Showing posts with label perimeter shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perimeter shopping. Show all posts

Monday, February 7, 2011

Perimeter Shopping: How did I do?


Since joining the February Eat from the Pantry challenge, I have been doing well with intentionally eating what we have on hand. Saturday night we had steak, baked potatoes, and roasted winter squash. Sunday was pizza for the Super Bowl. Tonight was mahi mahi with homemade frozen pesto, penne pasta, and steamed broccoli. We had smoothies with frozen fruit and fresh yogurt and toasted zucchini bread for breakfast. Kids usually prefer toast or cereal. Lunches are left-overs or soup.

It had been 11 days since I visited the grocery store and we were low on milk. So off to Kroger I went with my plan to stick to Perimeter Shopping. Just like it sounds, you only buy goods along the perimeter of the store and don't walk down any aisles. Generally, that's a healthier way to shop. My one exception was one loaf of whole wheat bread.

I've given myself the leeway in this challenge to include fresh fruit & veggies, milk, bread, eggs, cheese, and deli meat because this is a priority for my family. I'm not going to deny them fresh food because I'm trying to make a point. I also find that mixing in steamed veggies with meat I pull from the freezer or fresh bread with stew makes it all taste so much better.

So how did I do? Pretty well for me: I spent $56.01 and saved $31.29 (37%)--proving that you can still coupon on the good stuff.
  • PRODUCE: I saved on produce by buying what was on sale: red peppers, broccoli, red grapes, asparagus, mushrooms, and bananas.
  • BREAD: I saved on fresh ciabatta bread with a $2 off $7 at the bakery coupon from Kroger's home mailer. Yes, there are cheaper breads but I won't buy crap bread. My sandwich bread would have been an awesome deal if they hadn't over-charged me. Nature Pride was on sale for $2.19 and I had a $1 coupon from the Kroger home mailer. Anyone know their policy for when they make a mistake?
  • DAIRY: I got one Voskos yogurt free with a coupon and a 4 pack of Activia for just $.88 with a $1 coupon from again, the Kroger home mailer. I got two blocks of Kraft cheese for $1.17 each and some shredded Kraft cheese for $.67 after coupons. The milk, half & half, and sour cream were just on sale.
  • DELI MEAT: I wasn't going to buy any deli meat, but HIllshire Farm was $3 each and I had 2 $1/1 printables, making them $2 each. I decided not to pass it up.
  • FREEBIES: I grabbed a treat for the kids: two Pillsbury cinnamon rolls, on sale for $1 each. I had 2 $.50 coupons (which were doubled). An e-saver took another $.40 off, making it a $.40 money maker. I did not get the Dove or Colgate freebies because the Dove deodorant was not marked as $2 and my coupon was for Colgate Total. It might have worked, but I wasn't going to push it.
My goal is to make it another 10 or 11 days before returning to the store. I'm hoping not exceed $200 in grocery or pharmacy shopping for all of February. So far I'm under $60. We'll see!

What are your tricks to surviving a Eat from the Pantry challenge?


Friday, April 30, 2010

Perimeter Shopping


This week I had a plan to spend less on groceries: only shop the perimeter of the store for the real essentials. Though I had never broken out a typical receipt to see what percentage usually goes to the perimeter, I was guessing I'd come in around $50. Wrong!

I'm shocked and a bit humbled to admit I spent a whopping $83.11 and saved only 28% (mostly sales with only 12 coupons). This included fruits, vegetables, fresh dinner bread and sandwich bread, lunch meat, hotdogs, milk, eggs, yogurt, butter, pudding, chips and juice. I did pick up a few deals that worked out to free or a buck after catalinas: deodorant, pasta, and Scrubbing Bubbles, but about $5 of those savings won't be seen until future trips or rebates are returned.

As I watched the numbers climb and climb, I felt smaller and smaller. I really didn't think I had splurged. This is what my family consumes on a weekly basis. I admit I buy GOOD food: hearty whole wheat bread, eggs from cage-free hens, organic butter, and premium hotdogs with no preservatives. These are choices that are important to me and I'm willing to pay extra for that. However, it's so hard to do that and stay on course with a budget. It's a fine line I walk, but ultimately I will always go with what's healthier for my family.

My mother likes to say, "No matter what, you will not starve." Our family has seen its ups and downs financially, but I always knew there would be good food on the table. I'm determined to carry that same set of values for my family. Stay tuned for how I did overall on April's budget.