Here goes my first post on this forum. The tips that follow I have gleaned from several other places – so many, in fact, that I don’t know exactly where they all came from. Hopefully, you’ll find something in these you can use.
Couponing combined with grocery ads
Menu Planning
Cut down on eating out (the item above helps with that)
Go grocery shopping alone (after you’ve eaten)
Make grocery store list
Pack lunches or snacks when we’re going to be out.
Take own water bottles.
Bake bread
Make bread pudding from bread heels
Check out the Simple Living Forums for more tips
Rethink what you all drink and go to water for the summer whenever possible.
Or imagine how you would last the rest of the month if you had NO money to spend. Make every grain of rice count. The psychological attitude of frugality is just as important as frugal tips and actions .
Get good at making comfort foods from scratch, especially foods that might tempt you to order out, go out to eat, or buy prepared. Things like chinese food, pizza, desserts.
We have a “system” where we always have pizza dough ready in the fridge, and I’ve taught my kids how to press it out and put on the toppings. So we can have pizza on a whim. I also make a homemade dessert once a day (or someone else does). It’s important that you don’t feel too deprived while cutting corners, or you might crack and go out and spend money.
Use rags instead of napkins and paper towels.
If you live in an area with immigrants looks for groceries that cater to them. They tend to be cheaper.
Make a gallon of lemonade each day and have that and water be the only beverages. Once the lemonade is drunk for the day, don’t make more until the next day. I make lemonade with 1 1/2 cups each sugar and lemon juice per gallon jug. That’s about $1 per gallon. If you do buy prepared items (like potato chips) only buy a small amount each week and once it’s gone it’s gone.
Don’t even think about buying organic unless it’s cheaper (it never is though).
Buy store brand IF it is cheaper.
Set a grocery shopping day and do not go into the store any other time. If you run out of something, you substitute or change your meal plan
If a sale is really good, buy extra and freeze. I made big batches of soup and froze individual meals.
Use mason jars for storage rather than plastic wrap or ziplocks
Make your own household cleaners from cheaper ingredients like borax, vinegar, baking soda, etc.
Stop eating out. Period.
Stop buying coffee shop drinks
“Cut the fluff” from the grocery list (chips, frozen pizza, soda, candy, etc.)
Use generic products (shampoo [or make your own], face cream, etc.)
Stop using “fluff” products like nail polish and other beauty products that cost a fortune (make your own where possible)
Use “filler” in cooking like rice, beans, veggies
Have a baked potato night
Have a soup night
Use more dried beans
try not to use anything that can’t be used again (cloths for dusting/cleaning that can be washed and reused, mason jars)
don’t buy bottled water, get everyone their own “permanent” bottle and fill it up at home
pack lunch or snack if going out so you aren’t tempted to get fast food
Save on car fuel by running errands several all at once and minimizing trips. It may be cheaper to pay a slightly higher price for an item at a store you’re at than to drive to another location.
Check how much you are paying for cleaning products – you may be able to save a little using vinegar and baking soda.
Save ends of vegs and freeze; use when making stock
Make your own bread – it’s easy
Cut your toothpaste tube in half when you think it’s done and use every drop before getting a new one
GROW YOUR OWN VEGS – even if it’s just a few in pots
Rinse ziplock bags
Lots of soups, stews, breakfast for dinner
Invite company over for dessert instead of dinner
Grocery list (check circular)
Go to farmers’ market near closing time
Picnics, rather than take out or eating out
Dilute conditioner and maybe shampoo
Homemade cleaning supplies (when we run out of what we have)
Don’t use as many paper towels
Summer: take cooler (ice from frozen water bottles) with snacks
Use reusable containers for storage instead of ziplock bags
Use a cookie sheet over a casserole dish for baking instead of foil
Rag bag for cleaning up spills (old socks and shirts)
Get sheets and cloth napkins at Goodwill/Salvation Army/Value Village (Savers?)
Garden the most expensive items: tomatoes, peppers, basil, spinach, lettuce, scallions
Pack lunches, snacks, take bottled water
http://www.budget101.com
Cloth napkins
Make own salad dressing
Check out: Money Saving Mom, also this blog: http://simplemom.net/how-we-stopped-living-less-than-paycheck-to-paycheck/
FRUGAL EQUIPMENT
It seems counter-intuitive to buy stuff to be more frugal, but these items have helped me save money over the years:
* Squeeze-It Tube Squeezers: I put them on everything, and I believe them help me get the last bits out of many tubes. (And then yes, cut the tubes open for more.)
* Funnels: When the bottle is almost empty, put the funnel in the next bottle and tip over the old bottle into it. Let it drain for however long.
REDUCING WASTE
Jars with leftover bits of jam/jelly/cottage cheese/peanut butter get filled with water that is then used to give the next morning’s oatmeal some extra flavor.
Food never gets wasted! Read the Tightwad Gazette for great ideas and some good universal recipes.
BEING MINDFUL
Keep a PRICE BOOK (see also Tightwad Gazette or the Interwebs for info on how-to). It will absolutely change the way you think about every future shopping trip. It takes work, but you will feel like a ninja and it’s so worth it.
PRIDE
If you currently feel brand-conscious (like you really want the shampoo on your shower shelf to be something you consider quality, rather than the 1.99 discount brand), replace the branded bottle with a generic pretty bottle and just refill that bottle as needed with whatever is cheapest. Pour all 20 travel-size hotel shampoos in there, mix Salon Selectives and White Rain, whatever. It just becomes the “shampoo” bottle, not “my gorgeous bottle of $20 salon-only hair product.” This works for everything that comes in one of those bottles that are part of the decor of your house (dish soap, laundry detergent, fancy drinking water, olive oil, et al).
Find out if you live in a redemption state (or near a redemption state!) and if you do, save those bottles and cans. Otherwise you’re just throwing out cash money!
http://www.sustaincreateandflow.com/frugal-made-easy-part-one/
Only go in grocery store once a week (at most). Make do with what you have.
I never put only one thing in the oven. If I am cooking a roast, I put in cookies too. If I have three things in a once I feel pretty good.
http://penniesandpancakes.blogspot.com/
http://www.100daysofrealfood.com/real-food-resources/recipe-index/
http://theprudenthomemaker.com/
http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/