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Food shopping

(28 Posts)
SallyB392 Fri 25-Oct-19 11:27:53

Am I the only one who struggles to average less than £100 a week for food etc., for my husband and myself, and our medium sized dog?

I cook from scratch, and admittedly there are some (but not all), branded products, and we opt for the healthier products like whole meal pasta which are not available as a 'value range', but we waste very little. I've found that fruit and veg are no longer the cheap ingredients that they used to be, and as for fish, well I won't go there.

I have a friend who claims that she only spends £25 - 30 a week for the same household size, and its got me thinking......what do you spend?

Grannyknot Fri 25-Oct-19 11:55:59

HI Sally Welcome to GN if you're new smile. This topic crops up from time to time, here are links previous threads:

www.gransnet.com/forums/food/1257136-Weekly-spend-on-food

www.gransnet.com/forums/ask_a_gran/1228355-How-much-do-you-spend-each-week-on-food?pg=5

www.gransnet.com/forums/house_and_home/1243735-Supermarket-spending?pg=1

Happy reading!

fizzers Fri 25-Oct-19 11:56:38

I spend around £50, if that, on myself and 3 cats, that includes toiletries and cleaning items. My cats eat really well and I also eat really well.

I usually buy the basic range in rice pasta, tinned tomatoes, ketchup, etc as I find not much difference between the well known branded and the cheaper ones. The exception to the rule is coffee.

I shop around and look out for offers only on things that I know I will use. Istock up on a lot of frozen veg, so I do not end up throwing it out.

Calendargirl Fri 25-Oct-19 12:04:37

I don’t really know what I spend on food as it varies from week to week. For example, today I bought a large fillet of salmon, cut it into three pieces and froze them, but I won’t be doing that next week. Also if say there is an offer on three chickens, I will buy them and freeze them.
There is just DH and me, but we give our two grandchildren tea twice weekly. We honestly waste nothing, but don’t stint on what we want. Since retiring, I cook healthy meals mainly from scratch, lots of veg . Spend quite a bit on fruit, not cheap but better than eating choc or biscuits, a very occasional treat.

Maggiemaybe Fri 25-Oct-19 12:19:00

It’s taken a bit of working out.

Around £70 per fortnight at the supermarket, but that includes household stuff and toiletries, and I always get a money off voucher. Up to £15 a week at the fruit shop, £5 a week for the wine club, £5 for the milk delivery. Probably £10 or so a week for extra bits and bobs. The cat food’s £13 a quarter. DH grows nearly all our own veg, and most of our fruit in summer, so it’s cheaper then.. We eat fish, but very little red meat, and have a lot of veggie meals. I think we eat fairly healthily, but well.

About £70 a week then for food for the two of us and the cat? But then DD2 leaves meals for us on the one day a week we look after her children ?, and we eat out (just a curry or local pub meal) at least once a week.

FlexibleFriend Fri 25-Oct-19 12:56:35

I spend around £60 a week on just me and the dogs food bill is separate and is £125 a month. Although that £60 doesn't include washing liquid and comfort or loo rolls etc which are all bought in bulk online. I don't buy any ready meals or processed food at all but buy a lot of fruit.

annsixty Fri 25-Oct-19 13:02:04

I really don't know but only on Monday a friend I was talking to on the phone was surprised that I shopped weekly on line as she wouldn't be able to meet the minimum charge requirement of £40.
She is on her own and I now am not but when I was I spent at least £50 on my delivery and then shopped once a week for fresh.
I am not extravagant, far from it, but I do like good food.

Sara65 Fri 25-Oct-19 13:09:57

Again it’s hard to be precise, because I don’t necessarily shop every week, and then I’m popping into M&S every other day, I don’t buy any meat, and very little alcohol, but I would think I spend between £600 and £800 a month. I do buy things for one of my daughters, whose on a tight budget most weeks.

paintingthetownred Fri 25-Oct-19 13:49:47

I like this thread. Thank you for posting it Sally. I too (and DD) cook from scratch, partly to save cost and partly health reasons etc.

Nowadays daughter 14 and I am relegated to sous chef, and cleaner-upper as I'm tending to run out of steam for making meals.

I stock check and we waste relatively little if anything. Some times leftovers end up with someone's allotment chickens.

I'm currently reviewing spending. DD gone vegetarian which is a big challenge and any tips welcome.

I reckon I spend 70 currently which is probably too much, not including loo rolls and toiletries.

I bake own bread which I have got down to 40 p a loaf as I batch cook it, order flour in bulk, half wholemeal half white. This goes down a treat, I bake 8 at once and put in freezer. ;

I tend to buy wholefoods when I can and in bulk (which explains why I'm not entirely sure how much I spend each week). Ethical Superstore mainly - which I look out for vouchers for. To name a name Ecotricity switch had 40 voucher on offer recently and Triodos bank to open new account also 40 I think .

Milkman luxury on a Sat morning is the fruit box for daughter but means I don't have to carry it up the stairs.

My down fall is the local spar at the end of the road where I tend to go when I forget something...and sometimes but not always end up paying over the odds. But no transport costs and often on a Tuesday offers on veg. Huge cauliflower for £1 etc.

Tins I buy in bulk - again either B and M or ethical superstore.

I suffer from depression and often feel overloaded about housework so tend to go for things that DD can graze on. Recently bought ten (yes ten) jars of wholefood peanut butter for £2 each rather than the 3 odd at the wholefood shop.

