1 / 39

Healthy Eating on a Budget

Healthy Eating on a Budget . Rachel Griehs, MS, RD, LDN Clinical Assistant Professor SHRP, Department of Nutritional Sciences Rutgers University 12/9/13. Food Statistics . Grocery store prices are up ~1% from one year ago

chars
Download Presentation

Healthy Eating on a Budget

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Healthy Eating on a Budget Rachel Griehs, MS, RD, LDN Clinical Assistant Professor SHRP, Department of Nutritional Sciences Rutgers University 12/9/13

  2. Food Statistics • Grocery store prices are up ~1% from one year ago • In the last half decade, food price inflation is greater than overall inflation • Restaurant prices were more steady than grocery store prices • Households spend more money on food as the income rises but they start spending money on other goods besides food • 2011 • middle income family spent $5,620 annually on food (12.2% of income) • Lowest income family spent $3,547 annually on food (36.2% of income) United States Department of Agriculture

  3. Examples of increasing food prices US Bureau Labor of Statistics

  4. Weekly cost of diet by type of family (2009-10) • Becoming more and more expensive to feed a family • Number from 2013 are sure to be much higher • Need to learn how to be in the “thrifty” or “low-cost” section

  5. Good nutrition does not have to be expensive • USDA Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion (CNPP) put together a 7-day menu plan conforming to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. • Based on national average food costs adjusted to 2011 prices • Cost of menu less than the ave amount spent for food, per person, for 4-person family • 2000 calorie diet average food cost is $6.65 per day • Will pass out and discuss later • Total costs for satisfying the USDA food pattern quantity and variety for fruits and vegetables average under $2.00 per day ($0.40-0.50 per cup) • 2008 prices for commonly consumed fruits and vegetables

  6. Good nutrition does not have to be expensive • Many fruits and vegetables are less than $0.40 per cup-equivalent • Apples, bananas, navel oranges • Carrots, potatoes, onions • Produce Marketing Association report—”The Cost of the Recommended Daily Servings of Fresh Produce” • Fruit and vegetable recommendations can be met for ~$0.50 per cup • Fresh vegetables--$0.42 • Fresh fruit--$0.56 • Ave retail price for fresh fruits and vegetables for 2000 kcal diet= $2.18 (4.5 cup equivalent ) • Least expensive fresh vegetables: potatoes, lettuce, eggplant, greens, summer squash, carrots, tomatillos • Least expensive fresh fruit: watermelon, bananas, apples, pears, pineapple, peaches • Frozen or canned fruits and vegetables can further lower cost

  7. Remember the three P’s • Plan • Plan meals and snacks for the week according to an established budget • Find quick and easy recipes online • Include meals that will “stretch” expensive food items • Stews, casseroles, stir-fry • Make a grocery list • Check for sales and coupons in the local paper or online • Consider discount stores • Use a loyalty card at the grocery store

  8. Remember the three P’s • Purchase • Buy groceries when you ARE NOT hungry and not rushed • Stick to the grocery list • Stay out of the aisles that contain items not on your list • Buy store brands if they are cheaper • Find and compare unit prices listed on the shelves to get the best price • Purchase some items in bulk or in family packs • These usually cost less • Choose fresh fruits and vegetables in season; buy canned with less salt • Watch the items that are pre-cut—more convenient but also more expensive • Individual cups of yogurt are more expensive than a large container • Instant rice is more expensive • Good low-cost items all year: • Protein—beans (garbanzo, black, cannellini) • Vegetables—carrots, greens, potatoes • Fruit—apples, bananas

  9. Remember the three P’s • Prepare • Some meal items can be prepared in advance • Pre-cook on days when you have time • Double or triple up on recipes • Freeze meal-sized containers of soups and casseroles • Divide into individual portions • Try a few meatless meals • Substitute with beans and peas • Try “no-cook” meals—salads • Incorporate leftovers into a subsequent meal • Be creative with a fruit or vegetable • Use in different ways during the week

  10. Planning—Create a worksheet • Create a 5 day worksheet • Put together a shopping list and gather grocery ad flyers • You can see what is on your list and what is on special • If you don’t get the newspaper, try downloading it from the store’s website • Check what you have “on hand” • Look in refrigerator, freezer, and cabinet for those that need to be used up in the next few days or have been in the house for awhile • Write these as “on hand” on the menu planner • Think of a way to use “on hand” foods • Write ideas for each meal and snack • May need to buy some foods to go with “on hand” items • Add to grocery list • Review grocery ads for specials you can use • Circle on grocery ad

