Save money with monthly meal planning

Save money with monthly meal planning

Save money with monthly meal planning

It’s 5 o’clock pm. Supper time snuck upon us. And once again, we are unprepared.

The dinner hour can transform a confident, capable mom into a fearful refugee; hunted by a hungry pack of children. She hides in the pantry, hoping they’ll forget she is there and forage crumbs left under the table from lunch.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

Consider the payoff of planning out a month’s worth of menus. It sounds complicated, but I promise it’ll free up your overloaded mind.

Poor planning = impulse purchases; impulse purchases = overspending. Neither produces peace of mind.

For me, a homeschooling mom with chronic health issues, having no plan felt unnecessarily stressful. Coming up with random “meals” at 6 o’clock, when everyone is hungry and nothing is defrosted.

I shop decisively with a list. However, by not planning for the in-between weeks, I’d wind up running to the store for one thing.

Except – you know where this is going- that one gallon of milk or loaf of bread cost $50. Because along the way, you might see things on sale; fresh cherry turnovers, impulse purchases, fresh cherry turnovers…you get the idea.

One thing” became expensive.

 

meal planning quotes

 

Before you get started, make an inventory of what you already have!

That one change alone saves wasted money. I created a free PDF printable for to help you – click here:  How To Do A Freezer Inventory

Meal planning makes all the difference for a busy mom between chaos and confidence.

Print off a blank meal plan from useful places such as Life as Mom and glean ideas from Handmade in the Heartland . If you can carve out a bit of time without interruptions, this process will become second nature and move quickly.

Gather cookbooks, any loose recipes pulled from magazines, etc., and let’s do this!

 

Monthly meal planning tips

Study the calendar before writing a meal plan.

Coordinate future engagements; on busier days plan for crockpot meals, or other easy fixings.

Compare the blank meal plan and all those recipes; fill in each date with a suitable (time-appropriate) meal idea. At the same time, create a grocery list on another sheet.

Check the cupboards to see what is already on hand. It is helpful to plan around things you need to use up.

Account for nights when you won’t need dinner at all. There are bound to be leftovers or sick days or times when plans change.

No worries! The ingredients can be shifted to the next month if imperishable, and many perishable items can simply be frozen. (Here is s sample of how I use frozen meatballs)

 

meal planning quotes

 

How do you plan a menu for a month?

How I saved money, exactly, with monthly meal planning:

I shopped at Aldi’s for the first round (don’t forget to bring your own grocery bags), and then filled in everything they didn’t carry at Wal-Mart.

It took about two hours to plan, and about three hours to shop and put it all away (total, both stores). Five hours to stock up for five weeks!

I spent a total of $142.03 at Wal-Mart and $198.35  at Aldi.  That is a total of $340.38 for a family of four, for five weeks (2016 prices including personal items and household things like laundry soap)!

I also put aside $60 for estimated produce  still needed. Another $50 is set aside for unforeseen necessities (shampoo, dishwasher detergent, etc.) So the grand official total will be technically $450.38. *** (I already had 5 lbs of ground beef, and 2 lbs chicken in the freezer)

Granted, this number will be different for everyone, dependent on geographic location and what is already in the cupboard, company coming, and a million other factors.

I am only sharing to give you an example of what can be done.

I’d actually like to lower this further. Based on informal surveying of other women in my world, this is a nice start! Lunches and snacks (if all goes well) should be included. Next month? I will challenge myself even more, as I learn to increase real foods.

Don’t despair if you spend way more than this, or could only dream of having that much to spend. We are all in different places, and trust me…we’ve had many times when I could only imagine having a decent food budget.

Take one step today, just one step. Next month add another, in a year’s time the situation could be much improved.

Give it a try to plan a little more and spend a little less.

Let’s do this together…

 

Meal planning resources you might enjoy:

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3 Comments

  1. Ahh, just looked at this. (Your blogs sit in my inbox until I have uninterrupted time to read them, usually several at a time:-) Anyway, December has been a terrible month for meal planning. However, we are doing a ’30 days of real food’ challenge in January…which should be a blast (scary?) with two young ones. Meal planing and prep will either make or break our challenge! I’ll let you know which way it ends up…wish us luck! We’re not brave enough to commit to longer than 30 days, but we’re hopeful that if we can make it through 30 days, we’ll have set some new habits that last.

    1. Morgan I look forward to hearing how your 30 days go! That will be a challenge worth investing in. Please keep me posted! And, thanks for your sweet words about reading my blog. You made my day

  2. A lot of marketers always skip point #1 in their marketing strategies. A strategy without a plan is as good as none.

    With a plan/goal/objective, you get to measure your results.

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