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They tried eating on $25 a week

Posted Oct 06 2008, 06:59 PM by Karen Datko
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The $25 Challenge is over in Illinois, and we're sure the participants are thrilled about that. They agreed to spend no more than $25 on food for a week -- that's about $3.50 a day -- and blog about what they learned during the experience.

It was a real eye-opener for most. When you have so little money for food, you realize that "there is food all around you, all the time, but you can't eat it," wrote Frank Finnegan, who was planning yet another dinner of ham and beans. He added, "Forget nutrition. When shopping, the only thing that matters is price."

He makes a number of good points. It is difficult -- but not impossible -- to buy fresh vegetables and fruit when you're working with a tiny food budget. And you'd better make sure you can stomach repetition in your diet. You quickly learn that when you're buying and cooking in bulk to stretch limited dollars, food becomes a means to get necessary calories rather than a delicious treat.

Unlike some others in the challenge, Chris Strupp didn't take advantage of free food when it was available. It's a choice he likely regrets. On Day Four he wrote, "I have lost a lot of concentration and patience due to the challenge. I have become extremely agitated for no decent reason."

The food budget for the challenge wasn't selected randomly. The $25 a week is about what the average food stamp recipient is expected to survive on in Illinois. Many who took the challenge wrote eloquently about the deprivation they felt.

A poster named Becky accepted the challenge on behalf of her family of four and found that $100 was doable, but just barely. In a post called "We are out of milk," she said, "As the week has progressed, I feel an overwhelming sense of failure and guilt for not providing for my family. I cannot help but to think of the families who face this every week."

The challenge was organized by the Illinois Food Bank Association, which notes at its Web site, "Illinois has experienced an unprecedented rise in the number of working families who are turning to food banks and pantries to make ends meet."

Comments

 

hmmm, the built the meal plan in for us at my Uni.

Though, next year, living in an off campus apartment will mean saving every freaking penny to apply to that bursar payment each month so that I can be debt free at the end of college.

there are ppl who spend $10 a week for food.. and still make a living... after the FC i believe it has become an eye opener for many wel developed countries i guess..

Its not the healthiest but you could even do fast food on $25 a week if you stick to the value menu. Almost everywhere has something for a dollar, get that 3 times a day times 7 days and thast only $21...$23-24 with tax.

I easily fed myself on $70 a month ($17.50 a week) by going mostly vegetarian as a choice when I lived in Santa Barbara. Not exactly a cheap place to live really so the diet of $70 a month was rough. You can't accomplish this type of proposed financial restraint by lusting after $99 cheese burgers from McDonalds. Yes going somewhat vegetarian is hard, but you get used to it after a while. Shop farmers markets for cheap produce!!!

Not that any of you care but my typical day consisted of a Tangelo or large Apple and cup of coffee for breakfast, Half cup of rice with a bonless chicken thigh grilled, a can of tuna and whole grain bread with tomato or something similar for lunch, and for dinner a huge salad with zuccinni, feta chese, mushrooms, etc.. Then I would put in an hour or two at the gym. I weighed roughly 181lbs at the time, and I am 5' 11" tall.

Believe me I'm not saying I was never hungry. The trick to filling up was drinking plenty of water after your meal. And always keeping some unsalted nuts (Pistachios, walnuts, soynuts, etc..) around to snack on to stave off hunger between meals (protein + much needed fats!). Also, you have to plan your meals. Don't wait until you are so hungry you could eat a horse to finally decide to eat. That's when people usually make bad decisions. If your body is expecting lunch at 12PM everyday.. FEED IT!    

This is stupid.  The challegne isstupid.  Who cares what the average food stamp recipient gets?  Food stamps aree NOT (nor should they be) the sole source of food budget for people.  They are meant to UPPLEMENT lower income families.  Not provide handouts to idiots who don't work at all.

To say that this is "what recipeints of food stamps are expected to live on" is ridiculous. Obviously food stamps aren't there to cover the entire cost of food - but supplement a low income. I wouldn't mind having $3.50 extra a day! That's 3 double cheeseburgers from McDonalds.

It's not that hard, I get paid enough to eat pretty well being in the Army but I tend to go to the commissary and spend about $24 for 2 weeks.  18 cans of Chef Boyardee, different kinds of course, and 2 12 packs of soda.  People make it sound like it's hard to live off that, hell, you could eat ramen every day for a month and only spend about $6.  If you want, for breakfast, pick up a donut and some coffee every day, that's about $66 per month.  If you don't care about nutrition, eat cheaply, there's lots of different ways to make ramen. :P

...sorry, but even with the financial turndown that the world is experiencing, most people earn enough to be able to budget more than this for food.

...and lets face it, food is damned good. so screw the budget, eat as well as you wish and compromise on the true luxuries like petrol, computers, and cable tv...?

i spend around $250 per week on food and $0 on fuel, thats a much better idea.

In response to Kitty saying "and simply MUST have organic, hormone free milk,"

Who the hell would want to drink milk WITH hormones? Which means all cow milk that isn't organic.

I agree with the last poster. I've eaten on $100 a month, and I would rather skip milk altogether than buy non-organic. Eating cheap doesn't mean you have to eat unhealthy. I'm a little shocked by the nutrition sense of some people's  recommendations. Fast food for every meal? 18 cans of chef boyardee? 12 packs of soda? My God! I hope these people were joking. Easting food like that every day will give you far greater health expenses down the road than it's worth. You save money later by eating healthy NOW. Health care in this country is WAY too expensive to be making poor nutrition choices. It will catch up to you. I promise.

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