Saturday, August 30, 2008

Money & Business

Alpha Consumer by Kimberly Palmer

Life on $7 a Day

March 04, 2008 12:09 PM ET | Kimberly Palmer | Permanent Link

My friend Zack, who lives in New York City, recently told me that on average, he spends only $7 per day on food. I asked him to share his tips, many of which he gleaned from the personal finance blog the Simple Dollar. Here's how Zack saves money on food:

• Buy in bulk. Zack drives to the suburbs in New Jersey to shop at bulk retailers, such as Sam's Club. He fills large duffel bags of food to bring back to the city and estimates it saves a significant chunk of change each month.

• Stockpile supplies. Cans of beans and tomatoes are cheap, store easily, and make quick, filling meals.

• Compare prices. For some items, such as fruit, buying from street vendors turns out to be cheaper than shopping at Manhattan grocery stores.

• Cook big. Zack makes lots of soup, chili, and other big dishes that can turn into leftovers or even go into the freezer for a future meal. To spruce up the dishes and make them even bigger, he often adds pasta or rice.

• Plan ahead. By loosely deciding in advance which meals to cook on which nights, Zack avoids getting home from work—starving—and eating out just because it seems easier.

Have you developed other money-saving strategies? Please share them below.

Tags: food | money | personal finance | cooking

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Reader Comments

Even that's a lot

Even $7/day is a lot of money for food. What's he eating for breakfast and lunch?

I have cereal/milk for breakfast every day ($.25, maybe?), a PB&J sandwich or leftovers and cup of yogurt or piece of fruit for lunch (at most a buck), and am blessed with a wife who can really cook (and duh, who shops 'in bulk' and buys things only on sale) at dinner-time. PB&J for lunch gets old but I console myself knowing that I'll have money left to go out and actually enjoy a nice meal, compared to my coworkers who blow their dough making themselves fat on a steady diet of McD's.

I'd say I'm eating for less than $4/day easily.

Wow, that's great TK. Do your cooked dinners really add up to less than $4/day? So you and your wife together spend less than $60/week on groceries?

FOOD VENDORS

How about the hot dog guy in front of the Metropolitan Museum ? Twice a week & cheap

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Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about how to save money, avoid scams, manage debt, and be a savvy shopper. Share with her your own money issues by sending questions to alphaconsumer@usnews.com.

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