Porridge made with water doesn't have much nutrition in it - the salt isn't very healthy either.
You can't have porridge without just a pinch of salt 
Jersey trip, some tips please.
Do GNers have any suggestions for eating for a £1 a day?
Total food should be about 1,500-2,000 calories a day and well-balanced, ie good balance of carbohydrate, fat and protein.
Ideally, there should be little cooking (to save on fuel) and few cooking utensils (certainly nothing fancy) should be needed.
Porridge made with water doesn't have much nutrition in it - the salt isn't very healthy either.
You can't have porridge without just a pinch of salt 
Well that's breakfast sorted.
On to lunch and dinner now then.
Salt is so important it used to be currency
The word salary comes from the Latin word salarium = salt which was used as currency.
I don't like porridge, can i have something else?
I suspect we will be having dust for tea. How I lust for the days the free samples were out on the deli counters
Callistemon21
^Porridge made with water doesn't have much nutrition in it - the salt isn't very healthy either^.
You can't have porridge without just a pinch of salt
Yes, you can. I haven't bought salt or added it to anything I've cooked for decades.
Callistemon21
Salt is so important it used to be currency
The word salary comes from the Latin word salarium = salt which was used as currency.
Salt was used to preserve food. These days, we have fridges, freezers and tins.
Baggs
Do you have the same attitude about potatoes, gs, that used to sustain the Irish peasantry?
What do you mean by "attitude" Baggs? I'm T2 diabetic and keeping my carb intake low is the only way I can control the condition. It's not an "attitude" - it's a survival tactic.
Baggs
growstuff
Katek
Porridge made with milk? Just no! This Scot makes porridge with water and a pinch of salt, nothing else, and no sweet toppings are added either. If you want to be extremely economical there’s always the porridge drawer. This was found mainly on farms and was a tin lined dresser drawer which was filled with thick porridge. It was then left to cool and slices were cut off by farm labourers to sustain them during the day. A drawer could last for a week. Not something I would fancy!
Porridge made with water doesn't have much nutrition in it - the salt isn't very healthy either.
Oats are a nutritious grain. Obviously adding other nutritious foods is a bonus but oats are nutritious in their own right as far as grains go. Stop downing them, gs!
Salt is so important it used to be currency. Mainly because it was used to preserve food before refridgeration but we need some salt in our diets too. a pinch in one's porridge isn't going to kill you, otherwise there's be no Scots!
So how much protein and fat do oats provide? Both are necessary for a well-balance diet.
so we have porridge for breakfast
one potato for lunch
and a dust sandwich for tea and a generation of babies developing rickets and certain sections of society suffering from malnutrition. Something to strive for people
JaneJudge
so we have porridge for breakfast
one potato for lunch
and a dust sandwich for tea and a generation of babies developing rickets and certain sections of society suffering from malnutrition. Something to strive for people
Get a cat and train it to catch mice (or, better still, rats) and grill one to go in the sandwich.
Ratatouille?
There are lots of pigeons on my garden, maybe I should get a gun?
When my DS was still very young & I was separated from my now Ex, we had very little money, £36 per week, had to pay all usual bills & mortgage. We qualified for school dinners for my DS so he ate every day. I bought breakfasts for him & tea was couple of slices of bread & cheap jam. I bought 6 large eggs & had one a day with a slice of bread for my dinner. No idea how much this would have cost but certainly helped me lose the weight that I needed to. Would not recommend it though. It is amazing what you can manage if you have to. With the increase in my bills I may even try that again ?
28 fish fingers for £2 in Iceland should go a long way. Just had to place an order for our clubhouse and was amazed at some of their prices.
That's the thing.
It is easier and cheaper to go for that type of food, when bellies need filling.
Joking apart JaneJudge, I remember someone in Game of Thrones catching and eating a pigeon.
I've made the effort to get Loyalty cards for all of my local shops, hopefully some of the offers will be good.
I think I go a big over the pound a day but not by much. My diet is mainly plant based with the occasional egg. I must try and cost it. I find using frozen sweet corn and mixed peppers work out cheaper...sweet corn especially. I use the frozen mixed peppers in cooked meals.
By that MPs criteria £1.00 is very generous indeed!
He doesn't state whether his 30pence is for one meal or a family?
Do you think we should be asking him for some of his recipes?
25Avalon
28 fish fingers for £2 in Iceland should go a long way. Just had to place an order for our clubhouse and was amazed at some of their prices.
The CEO from Iceland said, at one point, that their customer profile was for someone with a family budget of £25 a week for food.
Theoddbird out of interest, other than the occasional egg what other protein do you eat to have such a low budget?
I'm not a vegetarian but do eat tofu - in fact having it for lunch today. 150g of organic tofu will give about 19g of protein, at a cost of £1 - it's from the supermarket so could be cheaper elsewhere.
When dh and I were exceedingly skint, for quite some time we virtually lived on thick soups made from local, seasonal veg, and the cheapest cheese available locally (this was not in the U.K.) which was some processed Australian stuff called for some strange reason ‘Penguin’. And bread, of course. Any sort of meat or ‘proper’ cheese was unaffordable.
I still make quite a lot of such soups especially in the winter - often now with lentils/pearl barley etc. added. We still enjoy them.
When particularly hard up my mother had frequently made such soups with whatever she happened to have - hence her name of ‘Dustbin soup’, which is what we still call them.
I wouldn’t like to have to do it, but I’m confident that if I had to, I could feed us both extremely cheaply and reasonably healthily - Smartprice porridge and pasta (I usually buy that anyway), the cheapest UHT milk, lots of relatively cheap seasonal veg, the cheapest bread and cheese, and obviously no more free range eggs, etc.
I’m very thankful that I’m not likely to need to do it, though.
It's been shown that the chilled soups you can buy are just as nutritious as making your own, I read somewhere.
99p in Aldi, and often on offer for that kind of price in other shops.
Tizliz
No such thing as free dog bones anymore ??
There are from our nearest butcher.
Back in the seventies I used to pay a few pence for a knuckle bone from a butcher we lived near in Lochee, Dundee. With onion, carrot, swedish turnip, and lentils the marrow that I boiled out of it made fantastic soup in large quantities. With a hunk of bread I don't believe you can be better fed than that.
Is that just one serving though, your entire day’s budget?
Cow's 'knuckle' of course.
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