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9 Ways To Save Money On Food This Winter

9 Ways To Save Money On Food This Winter

The supermarket is one place where small changes can make a huge difference to your food expenses over the course of a year.

1 November 2021

Did you know that New Zealand families spend, on average, more than NZ$10,000 on food each year?

By being smart about how you shop, store, and cook, you can save money. Simply by making sure you actually eat the food you buy (instead of letting it go to waste) you could save NZ$500 each year.

The team from Love Food Hate Waste has put together their nine top tips for saving money on your food bill.

1. Use your freezer

Did you know almost everything can be frozen? If you find yourself making an extra trip to the shop just to buy milk, keep a bottle in the freezer. Is there a great two-for-one special at the supermarket? Freeze the second item until you need it. And, if you find your fruit or vegetables tend to go bad before you can eat them, partially cook them and then store them in the freezer.

2. Snap up ‘quick-sale’ items

Supermarkets often heavily discount food if it is close to its expiry or best-before date. This can be a great way to nab some bargains, as most food is fine for a few days past its best-before date. Use your senses to check the food is okay. If it has a use-by date, then you should cook it immediately or pop it in the freezer. Food can safely be frozen up until its best before date.

3. Keep your leftovers

You may think it’s not worth it to keep the last few spoonfuls of something, but it all adds up. Use your leftovers in your next meal, or freeze them until you have enough to make something larger, such as a soup or stir-fry. Leftover rice can be used for fried rice and rice pudding, while vegetables can be used in soup or stews.

4. Raid the fridge

Plan to have a meal each week where you use up any bits and pieces that are in the fridge, pantry, and freezer. The meal may turn out to be a random mixture of things, and you may need to bulk it up with a piece of toast or two, but it will save you the cost of another meal. It will also ensure that you eat your food before it goes off so you don’t end up throwing it in the bin.

5. Eat all your food

We don’t mean eat all your food at once, but rather eat all the food you buy. Are there parts of vegetables that you aren’t eating, but you could be? Broccoli and cauliflower stalks are edible and are a great way to bulk out a stir-fry or a soup. If you are peeling potatoes to make mashed potatoes, roast the peelings in the oven to make a tasty snack to keep the kids going until dinner is on the table.

6. But don’t eat too much

If you make a recipe intending to have leftovers for lunch the next day, put aside what you need for lunch before you serve the meal. This will ensure that you or your family won’t mistakenly eat what you have planned to save.

7. Cook once, eat twice

If you buy a whole chicken or a roast, plan to get two meals out of it. For the second meal, shred the remaining meat and use it in a frittata, croquettes, or savoury bread pudding. Keep the carcass or the bones, and simmer with them vegetable scraps to make your own stock.

8. Make the most of your mince

Make your mince go further by bulking it out with other ingredients. If you’re making a bolognese or burritos you can add in grated carrots or courgettes, chopped celery or mushrooms, or a tin of beans or lentils. This is a great way to use up vegetables that may have gone limp. If you are making meatballs or rissoles, adding breadcrumbs means you’ll get more and will help them keep their shape.

9. Sort out your storage

It’s important that you put your food in the right place so that it doesn’t spoil. Bread should be kept in the fridge or freezer so it doesn’t grow mould. Most apples and other fruit should be kept in the fridge, with just a small selection in the fruit bowl – but keep them away from bananas! Potatoes and onions shouldn’t be stored next to each other as they will both go off faster.

First published 26 April 2018

Reproduced with permission by Love Food Hate Waste.

JUNO does not contain financial advice as defined by the Financial Advisers Act 2008. Consult a suitably qualified financial adviser before making investment decisions. This story reflects the views of the contributor only. Content comes from sources that JUNO considers accurate, but we do not guarantee that the content is accurate. Charts are visually indicative only.

Informed Investor's content comes from sources that Informed Investor magazine considers accurate, but we do not guarantee its accuracy. Charts in Informed Investor are visually indicative, not exact. The content of Informed Investor is intended as general information only, and you use it at your own risk.

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