  11. Planning—Create a worksheet • Think of meals family likes to eat • Try to fill in meals for five days • Do not need to specify which meal on which day • Leftovers are ok • Can use same foods for several days • Such as, cold cereal, fruit, milk • Have enough of these foods available • See if there is something from each of the food groups in most of your meals • How much food are you getting from dairy? Fruits? Vegetables? Meat/beans? • If have extra money, see if there are good specials on foods family uses regularly and try to stock up

  12. Purchasing—How to save at the grocery store • Priorities first • Fill cart with the basics first: vegetables, fruit, protein, milk • These foods are found along the perimeter of the store • Arrange list according to the store layout • Saves time • Prevents backtracking • If need something in center aisles, get item and go back to perimeter of store—this way you don’t go up and down this aisle tempted by items there • Pay for food, not convenience • Buy the basic ingredients in your recipe or meals—THIS WILL SAVE MONEY • Don’t purchase pre-prepared items

  13. Purchasing—How to save at the grocery store • DON’T GO THERE! • Stay out of empty calorie aisles—chips, crackers, candy, soda • These are usually found in the center aisles • Buy the store or generic brand • Sometimes the only difference between store/generic and name brand is the label • Sometimes there is more difference, so at least try! • Look up! Look down! • Less expensive items are above and below eye level • Companies pay to have their items displayed at eye level

  14. Purchasing—How to save at the grocery store • Pay attention at the checkout • Make sure you got the sale price! • The right code was punched in on produce • Know the regular items you generally buy • This way you will know if the advertised item is a bargain • Ask for a rain check • If the special priced item is sold out • You can purchase the item at the sale price at a later date

  15. Purchasing—Other tips • Use a price book • To find real deals • Helps monitor prices of frequently purchased products • Write down product name, package size, price, store, date • Compare written to advertised specials • You will soon know the best prices and be able to stock up • You will never have to pay the “regular price” • Don’t shop when you are hungry • It is easier to stick to your shopping list • Check sell buy dates • Buy the freshest food possible because it lasts longer

  16. Purchasing—Using coupons • Check for coupons on-line • www.coupons.com • www.redplum.com • Target—available on their website. If you add the manufacturer’s coupon you get great savings • Look for circulars in the Sunday paper • When at the store • “peelies” –off of items • “blinkies”—coupon dispenser machines that blink • “catalinas”—printed at register • Coupons are sometimes sent as home mailers • Look at weekly store ads, magazines available at the store ore sent home

  17. Purchasing—using coupons • Never throw away when they are unexpired! • Use coupons when items are discounted or on-sale • Use a store coupon + manufacturer’s coupon at the same time • Manufacturer coupons usually found in store circulars • Will state it near the expiration date • Ask for rain checks if item is sold out • Go for the smaller size—with a coupon the item works out to be cheaper or sometimes free • Most stores will match the competitor’s ad if it is the same item • Check with customer service department • Don’t use a coupon to justify buying a food that your family doesn’t need or costs more than the store brand

  18. Purchasing—Grains, Dairy • Breads and grains: • Look for bargains on day old bread—costs less but still nutritious • Buy regular rice, oatmeal, and grits instead of instant—saves on money, sugar, and calories • Make half of your grains whole • Know what to look for on the ingredient list—must be first on the list: “whole-wheat,” “brown rice,” “oatmeal,” “whole oats,” “whole rye,” “wild rice” • Not whole grains: “multi-grain,” “stone-ground,” “100% wheat,” “cracked wheat,” “seven-grain,” “bran” • Enriched wheat flour is typically the first ingredient of these. • Low-fat milk products • Buy fresh, low-fat milk in largest size that can be used before spoiling • Larger containers cost less than smaller sizes • Ultra-pasteurized milk has longer expiration date and doesn’t spoil as fast • If lactose intolerant • Choose lactose free milk • Drink smaller amounts at one time • Try soymilk

