• CathyBikesBook@piefed.zip
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    5 天前

    I try to keep it under 200 USD. Single person so it’s a bit easier. Buy meat and non perishable food in bulk when I can. Things like milk get bought sooner.

  • duelistsage@sh.itjust.works
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    6 天前

    Less than $100 just to feed myself.

    I haven’t eaten at a restaurant in years and most of my meals are cooked by me using the cheapest ingredients I can tolerate.

  • Goldholz @lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    7 天前

    About 400€ sometimes for special occassions i go obove it but not much. Highest is about 500€ i spend on food in a month and that was due to a BBQ party.

    100€ each week is my set limit for groceries For me and my partner

  • Pirasp@lemmy.world
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    9 天前

    Currently it’s about 160€ per month. One person in Germany. Potatoes and air fryers are a godsend

    • Perspectivist@feddit.ukOP
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      9 天前

      Potatoes and air fryers are a godsend

      I could live off french fries and chicken wings for the rest of my life and convince myself it’s healthy because I cook them without fat.

  • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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    9 天前

    $320USD/mo. for healthy, organic food for one person. It could be less, maybe 75% of that. I’ve been considering making changes, but I like what I like.

    I’m going grocery shopping today, in a couple of hours, as it happens. I shop once per week.

    • wjs018@piefed.social
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      8 天前

      This isn’t that far away from mine for two people: ~$600-$700 per month in a HCOL area and doing most of the cooking myself as well. I have found that sizing up a recipe for more people is only a marginal increase in cost. So, cooking for two is not just double that of cooking for one, but less.

      • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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        8 天前

        Oh yeah. I made a YT video recently about money-saving tips, and one of the things I do is look at restaurants that have family-sized meals that they offer to-go. This works really well for pasta and rice, but I can get six meals for the cost of a few dollars each, package up five of them, and then I have five really yummy lunches for my in office days when I go in.

    • bridgeburner@lemmy.world
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      9 天前

      Jeez, are groceries really that expensive in the US? For me in germany I can get groceries for 2-3 month with this money.

      • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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        9 天前

        They are. Luckily I cook nearly all of my own meals, or the bills would be way, way worse.

        My grocery bill is well more than double what it was before 2020. Both ruling parties here refuse to address the corporate greed in any meaningful way, so each individual has to make the best choices they can for themselves.

      • howl2@lemmy.zip
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        8 天前

        They are very high yes, partly because they have climbed 25~50% in recent years. I cook most of our food for 3.5 people, shopping at the least expensive store in the area, making a wide range of things but mostly mid to lower cost ingredients. Eat out about once a week, never high priced places. Typically spend around 800/mo.

  • SethranKada@lemmy.ca
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    9 天前

    $40 (CAD) / Day

    A bit expensive, but I’m both autistic and rather picky. I’m paying for my mental health there, not just food

    Generally I’ll spend $15 on breakfast, $3 on a waterbottle at work, $20 for lunch, and sometimes I’ll buy those discounted meals made with offcuts and leftovers from Sobey’s. Around $10 - $15.

    On my days off I eat whatever I have available in my pantry when I remember to eat.

    • homes@piefed.world
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      8 天前

      why don’t you prepare more of your food? it allows you maximum control and saves tons of money. plus, it’s a lot easier than it might first appear.

      • SethranKada@lemmy.ca
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        8 天前

        I pay extra so I don’t have to do that. Carrying a waterbottle and a lunchbox was a significant contributor to my negative mental health as a teenager, and my life is way more pleasant without them.

        In a similar vein, eating food that I don’t want to eat is very stressful for me, and I generally can’t know what I want to eat more than a couple of hours in advance. So eating food I prepared myself is usually rather disappointing.

        Third, food waste. I never eat the same meal more than once a week if I can help it. That means that, when I buy a tomato, I end up only using a single slice and letting the rest rot in the fridge because there really aren’t all that many things I like that have tomatoes. The same goes for most ingredients. If I don’t use it within 4 hours, I may as well toss it, cause im never going to eat it.

        I’ve tested out various ways of eating, and eating out often is cheaper compared to constantly re-buying ingredients for meals I’m not going to eat.

