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Putting the freeze on food prices

Posted Jun 25 2008, 01:09 PM by Donna Freedman
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Feeling pain at the supermarket checkout? Don't expect relief anytime soon. According to an Associated Press article, the Midwestern floods that destroyed soybean and corn crops will send the price of beef, pork, poultry, eggs, cheese and milk higher this fall.

Anybody want to join me while I shop for flour and beans and a small freezer?

Some people are already comfortably situated. Due to religious beliefs or mistrust of the current economic situation, they've stockpiled months' or years' worth of food. Some may have taken a bit of ribbing from friends and family as they stashed away their canned goods, bulk grains and MREs.

Well, these survivalist ants will have the last laugh as they watch all us grasshoppers weep over rising grocery prices.

A price 'freeze'
I'm serious about the freezer. It's an idea I've been mulling over for several weeks -- checking prices, figuring out where I'd put it in my apartment, asking a friend who subscribes to Consumer Reports to look up articles on the best models. For a 7.2-cubic-foot freezer, it looks like I'd have to spend $199 plus tax.

It would help me take advantage of supermarket loss leaders, and on great finds in the meat markdown bin or at the "used bread" store. I could really stock up, instead of trying to shoehorn just one or two items into the small freezer atop my apartment-size fridge. I'd also love to buy 20 or 25 pounds of flour at current prices and put that on ice.

Oh, and free blackberries, too. Lots of them.

If food prices keep rising -- and that's pretty much a given -- then I think the cost of the additional electricity will be offset by the chance to stash reduced-price grub.

I'm lucky to have the option of shelling out a couple hundred dollars for a freezer. (Thanks, emergency fund!) But I'm fortunate for other reasons, too.

Positioned to be prepared
I don't have small children, so I can shop easily and whenever I feel like it. (Imagine hauling bags of groceries and a couple of tired kids on the bus on a rainy night.) I know how to cook and I'm not a picky eater, able to subsist quite happily on a small amount of meat combined with a large amount of beans, starches or vegetables. I don't have food allergies or other health conditions (celiac, diabetes) that require special and often expensive diets.

Within about a mile of my apartment are three supermarkets, a bakery outlet, a dollar store, and two chain drugstores with cheap specials on food items liked canned goods, spices and dried fruit. Because I have a car, I can buy a lot of on-sale items at once instead of having to make multiple trips on foot or by bus.

I'm an avid user of coupons and rebates. I'm not above retrieving discarded supermarket ads from the recycle bin in the building lobby, a tactic that recently helped me obtain 29 cans of tuna for $9.57, 20 cans of organic tomatoes for $5, and four loaves of bread and two packages of onion rolls absolutely free.

In other words, I'm well-positioned to be a savvy shopper and I'm also motivated (some would say "obsessed") to spend as little as possible to stock my pantry.

How to get ahead?
Not everyone is this fortunate. Those who aren't will be increasingly squeezed as food, housing and energy costs go up and salaries stay right where they are.

For some Americans, the increase in food prices is cause for grumbling but nothing more. They complain, but they keep eating what they normally eat. I'm a lot more concerned about people already living on the margin. As bread prices increase, their brown-bag lunches are going to get more expensive. As milk goes up, they will find themselves watering down the gallon so there's enough for the kids' oatmeal until payday.

To them, and to everyone else for that matter, I strongly suggest the stealth stock-up plan. Even small amounts of money can be "invested" in on-sale foodstuffs to create a pantry of staples to carry you through the lean times. Ever had weeks when just before payday you were down to the heels of the bread loaf and a couple of tablespoons of peanut butter? Stealth stock-up will keep that from happening, or at least provide a can of chicken soup to go with your sandwich.

You may protest that every penny of your pay is spoken for before it's received. That could be true. But it probably isn't. Take a very, very clear-eyed look at your budget. Then be ruthless about carving away 50 cents or a dollar at a time. It may mean giving up the one small treat you allow yourself each week: a candy bar, a pound of coffee, a movie ticket, a pack of smokes.

But it may also mean the difference between eating and not eating.

Comments

 

We, too are researching a deep freezer, but have heard/found that they can drastically (even double it!) increase your energy bill. Be wary of really old deep freezers, and spend the extra to get something that will save in your food AND energy budget.

Learn to make your dollar stretch!  A cheap six pound chuck roast can be made to feed a family of four with vegetables and salad added to it.  Take roast left-overs and make a cassarole (meat, peas, onions, 1 can creme of mushroom or celery soup) served over toasted bread or biscuits.  I usually had enough to make BBQ beef sandwitches with the end.  A crock pot worked for all the meals to be made iin advance.  I have found a new friend in the grain "quinoa".  Easy to cook, versatile as risotto, breakfast cereal, or cold with vegetables as a salad.  Has all amino proteins as meat and can be a meat substitute.  I didn't have a whole lot of money when my kids were small and so learned to pinch a penny.  Still pinch to this day, and it has paid off in the long run!  Quit whining and do without some of your spoiled ways! It's a character builder!

