Many of my friends were intrigued (or should I say shocked?)
that my daily food budget is a little more than $2.00 a day, which totals to
$117 for my team for the week. Some of you don’t believe that we actually eat
enough to survive. This is the first in a series of posts this week to prove to
you that we are not only surviving but thriving with plenty to eat and actually
hosting guests for dinner once a week!
Early on we established a system for feeding ourselves that
has endured until now. For some context to this conversation, here’s our
system:
- Everyone is on their own each day for breakfast and lunch.
- For dinner, we are divided into pairs that plan and cook two meals each week, with everyone taking point on one meal a week.
- Every month we switch pairs and switch nights of the week, so that we cook with different people on different days.
- For example, this month I cook with Sophie on Sundays and Thursdays. If we decide that she will take point on Sundays, then I take point on Thursdays, providing the recipe and leadership in the meal preparation.
- We eat together for dinner whenever we can, which is most days, but we always eat together on Family Dinner night, which right now is Mondays.
- On Saturdays, we host a Community Dinner, inviting neighbors and friends from work or church.
- On Fridays, our Sabbath days, no one cooks.
- The pair that cooked the night before does dishes. On Saturday, the Thursday cooking team does dishes.
Now here are some of our operational systems for buying
groceries:
- Each week on Saturday morning we create a grocery list, naming items we need for breakfast, lunch, and for each dinner.
- We allot ten dollars for each dinner, leaving about $50 for lunch and breakfast for the week.
- A group of three or four of us goes shopping and the rest of us stay behind to clean the house.
The grocery store we frequent is Save-a-Lot, a discount
store that carries few name-brand items and has a somewhat limited selection.
It’s about five blocks away (depending on how you count blocks), and we usually
walk, although there is a bus that goes straight from our block to the store.
We’ve pretty well mastered the layout of the store, and it
doesn’t take long for us to fill our cart with the items we seek. We record the
cost of each item as we pick it up, and at the end of our spree we add it up
and make sure it’s within our budget of $117. Usually it is, but sometimes we
have to make hard decisions about what to put back to stay within the budget.
For example, this week we didn't buy much meat, but we had a lot of dairy products on
our list. When we counted up the costs, we were initially at $121. We talked
through what we could put back, and ended up getting blocks of cheese instead
of bags of shredded cheese, and traded one pack of sliced American cheese for
imitation. We also considered putting back the ground turkey in favor of ground
beef, but our cheese compromises saved us enough to stay at $115.
Starting on Saturday, I will post our individual dinner
meals, sharing recipes and cost-saving ingredients.
Each day’s post will be about what we ate exactly one week earlier, so don’t
get confused when I reference a Super Bowl party on Sunday! I hope you enjoy
this series—it has been fun so far to make it. And hopefully the doubters will
believe that we eat and eat well--with just $117!
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