    • polotype@lemmy.ml
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      7 天前

      You said you didn’t want to carry around a water bottle, what about a cup/mug, there’s surely a waterfountain at your workplace and saving 3$ a day is like ≈90$ a month (though if you spend a thou a month on food, 90 might not be significant ;) )

      • SethranKada@lemmy.ca
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        7 天前

        Eh, I haven’t tried it in a while. I’ll leave a waterbottle at work and try it out tomorrow. Your right that it will save some, and the tap water here isn’t that bad.

        Somehow I got it in my head that I have to carry it back and forth all the time. Not sure how that came to be.

          • SethranKada@lemmy.ca
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            4 天前

            Tried it out the last couple days. Works great. The tap water here is apparently almost as good as my preferred bottled water brand. Looks like I’m saving $3 a day, thanks

        • polotype@lemmy.ml
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          7 天前

          Well, habits work in misterious ways, sometimes you’ll desperately be trying to get one into your life and fail whatever you try, and sometimes you get savagely jumped by one and can’t get rid of it

  • neidu3@sh.itjust.worksM
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    9 天前

    Food alone? Varies, but around 1000-2000 EUR equivalent. Sometimes more, such as during holidays.

    Family of 6, Norway.

    • Bronzie@sh.itjust.works
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      8 天前

      I’ll tag on you comment as it’s the same country:

      About 10-12k NOK (so about 1000€) for a family of four.
      Could probably reduce, but it’s important for us that the kids have access to healthy food that they like.
      Take-out not included, which we do once or twice a month. Probably around 100-120 € there.
      Tobacco for me is probably another 200 €. I should probably quit snusing…

  • Level9831@lemmy.world
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    8 天前

    I spend about $200/month just for myself. I cook breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Take lunch with me to work everyday. I eat very very plain food (ie rice and chicken every day). With grocery prices up, I cut out a lot from my diet to keep around $200/month. No beef, no fresh fish, no fruits, no yogurt/kefir.

    Meat: chicken, turkey, tuna fish, eggs and egg whites Veggies: kale, collard green, frozen veggies, tomatoes Carbs: rice, pasta, sweet potato, canned beans, peanut butter, granola bars, cereal Fruit: I admit I bought a bag of apples recently Dairy: milk, mozzarella cheese

    I go to the gym regularly and drink 1-2 protein shakes per day.

    Kind of embarrassing that I live on such a restricted boring diet, but at least I cook for myself, stay within budget, and stay away from processed foods/ snacks.

    • polotype@lemmy.ml
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      7 天前

      Good for you ! But the fact that buying a bag of apples is a “frivolous”(that’s not the word but you get what i mean) thing is simply outrageous -_-

  • s3rvant@lemmy.ml
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    8 天前

    I’m paid bi-weekly with $1,200 USD going toward groceries from each paycheck

    Granted we’re a very large family though inflation these past few years hasn’t helped

    We live in central NC, USA

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    9 天前

    Left to my own devices it’d be about $100/month.

    Rice, beans, pasta, peanut butter, oatmeal, and then whatever fruit and vegetables are cheap.

    With the social life included, there’s more expenses. Did dinner out last week for $60 (a nice local Thai place). Ordered a pizza with a friend who was feeling down and watched Star Trek together for like $30.

    Other non-rice meals with my partner can also be more expensive. We air-fried up some potatoes and vegan “meat” last night and it was good.

    There’s an app called “too good to go” that lets you get cheap food near the end of day. It’s stuff the restaurant or grocery was going to have to throw out. Sometimes you get like four slices of pizza for $4, or a platter of Korean food for $6. Seems good and not enshittified yet.

    I’m in NYC, for context.

      • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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        8 天前

        It helps that I’m not a picky or demanding eater. I make a cup of rice in my rice cooker, get some canned beans, and throw in a random assortment of spices and/or condiments. Not afraid to try some weird combinations.

    • Nomorereddit@lemmy.today
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      8 天前

      Where is your protein? Peanut butter and beans are mediocre to okay for protein.

