
lettuce leaf (30
cents)
Snack: Banana (50 cents) and peanut butter (14 cents)
Dinner: Whole wheat pasta (49 cents), veggies ($1), beans (30
cents), nuts
(22 cents), brewerâs yeast (20 cents)
Day 6:
Breakfast: Brown rice (20 cents), red beans (30 cents), miso (15
cents),
greens ($1)
Lunch: Lettuce and veggies ($1), second half of sardine can
(89 cents)
Snack: Sliced pears and apples (50 cents), cheese (50 cents)
Dinner: Brown rice (20 cents), veggies ($1), tofu (47 cents),
sesame seeds
(5 cents)
Day 7:
Breakfast: Plain yogurt (60 cents), sliced apple (25 cents),
coconut,
sunflower seeds or ground flax seeds ($1)
Lunch: Kale (pennies), chard, (pennies) rice (20 cents),
onions (5 cents)
Kick up the protein with tofu
Snack: Roasted yam (30 cents) with butter, chopped onion 12
cashews (22 cents)
Dinner: Soup from chicken stock ($1), lentils (22 cents)
veggies ($50c), grains (20 cents), one slice whole wheat bread
(20 cents)
Healthy Investment on Eating for Less
If you're committed to eating on $7 a days, you may want to
invest in some assistance:
PASTA MAKER- Italian versions are the best. 40$
Rice cooker, as low as $27 on
www.veryasia.com
Wok, between $25 and $40 on
www.amazon.com
Glass jars for bulk items, $23 for 36 8-ounce ball canning jars
at
www.freundcontainer.com
but a jar is a jar. EASY to collect thousands, free.
Extra freezer, if you get serious, $234 for a chest freezer
that will hold 10 pounds of frozen food,
www.appliancesworld.com
Supermarket
vs. Whole Foods
You might not have a Whole Foods or
comparable natural grocery near you. Here is a side-by-side
comparison for many of the items covered in this Eating Healthy
and Organic on Pennies a Day story:
Item
Safeway Whole
Foods 99c store
Organic brown
rice
.50c lb
$1.29 per pound $1.39-$1.49 per pound
Brown Basmati rice Ethnic market 79c
lb.
COSTLY
cheaper not basmati but brown, 3
lbs 99c
Organic bulk beans (lentils)
$1.79 per pound $1.39 per
pound 25c lb
Organic tofu
$1.99 for 19 ounces 99c w.
coupon n/a
$1.90 for 19 ounces
Organic almonds
$9.99 per pound $3.99 per
pound (BULK) n/a
Organic cashews
$ 7.19 per pound $3.99 per
pound n/a
Organic broccoli
$1.50 per pound $2.99
per pound 99c big bunch
50c lb on sale occas.
Bulk organic oats
$1.19 per pound 89
cents per pound 99c a canister
Bulk organic corn
meal
cheap n/a
69 cents per pound
59 cents per pound
Organic apples
$1.40 per pound,
bagged
2 lbs 99c
$1.67 per pound,
bagged
not organic tho, WASHEM!
Organic peanut
butter Cannot
be found at 99c store. GRIND
$2.99 for 18
ounces
your own with VITAMIX and organic
$2.99 for 18
ounces
peanuts. 99c store pnut butter has lard.
Use Coupon at Sup Mark. for Scudders
GO
TO THE FRUGAL LIFESTYLE WEBSITE
GO
TO GUERILLA CAPITALISM/ COTTAGE INDUSTRIES WEBSITE
GO
to the HOLISTIC REJUVENATION DISEASE PREVENTION WEBSITE
GO
TO THE MONEY SECRETS WEBSITE
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