Do you agree with me that the amount of food that goes into landfill sites each year is truly staggering? It’s not only an environmental problem. It’s also a waste of your hard-earned cash. A scientific study calculated that wasting food means that the average family puts at least $600 or more a year in the trash. Meal planning will put those money back in your pocket.
The supermarkets make it easy for us to buy food that we don’t use. Special offers only save you money if you actually consume the goods before the use-by date. A simple grocery list is the key to smart shopping and resisting unnecessary purchases. That list should be based on a realistic assessment of what you need. A meal plan will allow you to draw up a shopping list that covers those needs.
Meal planning doesn’t mean a rigid schedule where you have pasta on Monday, meat on Tuesday and fish on Friday. It means knowing what your eating habits and meal preferences are so that you only buy the perishables you’ll use and don’t get seduced by the bargains in the store.
You may want to keep a food diary for a few weeks to see what your meal pattern is. How much salad do you actually eat in a week or a month? Realistically, are those fresh vegetables going to be used up while they’re still fresh? What types of food do you regularly consign to the garbage?
If your menu includes meals with lots of fresh ingredients, it makes sense to shop more often, for maximum freshness and minimum waste. If that’s not practical, plan meals that use up perishable ingredients and can be put in the freezer. By planning meals that use seasonally available ingredients and can be frozen you can still take advantage of bulk buys when produce is at its cheapest, without worrying about waste.
The time you put into meal planning will pay you dividends. With a bit of practice it becomes second nature. You’ll know intuitively whether you need six eggs or a dozen. Meal planning means a smart shopping list, which also means you won’t find out halfway through a meal that you’re missing the vital ingredient.
Planning your meals also means you may never have to deal with those vegetables that you meant to use but that are actually rotting in your refrigerator. With the gains of fresher food, less daily hassle and extra money in your pocket, meal planning is something we should all be thinking of.
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