  19. Purchasing—Meat/beans • Meats/Beans • Buy chuck or bottom round • Less fat, cheaper than sirloin • Choose dried beans and peas • Good source of fiber and protein • Lasts long time without spoiling • Look for specials at the meat counter • Buy meat on sale for big savings • Buy meat in large bulk packages to save money • Freeze those not using right away to prevent spoiling • Watch the sodium • Added to canned meats, beans • In processed meats—hot dogs, sausage, ham

  20. Purchasing—Fruits and vegetables • Buy in season • At peak nutritional value • Least expensive • Consider the Farmer’s market • Don’t pay full price • Check local newspaper, online, and at store for sales, coupons, and specials • Can get more for less at discount grocers • Consider canned or frozen • Compare prices between these and fresh—may be less expensive • Choose fruit canned in own juices • Choose vegetables that are “low sodium” or “no salt added”

  21. Purchasing—fruits and vegetables • Buy small amounts frequently • Fresh don’t last long—need to use within one week • Don’t want to have waste • Buy in bulk when on sale • Purchasing in large bag, rather than individual is less expensive • Can buy larger amount of canned and frozen since last longer • Store brands are less expensive • Will get same or similar item for much less • Get store membership card for more savings

  22. Purchasing—fruits and vegetables • Don’t do convenience • Pre-cut, pre-washed, ready-to-eat are convenient but also more expensive • Buy fruits and vegetables in their most simple form • Consider planting your own • You can start a garden in your yard or on your deck • Easy to start with—herbs, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers • Plan and cook smart • To save time, prepare dishes in advance • Freeze soups, stews, etc. • Add leftover vegetables to casseroles, blend to make soup • Use overripe fruit in baking or make a smoothie

  23. Purchasing-When and where to shop • As stated before, do not shop when you are hungry • You will purchase items that you don’t need (but may have a craving for) • Shop when the store is not crowded • Saves you time • Will be able to concentrate better • May need to shop alone • If family will distract you and keep you from buying only what is on your list • May need to shop at multiple stores • No one place has the best buys on everything you want

  24. Purchasing--When and where to shop • It is more efficient to shop at one store that has reasonable prices • Takes extra time to go to different places • Warehouse stores • Less expensive • Can be tempted to wander through the aisles and pick out things you don’t need • Convenience stores • Charge higher prices • May be fine if you need one item, such as milk—will save you much time and keep you from getting things you don’t need • Farmers’ markets, Co-ops • Sometimes costs less, sometimes more • May find more nutritious foods • Supports the local economy

  25. Preparing—Tips to build a healthy meal • Make half of your plates fruits and vegetables • The darker the better nutritional value • As states before, try to consume those in season for better flavor, nutrition, and price! • Add lean protein • Consume lean or extra lean beef and pork • Poultry should be eaten without the skin • Try vegetarian proteins—beans, tofu • Eat seafood twice weekly—high in omega 3 fatty acids • Include whole grains • Try to make 50% of your grains whole • The food label should read: “100% whole wheat” • Look for “whole wheat flour” as the first ingredient • If it says “enriched wheat flour”, it is not a whole grain

  26. Preparing—tips to build a healthy meal • Don’t forget dairy • Use 1% or non-fat milk—same nutritional value but without all the fat • If you don’t drink milk, you can have non-fat yogurt or 2% milkfat cheese • Avoid extra fat • Watch the creamy soups, sauces, heavy gravies • Use reduced fat mayonnaise and salad dressing • Choose “light” margarine without trans fat • Take your time • Eat slowly and chew your food well! You will enjoy it more • You will likely overeat if you eat too fast • Takes 20 minutes for the brain and stomach to connect

  27. Preparing—tips to build a healthy meal • Be mindful! • Know exactly what you are eating. • Try to sit at the kitchen table so you can focus on eating • Use a smaller plate • Helps with portion control • Will finish your entire plate and likely feel satisfied without overeating. • Take control of your food • Eat at home! You will know exactly what you are eating • If eating out, check out the nutrition information and choose healthier options (baked vs fried)

  28. Preparing—tips to build a healthy meal • Try new foods • Include variety in your diet to make it interesting • Pick out things you have never tried before. YOU MAY FIND A NEW FAVORITE FOOD! • Trade recipes with friends or try those online • Satisfy sweet tooth the healthy way • Have naturally sweet dessert—FRUIT! • Make a fruit parfait with yogurt • Add non-fat cool whip to fruit • Bake apples and top with cinnamon. YUM!

