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Supershopper shares her game plan

Posted Feb 06 2008, 05:22 PM by Karen Datko
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Like a veritable Bill Belichick (oops, or should we say Tom Coughlin), Lynnae at Being Frugal leaves little to chance when she plans her weekly grocery shopping. In several posts recently, Lynnae has shared the details of her method. It works: She spends $100 or less a week to feed a family of four as well as stockpile, and she thinks she can eventually reduce her spending even more.

Every Sunday morning, Lynnae browses The Grocery Game for coupons. The Grocery Game in a paid site -- it's $10 every eight weeks for each store you pick, and Lynnae swears her savings make the subscription price worth it. (She describes the benefits of The Grocery Game and two free online coupon sites -- The Coupon Mom and My Grocery Deals -- at a separate post at Being Frugal.)

After church and lunch, Lynnae grabs the two Sunday newspapers she buys, her coupon binder and laptop and beats feet to the bedroom to plan her menus for the week. If she's short on time, she relies on Menus4Moms to plan meals. Then, she says, "I make two to four lists, depending on who has what on sale that week."

Lynnae consults Money Saving Mom for deals at Walgreens and goes through the Rite Aid flier. She generally shops at those stores only when she can get free items after rebates or register rewards. She hits Albertsons for sale items, and the local Winco for "non-sale items, because it's one of those bare-bones stores where the prices are typically much lower than the big-name stores," she says.

Of course, each list is attached to an envelope containing the coupons for that particular store. She heads to town Monday morning after putting a cooler in the van for refrigerated items.

Reminder: Don't forget to cast your vote for the "Superbowl of Personal Finance" MVP at Being Frugal or I've Paid For This Twice Already, and while you're there, read paidtwice's thoughts about the Patriots' "pursuit of perfection."

Comments

 

I do pretty much the same thing (and, btw, work full time and go to school part time). I don't "poison" my kids as I do read labels and shop responsibly and still manage to use coupons and save 50-80% per shopping trip/week. As far as the garden goes, if you have the extra time and space, go for it. I have done the garden route too.

Sites like the Grocery Game just help to make it easier (and less time consuming) to match sales up to coupons.

BTW - right now I have probably 100 coupons for high quality, natural or organic foods so it is possible.

I agree with WYTCH - after perusing the coupon sites, I found only 1 item that I typically buy. Many of the coupons are for unhealthy items such as cake (easy and cheap to make your own), snack foods (try raw fruit and veggies instead) and prepared meals (little nutritional value, high sodium content, and you are paying for the packaging). My local produce grocer sells items for far less than what's on special at the major grocery stores. I also wonder about the cost of gasoline and time it takes to go to all these different places?

Bottom line: grow your food if you can, make food from scratch, and buy local.

Wow!!! Don't beat up Lynne. :-(

It's been awhile but I too have subscribed to the Grocery Game after learning about it on another message board. It's AWESOME. Worth every penny of the $10. Grocery sales run in cycles. You end up with good savings. Some items end up FREE.

Put it this way... I spent $180. one time and after coupons and sale items, I ONLY paid $40!!! and YES... I DO have a job. I work 40+ hours per week and have an hour commute each way. BTW... I'm tying this on my lunch hour. (not abusing company time). The only "downside" for the Grocery Game is that you have to set at least an hour aside to plan when and where you are going to go. Other than that... LYNNE YOU'RE AWESOME!! Spread the news!!  :-D

WYTCH - You're right.  I'm a stay at home mom, so I do have the luxury of shopping on Monday mornings.  My shopping method would work equally well on a Monday night though.

And though I don't feed my family organic food, I do feed them a healthy diet.  I only use coupons and stock up on items I use when cooking....eggs, butter, canned tomatoes, cheese...things of that nature.  I don't buy a lot of junk food.

And I think gardening is a great idea.  I have grown tomatoes and squash in the past, and I'm planning a more extensive garden this summer.

Laurel - None of the grocery stores in my area accept internet coupons either.  That's why I get all of my coupons from the paper.

Laurel -

Our Kroger stores in Las Vegas (Smith's out here) don't accept online coupons either, unless they are done through their website.  I think it is their way of driving online traffic to them, instead of anyone else.  All of our other stores do accept them - no questions asked.

To everyone - we have this lovely small chain of whole foods stores here - Sunflower Markets.  They are amazing for selections and prices on fresh fruits and vegetables (including organics), fresh meats, healthy breads, fresh bulk seasonings, an olive bar, a fresh deli, and a great selection of organic vitamins and health & beauty goodies.  They carry tons of natural, organic and bulk foods at low prices.  Last week I paid 99 cents a pound for Organic Red Bartlett Pears - I can't even buy non-organic yellow pears at the regular market for that.  They even do double sale days.  On Wednesdays the new ad starts, and on that day they honor last week's prices as well as this weeks.  They accept coupons, offer discounts if you bring your own bags, and the staff is always friendly.

If one of these stores pops up in your neighborhood - I highly recommend them!

Faerie Girl in Vegas :-)

If you notice, many grocery stores have items on sale that match coupons in the Sunday paper. I always look for double deals. Whole grain pasta, brown rice, unsweetened fruit juices, olive oil, and oatmeal are not junk food items. There is also nothing harmful about canned no salt added vegetables and canned fruit packed in natural jucie. I'ld prefer fresh foods but need to closely monitor what is spent on food. Usuallly it is hard to find coupons for fresh fruits and vegetables and low-fat dairy items. Better to eat canned fruits and vegetables than no fruits and vegetables. You save the most money by planning meals and stocking up when items you routinely use are on sale. It's easy to say buy organic but not everyone can afford to do this.

In CA (San Diego) we have a lot of 99 cent stores.  Many people here will not even go in to the store.  Too bad for them they have a lot of fresh vegetables and store over runs that you can fill your refrigerator weekly for $20.00.  It is hit and miss but when they have good shipments you could eat all week with the items you find there.  The Dollar Tree also carries many good items.  When I am out running errands or on my way home from work I stop and pick up just the specials for the week at local grocery stores.  I have saved a ton of money over the years and have a lot of food in my pantry.  Coupons expire quickly now so you have to use them quick or it is a wate of time.  Watching the ads really pays off.  Only buy what is on sale never pay full price.

for all the garden "money savers":  gardening does not save you a darn thing-  with all the fertizlier, bug killers, mold sprays, etc....plus water and back-breaking labor you are better off going to the supermarket/greengrocers and buying what you need there

Thanks for this idea and where to go for coupons.  I appreciate the information.

By the time you pay the $10.00 member fee to the little coupon club, buy 2 Sunday papers a week, run to 5 or more stores racking up gas and wear and tear on your vechicle and spend a ridiculous amount of time on this your not saving that much. Its not worth it.

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