[identity profile] amarafox.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 07:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I has a couple of years where I had no more than $20 a week (And sometimes as low as $10 a week) to feed myself. Those were not fun times.

Still, if I budget, I can feed myself on $35/week, easily. But I had to be trained to do that by poverty.

[identity profile] dandelion.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 08:07 pm (UTC)(link)
$35 a week really doesn't sound that onerous; am I missing something?

[identity profile] dandelion.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, of course it goes further, but I don't see why a person with $35 a week to spend on food needs any extra provided meals. I average less than $25 and eat very well, including meat basically every day and plenty of snacks. That sort of budget doesn't mean rice and beans for dinner, and I'd have even more variety (and bulk discounts, less food wasted like the ends of milk cartons, etc) if I wasn't cooking for me alone.

[identity profile] marveen.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 09:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Less than two dollars a meal? Piece of cake.

Budget for the two of us (both adults, one with a factory job): $50 a week when we're flush. When we have no income, that's down to $10 a week plus food bank.

If you're getting food stamps to the tune of two dollars a meal, that's....*calculates* almost two hundred dollars a month per CHILD.

There should be room for snacks in there. Hell, there should be room for three meals, two snacks and a bedtime treat. Add in food bank stuff to the hunnerd-and-eighty-some dollars a month, and you're golden.

Sample menu:

Breakfast:
Oatmeal (free from food bank) with a teaspoon of brown sugar (less than one cent) and a teaspoon of jam (canned last year, probably also less than a penny)
Milk (free from food bank/purchased with WIC/purchased with food stamps: 15 cents if purchased)

Snack:
Handful of raisins (purchased, about thirty cents)

Lunch:
Fried-egg sandwich (bread, .96 per loaf--two slices, 10 cents; egg, free from food bank; a penny's worth of salad dressing on the bread)
Carrot sticks (dug fresh from last year's garden)
Half a banana/apple (ten cents)
One half cupcake (homemade, ingredient cost 6 cents per serving)

Afternoon snack:
Crackers (14 cents) and cheese (18 cents per serving)

Supper:
Meatloaf (fifty cents per serving: hamburger bought with stamps, free egg, free bread, bought onion/spices, free bell pepper, ketchup canned last year)
Boiled potato (free from food bank, served with butter, 14 cents per serving)
Side salad (lettuce seeds, 98 cents: per serving, about 1 cent)
Green beans (canned last year)
Other half of cupcake (see lunch)

There WILL be leftovers: meatloaf becomes lunches (meatloaf sandwich), any extra potato is hash browns for breakfast, the green beans can even be frozen to await reincarnation in a minestrone.

I'm a housewife. This is what I do.

Now, there will be regional variations in how much gardening one can do and what exactly food banks hand out. But it is possible.

[identity profile] marveen.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 09:27 pm (UTC)(link)
1. *snickering*

2. I figure if you're down and out badly enough to get food stamps (remember, they wouldn't give them to US), you're going to patronize the food banks. The free stuff in the menu is based on what we got last time we went. I also included a sack lunch because I remember the horribly nasty school lunches when I was a kid--I'd rather have had a cold sandwich than their version of "pizza" any day.



[identity profile] marveen.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 11:31 pm (UTC)(link)
No, the crackers are wholegrain. As is the bread.

I love love love sweet potatoes, but only the dryish yellowfleshed kind (usually more expensive around here). I'll eat them baked, plain, with a dusting of black pepper and salt. (Panseared cubes with crusty edges are the bomb.)

The meatloaf I made Monday (and which Grey just took the last of in his lunch today) included onion, dried celery, bell pepper, mashed sweet potato, oatmeal, basil/oregano/garlic/chile/lovage, ketchup, and whole-wheat bread. I just throw in whatever's around and season it till it smells good.

I should point out that if you save your pennies by having days like the above, you can use the saved monies to have days like those you prefer (more expensive if you have to buy all those vegetables). This might be a good time to mention the ketchup above is my homemade stuff, less sugar than the commercial kind and probably less salt, too.

I'll also note that the only beverage I specified is milk, and the only one I very nearly ban is soda pop. (You want to talk about empty calories...!) We do buy it, but a two-liter two or three times a year. It's a treat, not a daily drink.

Serving size

[identity profile] marveen.livejournal.com 2012-04-28 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
You're right--remember the introduction of Coke, with the six-ounce bottles?

I have a little cut-crystal glass I found at a thrift store that I drink pop out of. It holds about five ounces.

For everyday, I drink coffee and tea. Occasionally some milk. But every few weeks, I just get a yen for something fizzy. (More often in hot weather.)

[identity profile] rainbow-goddess.livejournal.com 2012-04-27 11:57 pm (UTC)(link)
While I won't make a fuss about "hopefully" or "less" vs. "fewer," the misuse of "literally" is STILL wrong even if you understand that the person using it wrongly actually meant "figuratively."

Damn, my grammar police icon get taken away when my userpics expired.

[identity profile] janewilliams20.livejournal.com 2012-04-29 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
So, if I really do mean "literally", what word would you suggest using, once the meaning of "literally" has been diluted to the point of being useless?