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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 have recently discovered that Wal-mart will match not only clouth's, furniture, and electronic's but also grocerie as well.  As long as I have the ad for anything over $10 ( ad not needed below that) they will give me that price and I can still use my sunday paper coupon's as well as the online one's. Some time's it's still better for me to hit Martin's on the way home due to double coupon's. Depend's if I feel like dragging the kid's into another store.

HA HA!  A garden, year round?  So that is what you do when (1) you live in an apartment; and (2) it is below freezing for at least four months of the year.  

But I am with you, I'm in the office all week, not much time for putting around to five different stores.

cgotch  Can you reveal a little more about the amish market?  I certainly wpild be interested if I knew where to go.

Chance

I was also a member of The Grocery Game, but my husband and I recently started trying to eat more fruits, veggies, whole grains, organics, etc., and I found that I wasn't really benefiting much from the specials the site listed. Most of it seemed to be stuff we don't eat. Still, I'm definitely interested in saving money when possible, and I am really curious to know where I can find the coupons for organic foods. Is there a website for that? Thank you!

Plantetamerica, gardening saves me LOTS of money. My ANNUAL investment in my veggie garden is $30-$50, total, yes, including water. For that I get year-round chard, kale, collards, etc. About 10 bucks a month worth at my local grocer's prices. I also get 10 pounds of eggplant (value:$15), 20 pounds of tomatos ($30), 10 artichokes ($20), 15 pounds green beans ($25), 20 pounds cucumbers ($10 in cukes, $15 in pickles), 25 pounds squashes........

Dont need bug killers, mold sprays, etc. Good compost is free and is plenty fertilizer by itself. Backbreaking labor? One weekend in the spring hauling compost and setting up, 15 minutes a day to hold a hose, an afternoon a week weeding, projects, and harvesting. None of it is backbreaking, and it partially replaces a gym membership, saving even more, about $50/month.

You watch, as gas tops $4/gallon, produce is going to go nuts. Small scale local agriculture is going to make a big comeback this year.

Coupons are good but after doing the shopping for my household for 30 years,

the savings on coupons to the time spent is about 20% of your savings per shopping outing.Flexability on what you eat,whats on sale that piticular week,and the brands you buy along with using all the differing sales in the stores to your advantage gets the job done when it come to saving your hard earned cash!

There is a book where you will learn to be The Elite Grocery Shopper,one that saves more,gets more volume for the same money or less,etc. It brings simple principles and concepts

to the forfront to save you huge in the grocery buying arenas,yes coupons are included. Contact The Elite Grocery Shopper anytime through   -    elite-gs.com

I find that I use LESS coupons these days and COOK more. Yes I cook, from scratch. I  find that most coupons are for food that is over processed. If I want to have lasagna during the week I make sure  that I have it in the freezer because I have made it, and I likely made two, one for another night.

Search the web for sites that include Investment Cooking, Make-a-Mix and Frozen Assets. Learn to cook from fresh foods. Find the farmers markets. Search out the ethnic stores. and check out cookbooks from the library.  That is how to save money on your groceries.

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