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Food Prices are Rising - Tips to Outsmart the Register

By Susannah Locketti
Posted Thursday, April 17, 2008


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With food prices on the dramatic rise, consumers need to get creative on how to reduce their bills while still leaving the store with food for a week. My grovery bill used to hit nearly $300 per week. Thanks to some store savvy strategies, we have (and you can too!) cut the bill in half! Here are some tips to make this possible.

Think Thin

Ask for all deli meats and cheeses to be sliced very thin. You’ll use fewer pieces and stretch the deli items throughout the week. Not to mention you’ll save on fat and calories.

Buy Produce in Season

Don’t buy berries in January! Limit your fruit and vegetable purchases to what is in season as you’ll pay far less for it. Here’s what’s in season right now: mixed baby greens, spinach and dandelion, asparagus, brussel sprouts, new or baby potatoes, artichokes, carrots, sugar snap peas, snow peas, fennel, beets and sweet onions, rhubarb and strawberries. Buy the off season produce frozen…it packs the same nutrients as fresh and costs less.

Get Out the Slow Cooker

Buying inexpensive and tougher cuts of meats is no sacrifice when you slow cook them to melt in your mouth perfection. Slow cookers also make use of lots of leftover veggies so nothing goes to waste and your wallet doesn’t suffer.

Shop the Outer Perimeter of the Store

The outer perimeter of the store is the most wholesome area because it contains whole all natural foods like produce, seafood, dairy and grains. Once you hit the middle aisles, your bill skyrockets with costly packaged and preserved foods that offer no nutritional bang for your buck.

Come Prepared With a List

My husband does our shopping because I veer from the list and come home with extraneous items we don’t need. Saturday I bought a jar of jarred jalapeno picked beets for ten bucks plus a bottle of Mango Chili grilling sauce and Sake Soy grilling glaze. I don’t even have propane for the grill! My boy wonder sticks to the list and keeps our family of four fed for under $150.00 each week. Sticking to a strict list saves a ton!

Grow Your Own Herbs and Veggies

April is National Gardening month. Make a commitment this year to grow your own herbs. Do you know how much money you will save? The average fresh herb bunch at a grocery store is $1.99. That is just for one herb. Times that by a few for a recipe and you are out ten bucks just like that! I just started mine from seed indoors and then transfer them to the deck for use all summer. At the end of the season, I bring the perennial herbs like Rosemary, Marjoram and Oregano indoors and enjoy them year round. I have also started growing my own basic vegetables such as salad greens, tomatoes, and squash. Last summer, I barely bought a vegetable from the store and saved us a boat full of cash.

Have more suggestions for saving at the store?

Clip Coupons Wisely

Only clip coupons for items that you use. Don’t buy it just because there is a coupon for it. Also, match your coupons with sale items in the weekly circulars to save even more.

Here’s a GREAT unknown supermarket tip for you. All grocery stores accept competitor coupons. So, if Shaw’s has a $5 off ham coupon, Stop & Shop will honor it at their store.

I use them all the time and it saves me a ton. Also, go online and request coupons from your favorite manufacturers. I have done this with success many times.
Email me at slocketti@comcast.net. We need to share our ideas because it doesn’t look like prices will be falling anytime soon.


Latest articles in The Culinary Adventures of Suzy Suburb

Food Prices are Rising - Tips to Outsmart the Register
[Apr. 17, 2008] With food prices on the dramatic rise, consumers need to get creative on how to reduce their bills while still leaving the store with food for a week. My grovery bill used to hit nearly $300 per week. Thanks to some store savvy strategies, we have (and you can too!) cut the bill in half! Here are some tips to make this possible.

I’ll Have a Gym and Colonic with a Twist of Lime
[Mar. 4, 2008] Have you stuck to your New Year’s Resolutions? By February most people are off the wagon. Me? I’m going strong with my resolutions. I wanted to work out more, cleanse my body and eat healthier foods. Let’s start with the gym. I started teaching a yoga class to force me to go. I’m the type of gal that needs someone to pay me to workout, so for $25 an hour, I do downward dogs, bridge lifts and deep breathe with some great men and women at Namaste Yoga Studio in Wareham, Massachusetts.

Is the economy affecting our choices for food?
[Jan. 29, 2008] I read an interesting article in the December 17th issue of the New York Times. Food Network’s ratings have dropped a staggering 15% for their "In The Kitchen" weekend block of instructional cooking programs.

Christmas Cookies and Other Goodies
[Dec. 23, 2007]  

Food to Fall For: A Seasonal Flavor Fest
[Nov. 27, 2007] For those of you wondering what to do with all those extra fall fruits and vegetables, I have some great new ideas. Fall is my favorite time of the year. I love the cool, crisp air that instantly reminds me of brown sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg. The flavors and foods are simple, rustic and delicious.

The Thanksgiving Menu
[Oct. 30, 2007] With Thanksgiving around the corner, I have been contemplating my menu endlessly. Do I stick to traditional or do I venture outside the box and switch things up a bit? I think back to the Thanksgiving spreads my mother cooked, and she was traditional with a twist. Her stuffing had roasted chestnuts and I remember her scoring them with an X so they did not explode in the oven. I helped open them up after they baked and I adored their firm, yet soft consistency in the stuffing. My dad LOVES giblets, so on occasion my mom would include them in the stuffing. I will be the first to admit that I love giblets too. My mom was not a big fan but she did it for him and he appreciated every bite.

Feasting on a budget banquet
[Sep. 28, 2007] This month I mastered roasting chickens. I rarely roast chickens, unless I do it in my Showtime Rotisserie and roast them whole. That was my initial intention. Stop & Shop had roasting chickens on sale for sixty nine cents per pound and I sent my husband to the store to get four of them. No luck. They were out. In fact, they are still out. Rather than pay nearly four dollars a pound for boneless skinless chicken breasts, I opted for Perdue’s cut whole chicken for $1.79 per pound. It amazes me that Perdue charges one dollar and ten cents per pound more just to cut the chicken. Or are we that lazy and willing to pay that much more?

Kids Don’t Count Calories - That’s Mom’s Job
[Aug. 27, 2007] I always know when summer is over and school is about to begin. The first tell tale signs occur when the grey hairs start popping up left and right on my head, eyebrows and probably my underarms if I let the hair grow long enough. I have a few extra wrinkles around my mouth from yelling to break up fights, I look mad even when I’m not and I search the malls endlessly for a black and white striped referee outfit just to look the part.
 

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