Sunday, April 29, 2007

$25 Emergency Menu

A few things on my mind lately led me to put together this $25 Emergency Menu/Shopping List this afternoon. This is "healthy" in the sense of whole, nutritious, simple, old-fashioned foods. It is obviously short-run in nature since doesn't provide much variety, but in the short-run the focus is on meeting basic nutritional needs as cheaply as possible. I've devised a one-week plan for a time when money's tight and you need to stretch your dollars and make do!

The dollar amounts I assigned to each item should take taxes into account and are also the "real world" prices I experience in my everyday shopping -- not sale prices. I even rounded up, so I truly think if you walked into the grocery store with nothing but $25, you could get everything on my list and eat for a week. Not feast, mind you, but eat. And nourish your body, too.

My Emergency Menu assumes only that you have a means to cook (a pot or two and a stove or other heat source), and probably something to put your water in. There are no hidden ingredients necessary that are not on the list. There are optional or desired ingredients, but no necessary ingredients. AND, as to the healthy part, I've only included foods we eat on a regular basis. Now, on to the list:

Healthy “Emergency” Menu

$2 Oatmeal (water; optional: salt, butter, fruit, honey, milk or powdered milk) – 42 oz container; should make 30 bowls
$2 Bananas – 7 (possibly even more)
$2 Eggs – 1 dozen
$3 Beans and Rice (water; optional: salt, additional seasonings, canned tomatoes) – 1 pkg of each
$3 Apples – 7 small size
$3 Carrots – 2 lbs
$2 Bread – 1 loaf
$2 Frozen veggie – 1 pkg
$3 Peanut butter – 1 jar
$3 Water – 10 gallons

Total Cost: $25

With a few extra dollars, I would buy some salt and butter and a can of tomatoes for my beans and rice. With even more, I would buy some honey (it's one of our staples now!). If you have a way to pop it, popcorn makes a great cheap snack. You can buy a whole package of popcorn for about $1.50, which makes several bowls big enough for snacking and sharing. I also regularly make cornbread, which is very cheap per pan, but if you were having to buy everything at once it would be a bit more expensive (you need corn meal, flour, baking soda, butter, eggs, and salt; my emergency list only includes the eggs and probably not too many extra for baking versus just eating plain).

Some details about the items I included and what I buy:

I buy the old-fashioned oatmeal; just the kind regularly available in the grocery store, but not instant or quick oats. Natural, old-fashioned oatmeal. We eat it for breakfast almost every morning. We have eaten it and do eat it plain, but usually we doctor it up a little with butter, salt, honey, and some fruit. One of my favorite versions is with chunks of frozen peaches and a little vanilla and some milk or powdered milk. I also like our apple-cinnamon, banana, and blueberry versions.

Eggs: I'm thinking if you boiled them they would be easier to ration rather than scrambled. I put $2/dozen because we have local sources of good, "home grown" eggs for $1.25 or $1.50 a dozen. You can't get store-bought cage free eggs for $2 (especially including tax), but you could get some type of grocery store eggs for that, which would be okay. I do it to save money all the time. Sometimes I buy the better, more expensive eggs, but sometimes I choose to spend the money elsewhere.

Beans and rice: You can get a package of dried beans for $1 which should be 2 cups; I usually make 2 cups at a time which is a good quantity in my crock pot (regular size). It always makes us at least 6 full bowls, maybe even 8 (with rice and usually cornbread, too). Our favorites: pintos, red kidneys, navy beans, and lentils. I'm a little more uncertain about the size and cost of rice, but I feel certain you can get a bag of rice for $2. Making the rice is a great way to stretch the beans and from what I know, nutritionally beans and rice make a great combination. If you need more information about preparing the beans and rice, or the oatmeal for that matter, please let me know.

Apples: several of our stores have had lunch size apples 3/$1 regularly lately (conventionally grown, of course). This is what I based this suggestion on.

Carrots: real, fresh carrots in the produce section. I'm usually able to get them for $1/lb (sometimes even organic for that price), so I rounded up and left in some leeway here. We love to slice them into carrot sticks or chop them and boil or steam them for a great supper veggie.

Bread: you could get cheap bread for less than $2, but I wanted to make this realistic for us and what we buy. Sometimes I buy bread more expensive than this, but I commonly buy a package of 10 wheat n' honey pitas at Brookshire's for $1.50 -- so that would qualify. Or, it's not a regular purchase any more but I would do it again in a crunch -- Nature's Own offers a wheat bread that according to the label does not include high fructose corn syrup. Sometimes I see it for $1.50/loaf. So these two options are what I had in mind for the $2 I suggested.

Frozen veggie: pick your favorite. Many times the Brookshire's brand veggies will be about $1.25/package, so I rounded up and left some leeway (since some veggies are more).

Peanut butter: I've been buying the organic PB Brookshire's and Super 1 offers which is usually about $2.50/jar, but often goes on sale for $2/jar. I only buy natural, sugar-free peanut butter (and usually organic, but sometimes have to settle).

Water: We've been buying the "water by the gallon" from either the Monroe location (Hwy 165 where Brookshire's used to be; in between Albertson's and ULM -- 30 cents/gallon) or the West Monroe location (at the RV park right at the Well Road exit -- 25 cents/gallon). My figure gives you 10 gallons at 30 cents/gallon.

I enjoyed working on this. Let me know if you have questions! Praying God's blessings on you and your family....

Aleecia

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