That's a brilliant breakfast or snack and she loves it. Slice of wholemeal home made bread, peanut butter and fruit...

Another downfall is taking myself out to lunch when I'm fed up of cooking. Not expensive, our local Wetherspoons has chefs specials...

Revisited all my bills recently to keep tabs. Still looking for ways to cut down. perhaps we could start a vouchers and coupons thread?

painting

paintingthetownred Fri 25-Oct-19 13:52:46

oh also we use olive oil, which adds to cost but do so because of health benefits.

craftyone Fri 25-Oct-19 14:48:49

most of my food is from an online organic fresh food supplier and my order might average £40 pm. I do buy organic meat in bulk elsewhere and also fish. I would say maybe overall £55 pm, that doesn`t include chocolate

craftyone Fri 25-Oct-19 14:49:52

oh my silly calculation. That was per week so is about £160-£200 pm

BBbevan Fri 25-Oct-19 19:10:09

We spend about£100 a week. Just DH and myself and I mostly cook from scratch. The amount does however include everything. Toiletries, washing powder, tboilet rolls etc.

etheltbags1 Fri 25-Oct-19 20:34:25

I must average about 40 for me and puss including my toiletries etc. I buy convenience food but try to vary it with fresh. I just have not got the energy to start cooking after work at 7pm in a cold house. I just open a tin of soup however last night i reheated some which i had frozen and it was lovely. I do have waste as i live alone. If i cook veg i dp try to cook for the next day but usually forget to put it in frigd and end up with a smelly mess the next day. However my birds are well fed. I do try to eat well but its a struggle

etheltbags1 Fri 25-Oct-19 20:35:57

Just to add. The frozen soup was homemade. I must do some more often

BlueSapphire Fri 25-Oct-19 21:07:25

Just me at home. Probably about £50-£60 a week, but that includes food, cleaning stuff, toiletries, cat food/litter, wine. I like to eat well and rarely buy convenience food and cook from scratch and do a lot of batch cooking. Also includes feeding DGD tea after school twice a week.

BlueSapphire Fri 25-Oct-19 21:08:42

Just to add, when there were two of us it was around £80 a week.

Sar53 Fri 25-Oct-19 21:15:59

There are two of us and we spend about £300 a month, this includes all toiletries, washing liquid, toilet rolls etc. I go to the butchers about once a month and buy enough chops, mince, liver etc to last. Everything apart from the mince is eaten by DH. We usually have fresh fish on a Friday. Most meals are cooked from scratch and we don't scrimp on anything. Plenty of fresh veg and fruit. This doesn't include any alcohol. If we want a drink we go out.

Septimia Fri 25-Oct-19 21:53:26

I used to challenge myself to spend less than £20 a week. DH and I went back to uni and had to live more frugally than students!

Now it's usually between £40 and £50, but a large part of that is the expensive food we have to buy for our cat which has digestive problems. We have more money now, so I don't need to be quite so careful.

welbeck Fri 25-Oct-19 22:23:34

not sure if I should write this as it is a minority report. there is only me now, I don't cook anything, try to spend as little as poss, as income is less than £10 a day. not able to work. no pension. living on savings.
buy most things from Lidl, pronounced to rhyme with idle... I like lidl because the shops are not too big.
don't eat veg, except tomatoes, or fruit except occasionally tinned mandarins, which I like with plain yogurt and nuts, found some flaked almonds, and sometimes Weetabix or shredded wheat. I eat mostly rolls, with a prepared filler, egg, cheese/onion, tuna/sweetcorn. prepared salads eg tuna/pasta, where i do eat shredded carrot etc. deli tubs of morrocan cous-cous, also falafels, potato salad. pot pasta with boiling water from kettle, that's the extent of my cooking.
packet soups with cous-cous to bulk out. also eat pot noodles but only Lidl's which are harder to find now. don't eat meat. do eat tinned fish, and occasionally fish n chips lunchtime special price smaller portion.
many bills etc. am disorganised. trying to keep going. if I think too much about food I get too sad, thinking of what I could should have done for other people. too late now.

GillS Fri 25-Oct-19 23:17:27

Dear Welbeck, your post has left me feeling so sad that I just had to let you know you are in my thoughts. Being disorganised can be very tiring, and as I know, always eating alone does make it hard to think of bothering much about food even more so if you are on a very limited income. Sending you flowers and very best wishes.

MissAdventure Fri 25-Oct-19 23:40:54

Wellbeck
I have very similar tastes to you, it seems.

I don't enjoy cooking at all, so I eat similarly to you if I can go away with it.

Its only that I have my grandson with me that I make a bit more effort; 'effort' being the right word for it. blush

welbeck Fri 25-Oct-19 23:48:36

GillS,
Thank you, that is very touching.
I appreciate your kind words. and your discernment.
I think you are a sensitive person.
a bunch of flowers for you too.
with every good wish.
w.

GabriellaG54 Sat 26-Oct-19 00:30:34

Maybe if you detail all the food you buy in one particular 7 day week and the prices, some GNers could tell you where money could be saved.
It might nudge you into realising where your money could be better spent.

annep1 Sat 26-Oct-19 22:17:17

Wellbeck your income is very low. Perhaps you should check if you are entitled to any benefits.