Search Smart Spending:

Late-date carnivore bait

Posted Oct 09 2007, 11:52 AM by Donna Freedman
Rating:

I had a $1 steak for lunch, but it was no one-buck chuck. It was certified Angus beef sirloin, with no hormones or antibiotics, and “minimally processed,” according to the label. In addition, this steer apparently ate only vegetarians: The label also said “100 percent vegetarian diet.”

How’d it get to be a dollar? First it went on sale, then it got old.

Meat department managers keep a constant vigil against meat that’s close to its sell-by date. They need to sell that flesh pronto, so they discount it deeply.

That’s how people like me end up with steaks whose original per-pound cost was one and a half times the federal minimum wage. That same shopping trip netted me a two-pack of sirloins that initially cost $8.99 a pound; I paid $4.07 total. Another pair of steaks cost just $1.24 and $1.52.

Look for the used-meat label

A friend calls the markdown bin the “used meat” section, a phrase that amuses me greatly. Probably 75 percent of the time I don’t find anything I want: Either the prices are still too high or it’s meat I don’t like.

I always take a quick look in the markdown bin even if I’m not in the market for meat, as it were. The other night I was actually shopping for loss-leader tomatoes and carrots. To me the markdown bin is foraging rather than shopping, in that I don’t plan my meals based on what I might find. I always have freezer backup.

Most of the stores I patronize use a bright orange sticker on their late-date carnivore bait. The color gets my attention with its connotation of “BUY ME NOW! I’M UBER-CHEAP!” The actual message is usually much more genteel, along the lines of “manager’s special.”

Always being on the lookout keeps me from having to pay full price, ever. I honestly cannot remember the last time I bought meat that was not from the markdown bin or at least at a killer sale price.

A real meat market

When you buy ground beef close to the end of its useful span, always be prepared to cook or freeze it immediately. It probably won’t hold over in your fridge. As a kid I got really sick from eating old hamburger. I will never make that mistake again.

You may find that larger cuts in the markdown bin have more than a day left before their sell-by dates. Because of that long-ago bout of food poisoning, I still err on the side of caution and throw it in the freezer unless I’m going to cook it right away.

For optimum shopping, ask the manager if there’s a particular time of day when the used meat gets put out. Some stores do it first thing in the morning, others throughout the day.

Finding meat at these bargain prices will make you feel as smug as I do: All that discounted protein!

Please, all you vegetarians and vegans, do not write to tell me that there can be protein aplenty in a no-meat diet. I know that. But I’m a happy omnivore.

Besides, after reading that certified Angus label, I’ve got another reason not to be a vegetarian: Cows might eat me.

Comments

 

This is called, smart shopping in some circles.  In others, it's called shopping for the Destitute.  Another feature of capitalism gone amuck.  How about the price of Beef Tendorloin(Filet Mignon) these days. I'm surprised the Grocery store doesn't offer

financing deals.  Wow I shouldn't give them any ideas. :-)

Mixed emotions on your post . . . I am the orig "getto boy shopper" and make the discount meat section a MUST LOOK every time . . . my wife thinks I'm cheap, crazy and endangering my life . .  . even though I tell her immediate use is fine and great meat is "aged" anyway  . . .  so your story helps to show her that I'm not alone . .  but now you have let the world on to my secret discount bin . . . so a reserved thank you for the information . . .

I bet you could get really good deals with meat stores that are closed on Sundays and get Sat. night bargains

THIS HABIT, CHEP MEAT, WAS A PART OF MY FAMILY HERITAGE, DAD WAS MEAT CUTTER AND IT WAS WELL KNOWN THE TASTINESS OF AGED BEEF.  WE ATE WELL WHEN IT CAME TO MEAT AND I STILL DO HAVE A LOVE FOR GOOD AGED MEATS.

SOME FOLKS JUST DON'T HAVE A CLUE.............

donna, if you buy the meat on it's last leg (ha ha) then is it truely safe to freeze it? I have turned it down before because I was concerned about that. Thanks, Judy

If it's worng to eat animals why did God make them out of meat?

that's awesome, i do the same thing!  i thought i was the only one.  also i have a little tip myself..... i don't like to shop at walmart for my meats, but i go for the side dishes.  they cost between 10-50% less than Publix, Windixie, Albertsons, etc.  the only thing i make sure to check for is the expiration dates on the product, sometimes the product expires the next or same day, but most of the time it's fine. well, thanks for listening.

thanks,

tanya

dry aged beef is a special process that takes weeks to cure them.the old rotting meat in the reduced is not the same!don't buy it!That is wet aged meat and loaded with bacteria and could kill a person!Pay for fresh meat on sale!much safer as it was cut that day.and you can still save money!

Aged meat and meat that is nearly at the "sell by" date are two VERY different things.

Properly aged beef is stored at a specific temperature and humidity level, for specific periods of time, usually 7, 14, 21 days etc.

Meat that is wrapped in Styrofoam and cellophane and sits in the chilled meat bin for two weeks is not "aged".

While I appreciate the bargain shopping experience, and will look for deals whenever I can (which is the spirit of the original article I believe) I would caution those of you who say that Aged, and "used meat" are the same.

I'm a bargain shopper for all groceries and call the section where they keep the outdated or nearly outdated items, "The Rotten Food Department."  

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):