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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

 

Go Vegan or Go to Hell:

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

perhaps someone who wants to drink milk, but doesn't want to pay 50% more per gallon for a premium product that may or may not have any health benefits?

just speculating....

Hey guys.

I live in Romania (Europe for those of you who don't know :) ) about 20 year ago we got out of comunism and a few years after the revolution the average sallary was around 50$/month, so a family would live with about 100$/month (3-4 people mabey more). So in a best case scenario you had ~8.5$/week per person. And I have to mention the fact that these money were for every thing not only for food. So yeah you can survive on 25$/week for food.

P.S. Things have changed now. You can make a decent living here if your willing to work.

Misu

I budget $150 per week for my family of 5.  I make everything from  scratch, but I only buy organic produce and we eat A LOT of it, so that adds up fast.  I also buy 5 pounds of almonds every week, because we only drink almond milk and my kids and I drink a ton of almond milk smoothies.  I don't eat meat, but my husband does and he only likes expensive cuts, so that eats up about $30 of our weekly budget right there!

I have also done this. There was 6 of us living in a 2 bedroom apartment in Jackson, WY. The only job I had was working at the ski resort. I averaged about $25 a week on food during the winter season, (some weeks were $30).

I ate a lot of eggs, grilled cheese and spagetti; as the eggs were somewhat cheap as was bread and angel hair pasta. The most expensive things were the Prego sauce and Kraft cheese slices, lol

I wonder if i could convince my wife and daughter to take the $25 a week (per person) food challenge....lol (it might be a fun test of just what they are capable of)..

I miss those days when I was a graduate student. I easily used to survive on 100 per month on groceries (including milk and eggs and oreo etc). I am an Indian by origin and preparing Indian food at home is the cheapest option I've ever found. Its also delicious (for me).

Now I am spoilt and I eat out  in a restaurant a couple of times every week or so. I don't even think twice buying a glass of coffee from Dunkin Donuts. (It was rare that we'd visit Starbucks back then.)

Back then, free food was always welcome. The key issue in buying food was not the price but making sure everything gets consumed before it rots.

If you have an Aldi's near you, this is completely doable, I can keep 2 of us fed for about $40-$50 per week if necessary because we have an Aldi's nearby.

Where was this test taken?  I know that as a student in Boston, I'm spending a lot more on food than I would back home in the burbs.  A lot of people are posting about hunting and fishing, which can't be done in the city (besides pigeons and squirrels in the parks, am-I-right?), nor is there enough room to prepare and store that much food in a small apartment.  I try to save money at the local Hispanic super market when I can.  I'm fortunate enough to have a good job while I go to school, but most of my neighborhood survives on food stamps.  They really help!

Since when was anyone expected to survive on $25 a week for food? Food stamps are a SUPPLEMENT, it's so you can buy $25 MORE worth of groceries in a week. We aren't talking quantum physics here. They should be a productive enough member of society to buy some food, and that's supposed to be an additional $25. How that got lost in translation I'll never know.

Wow. between my fiance and I we spend 80-100 a week on food. I would rather eat well then have a new car, cable tv or surf the internet.

Respect!

Note we are in Canada so prices are usually higher for produce etc...

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