  29. Preparing—after shopping • Store food right away to preserve freshness • Freeze food to prevent spoiling • Divide food into small portions to prevent waste • Use foods with the earliest expiration date first • Cut up vegetables and have them available in the refrigerator to , have a snack • Carrots, celery • Wash fruit so available for eating right away • Grapes, strawberries

  30. Preparing—tips to save time • Keep your meals simple! • Look for those recipes that have a few ingredients • You can find ones that can be completed in 30 minutes or less • Food that keeps you health can be easy to fix! • Cook when you have more time • Make several dishes and freeze them • Use the slow cooker—make stews or soups that you can have for several meals • Do some preparing ahead of time • Wash and trim vegetables • Make a fruit salad • Cook whole-grain noodles and make a pasta salad • Cook and cool the lean meat for tacos

  31. Eating out—Where to go • Check newspaper, websites, shoppers, home mailings for coupons to restaurants • Look for out-of-the-ordinary places to eat out • Discount stores at times offer a lunch special—pizza and soda • Pizza is large so share to save money and calories • Choose small, family-owned restaurants • Food is usually great and prices are low

  32. Eating out—When to go • Breakfast or lunch • Generally lower price range • Offer “lunch” size portion of meals • Can take home a “doggie” bag for dinner • If a senior citizen, go early • “early bird” specials usually offered • Local restaurants may have a “kids eat free” night • Look for coupons for extra savings • Kids often don’t finish their meal so you can take home and have for lunch the following day • Can work with community members to develop a “kid’s night out” calendar with the restaurants that offer a “kids eat free” night • This way others know where they could go to save money

  33. Eating out—What to order • Share entrée or entire meal • Check for “split-plate” fees • Ask for server to put half in “doggie” bag and have the next day • this helps with portion control • Order side dish as entrée • Order an appetizer or soup for meal along with a side salad • Just be careful with the appetizers! Many are fried so pick the healthier options • Save calories by ordering water to drink • Water does not cost anything! • If you do want soda or iced tea, choose diet soda or unsweetened iced tea. • Avoid alcoholic beverages. If a special occasion, go to restaurants that are BYOB. • Some restaurants allow adults to eat off of the children’s menu. • Smaller portions so you are sticking with your healthy eating • Smaller prices so you are sticking with your budget

  34. Summary and Conclusion • Remember to PLAN BEFORE YOU SHOP • Remember to PURCHASE ITEMS AT THE BEST PRICE • Remember to PREPARE MEALS THAT STRETCH YOUR FOOD DOLLARS

  35. Conclusion—Tips to eat better on a budget • Plan, plan, plan! • Before shopping, plan your meals for the week • “Stretch” food dollars by including stews, casseroles, soups • Get the best price • Check local newspaper, online, and at store for sales and coupons • Get a loyalty card • Compare and contrast • Locate “unit price” of food and compare with different brands and sizes • Buy in bulk • Almost always cheaper! • Good foods to purchase in bulk: chicken, steak, fish, potatoes, frozen vegetables

  36. Conclusion—Tips to eat better on a budget • Buy in season • This is when fresh fruits and vegetables are at their lowest cost • Most nutritious and best tasting • If not using right away, purchase those that need time to ripen (bananas) • Don’t buy convenience foods • Pre-cut, pre-washed cost more • Instant rice, oatmeal or grits cost more • Frozen meals cost more than if you make from scratch • Look for low-cost items all year round • Beans, carrots, greens, potatoes • Apples, bananas

  37. Conclusion—Tips to eat better on a budget • Cook once…eat several times and several meals! • When have time, cook several entrées • Cook double or triple the amount • Use the slow cooker • Freeze in individual containers and use throughout the week • Be creative! • Use leftovers in new ways • Use chicken in a salad, stir-fry, with pasta • Save when eating out • Go out for breakfast or lunch instead of dinner • Get the early bird special • Look for “2 for 1” deals • Get lunch size portions • Drink water instead of other beverages

  38. As you can see, eating on a budget can be healthy and nutritious. With limited funds you can still find things you enjoy and stretch your food dollars

  39. QUESTIONS?

More Related