Grocery bill - going down
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Grocery bill - going down
Has anyone else experienced a real lowering in grocery bills?
Snack foods are expensive.
I'm buying for another adult and 2 kids and still see a difference. I had to stop buying so much fruit, it was just not getting eaten. I had been sort of deluding myself about what I was buying for me and what I was buying for the kids. Granola bars, popcorn, bread, yogurt it is all lasting much much longer now.
Snack foods are expensive.
I'm buying for another adult and 2 kids and still see a difference. I had to stop buying so much fruit, it was just not getting eaten. I had been sort of deluding myself about what I was buying for me and what I was buying for the kids. Granola bars, popcorn, bread, yogurt it is all lasting much much longer now.
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Heh. I'm not sure about our grocery bill overall, but we're definitely refreshing certain items a lot more often.
Carrots and cottage cheese (usually 2%, the "fat free" stuff tends to have more sugar), I eat pretty much every day now... we're going through more milk...
... and my wife found some good protein/fiber bars (Fiber One Oats and Chocolate - little drizzle of chocolate-flavored stuff on top) that we're both eating a lot of - it's been an easy way to get more fiber into the diet, and the bars are fairly healthy (low sugar, etc) as far as we can tell. I'm not counting it as a "sweet" since it's a fiber bar (claims 35% of daily fiber - more than some cereals).
We're also making more of an effort to have vegetables with dinner every night - had some Swiss chard earlier this week, got it at Bloom (what used to be Food Lion, post-makeover they're quite good)... supposed to be good for your eyes.
Snacking wasn't generally my big problem - it was desserts at work, really. 2 cookies every day definitely adds up over time.
Carrots and cottage cheese (usually 2%, the "fat free" stuff tends to have more sugar), I eat pretty much every day now... we're going through more milk...
... and my wife found some good protein/fiber bars (Fiber One Oats and Chocolate - little drizzle of chocolate-flavored stuff on top) that we're both eating a lot of - it's been an easy way to get more fiber into the diet, and the bars are fairly healthy (low sugar, etc) as far as we can tell. I'm not counting it as a "sweet" since it's a fiber bar (claims 35% of daily fiber - more than some cereals).
We're also making more of an effort to have vegetables with dinner every night - had some Swiss chard earlier this week, got it at Bloom (what used to be Food Lion, post-makeover they're quite good)... supposed to be good for your eyes.
Snacking wasn't generally my big problem - it was desserts at work, really. 2 cookies every day definitely adds up over time.
It seems like eating less (and therefore presumably buying less) would obviously save you money, but apparently not on most diets:
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/inv ... 114424.asp
So No-s, with its primitive emphasis on simply eating less, is probably the only diet around that will do the obvious and save you money.
Reinhard
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/inv ... 114424.asp
So No-s, with its primitive emphasis on simply eating less, is probably the only diet around that will do the obvious and save you money.
Reinhard
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grocery bills
Our bills are going down,for sure. the no snack thing.
really eliminates a whole section of the grocery store.
Also, Iam combining this with "The FatFallacy" by Will Clower ,which eliminates all "faux food" in favor of only "real"food
flangan
really eliminates a whole section of the grocery store.
Also, Iam combining this with "The FatFallacy" by Will Clower ,which eliminates all "faux food" in favor of only "real"food
flangan