How much do you spend on food?

pinkfox

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aldi is great for milk and for canned goods, boxed goods and snack foods are about normally priced, produce is about right but the quality can be hit or miss...but stocking up on cans...PERFECT.

my currently grocery bill is $78 a month
 

frustratedearthmother

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I'm definitely gonna have to check them out. I don't buy milk but I do stock up on canned stuff when I find a fantabulous sale.
 

Hinotori

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We spend about $400 a month. We spend about $100 a month just for his lunch because of the snacks and drinks he likes to take for breaks.

We have a store here called Winco. They have excellent prices. Butter was running $1.97 a pound over christmas and much of january. It's back up to $2.59 now. There is a nice bulk section there and they will order in full bags for you if you want it. The full bags are a few cents cheaper per pound. I've been trying to figure out different things to do with lentils lately since we like them and they are cheap at .49 a pound.
 

moolie

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You don't know how lucky you have it, grocery price-wise, in the US.

Butter here is $3.99, sometimes can get it on sale for $3.49 or very rarely $2.99, and then there are limits on how many you can buy at the sale price.

A gallon (well, 4L) of whole milk is $5.09, sometimes $4.99--2% is cheaper but I don't buy that.

Cheese is usually around $6-8/lb.

Beans/legumes and grains are pretty cheap for me locally--my 6 gallon bucket of organic wheat is about $25, and beans/legumes are even cheaper.

I don't look at meat priced by the pound, but rather by the portion (and we eat smaller than typical portions of meat) so I can't comment much on meat pricing without going to the store/market and looking at some labels. But a pound of ground beef at the grocery store is usually in the $4 range and a pound of ground bison at the grocery store is usually in the $7 range--I buy bulk freezer packs from local ranchers at the farmer's market and get a deal.

We try to grow/glean and preserve as much of our produce as possible and we buy the rest of our produce as much in-season as possible then preserve (still have one home-grown spaghetti squash left from the fall, just ran out of home-grown carrots last week, still have a few home-grown onions plus shelves of canned tomatoes and fruit). Most seed packets are in the $2-$4 range, higher for the heirloom/organic/non-GMO varieties.
 

Denim Deb

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That's about what prices are for stuff here as well.
 

Hinotori

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I don't have any idea what meat prices are in the grocery store, so I can't comment on that. We've been buying at the local butcher that has their own herds or contracts out to other local farmers. Just cannot beat their prices when buying half a beef. We paid $3.39 a pound hanging weight including cutting and wrapping. It helps a lot that grasses grow most of the year here and our winters are very mild.

If we get enough area cleared and fenced, we may just raise our own and I'd have butcher it myself.
 

Plantress

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Love aldis. Cheese, butter, cream Che's, cottage Che's, cheddar, sliced Swiss, celery, fruit, eggs, milk, wraps, lettuce, baby spinach, hum as, avacados, tomatoes, potatoes, melons....all significantly cheaper. Sorry about typos
 
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