Our combined household (three women) bought a membership at Costco, so we save on large bags of fruits, vegies, pastas, gas ($.12 a gallon cheaper!), meats.  We split the cost of everything.  We have a freezer and repackage meats into meals, with a list on the top so we know what we have.  We make almost everything from scratch.  Some chickens make us 3 meals, including roast, sandwiches and soup.  We don't buy mixes unless they are 10 for $10.  Last week eggs were 4 dozen/$5 so we bought 4 and hard boiled half.  Yogurt makes a great substitute for sour cream and cream cheese, both of which are bad for you and is often on sale.  We also fill the gas takes at 1/2 full, which actually saves you money.  We found a great used clothing store and stopped buying new clothes.  We have pancakes day at least once a week and dress them up with jam or fruit instead of syrup, which is really sugar water.  We don't have long distance on our telephone, we use our cell phones or phone cards.  E-mail reaches out just as well as letters and doesn't cost $.42.   We drink mostly water or tea, no soda.  We get the tea on line. Our waterheater is on a timer, which goes off at 9 pm and on at 5 am.  So we do all washing in that time period. We are thinking of turning off in the afternoon for a few hours.  Every light bulb has been replaced with high efficiency bulbs.  You never have to change them. At night, only the lights in the TV room are on; the TV,VCR/cable box are on a strip and that is turned off at night so it doesn't draw power when not in use.  Only the stove, freezer and refrigerator are left plugged in. (If you see a light, that appliance is using power.)  I save 10% of every pay check, every time, sometimes more if I can.  I recently bought a 3 month CD through an on-online bank  I found on bankrate.com.  It took me quite a while to save that up.  The next $1000 is going into another CD.  Don't just keep your money in your checking or saving account.  Look for other options that will work for your situation.  My sister invested the money from her husbands death in several places, with advice from her insurance company.  So have something for emergencies, pay down your debts to ZERO, and start stashing money away.

I accidentally froze a tomato once (malfunctioning refrigerator) and when it thawed, it was mush.  How is it that everyone's saying they freeze their home-grown produce?  Is there a trick or technique that I should know?  And I've never gardened in my life (born and raised in a city); can a garden be maintained in any climate?  I'm moving to Las Vegas where it's a challenge to make even cacti thrive.

Stockpiling is a great way to get around the rising food costs. We have 2 refrigerators and an extra chest freezer, along with multiple shelving units for non perishables.

I am 66, and do have those expensive health chalenges so can no longer do the work of making a garden and the harvesting, but used to have my entire big yard tilled for about $50 then planted part for salad stuff and the rest in tomatoes and canned those.  We used to have lots of farms nearby but the farmers are retiring and their kids don't want to farm so they are building homes on the farms and selling them instead, but we are seeing about 12 farmers now selling shares in their produce for about $500 a year, some deliver to your home and some you have to go pick up the boxes of food weekly.  That seems to be the trend here in Vancouver, WA.  I would like to tell you all that if you can can the product you should consider doing that first before you freeze any because it will save room in your freezer for that meat and baked goods.  Blackberries, for example, canned make just as good pies as frozen.  You can can Salmon and even your homemade soups and sauces too.  But some things just do not freeze well, cauliflower, summer squash, including zucchini are just two kinds.  Then lastly, you can go to www.USDA.com and find all the information about freezing and a lot of other stuff you really should check out like safety with foods and all.  In addition, check out your County and State information services and all the Universities for free information....I mean like you all are paying for them to help you thru your taxes, so find out how to get the information and pass it on to everyone you know....and this site too.  

Hi,

I want to put a freezer in my basement as well as want to store other goods like pasta, etc in a file cabinet. Unfortunately it gets a bit moldy down there.

Will the food be okay even with moldiness? Anyone else have a basement problem like this and keep a fridge there?

I see someone says to put things in containers in freezer to prevent critters from getting in. How would they open a freezer?

I am puzzled.  

I have a great idea for people who can not afford meat...get a hunting license and go out and kill your dinner. My best friend killed two elk last year and gave me one and I STILL have meat from it in my freezer. If you don't hunt find a friend who does. See if they can help you out. By the way I have a family of five. Just make sure if your going to do the hunting you use every part of the animal. If not take it to your local Indian reservation and they'll use what you don't want.

he! it is nice great job and make more. I believe that I am good but not as good as you.

http://pinayspeak.com

my tomato soup in a can froze is it still safe to eat?

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