      Edit: numbers dont lie

      Protein per 100 kcals , v egetarian Sources, food, Protein::

      Seitan (wheat protein) 20–24 g Tempeh 17–19 g Tofu (firm) 11–13 g Lentils (cooked) 8–9 g Black beans / chickpeas (cooked) 6–7 g Edamame 10–11 g Greek yogurt, nonfat 15–17 g Cottage cheese, low-fat 12–14 g Quinoa (cooked) 3–4 g Peanuts / peanut butter 3–4 g Almonds 3–4 g

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        8 天前

        TF would you have them eating for protein? Hummus? Gruel? Peanut butter and beans are some of the best proteins on earth pound for pound. I say this as a meat eater.

        • Nomorereddit@lemmy.today
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          8 天前

          Tf is that you wrong, here numbers:

          Protein per 100 kcals of Food & Protein-

          White fish / tuna 23–34 g Protein powder 13–20 g Chicken breast 14–15 g 90/10 ground beef 8–9 g Peanut butter 3–4 g

          (Edit) Vegetarian options here: Protein per 100 kcals , v egetarian Sources, food, Protein-

          Seitan (wheat protein) 20–24 g Tempeh 17–19 g Tofu (firm) 11–13 g Lentils (cooked) 8–9 g Black beans / chickpeas (cooked) 6–7 g Edamame 10–11 g Greek yogurt, nonfat 15–17 g Cottage cheese, low-fat 12–14 g Quinoa (cooked) 3–4 g Peanuts / peanut butter 3–4 g Almonds 3–4 g

        • hector@lemmy.today
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          8 天前

          I think plant proteins are lacking in something. I’m sympathetic to vegitarianism, but their brains shrink like 7% or something after a number of years it’s been reported.

          • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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            8 天前

            I’m gonna need to see some sources on that one. I seriously doubt that any credible studies have shown anything of the sort.

            • Slatlun@lemmy.ml
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              8 天前

              I’ll save the nonsense response you would’ve gotten from the person who says “something like 7%” without a source.

              The credible studies say that simply cutting meat can cause some deficiencies like iron and b12 that you have to be mindful of. If not, there are negative reproductions on things like cognitive ability.

              People who can’t fathom vegetarianism read that and think “vegetarians brains shrink” instead of “vegetarians know this and adjust their diet to maximize the missing stuff (or take supplements)”

            • hector@lemmy.today
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              8 天前

              It was reported in the newspapers maybe 15 years back. Believe the study, or no, I don’t give a fuck.

      • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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        8 天前

        I’ve been feeling okay on the beans, peanut butter, and sometimes peas.

        If you have cheap vegetarian options I’m open to recommendations

        • straycatstrut@discuss.tchncs.de
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          8 天前

          Lentils are a complete protein, along with quinoa (one can be allergic to the coating on raw quinoa, wash thoroughly and test your compatibility carefully. I’m allergic.). Pea protein is great, my fave fake meat is pea protein based rather than soy. Rice balances out beans (black beans if possible) to make a complete protein, it’s no accident that combo is standard in many latino dishes. Obviously tofu, it’s just more work to prepare especially if it’s only 1 or 2 ppl.

          Slow cookers are great, most veggie dishes are ~4 hrs since no need for meat safety, you can make a billion things and Tupperware it for 6-8 meals. Celery works great as a natural salt, stands the heat and gives a dish some character (mince it). Half a jalapeno minced up brings nice fire to veggie dishes, goes well with chopped green onions which is also friendly to many dishes.

        • Nomorereddit@lemmy.today
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          8 天前

          Got you.

          Protein per 100 kcals , v egetarian Sources, food, Protein-

          Seitan (wheat protein) 20–24 g Tempeh 17–19 g Tofu (firm) 11–13 g Lentils (cooked) 8–9 g Black beans / chickpeas (cooked) 6–7 g Edamame 10–11 g Greek yogurt, nonfat 15–17 g Cottage cheese, low-fat 12–14 g Quinoa (cooked) 3–4 g Peanuts / peanut butter 3–4 g Almonds 3–4 g

  • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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    8 天前

    Single person, I probably could get by on $150 a month, but I eat out frequently, so I spend about $300 a month. This is in San Diego.