Posts Tagged ‘frugality’

Extreme Frugality

April 13th, 2008

What’s the most extremely frugal thing you  do?   A man I know lives on a corner and he parks his car on the street and backs the car around the corner instead of going straight because it wears his tires out just slightly less than pulling a U-turn and then taking a right handed turn.  I am insanely anal about turning off lights and computer monitors around our house (we have two).  I also like to keep “fart fans” on as short as possible in the bathroom (and wish I simply had windows upstairs, though the basement doesn’t need one in the bathroom).

Tonight we bought 30 bags of goldfish crackers at the grocery store because they were on special and that was the limit.  They cost us fifty cents each and so we spent fifteen dollars on enough goldfish crackers to last quite a bit of time.  Our daughters like them and the big containers can’t compete with that per-bag price.

So… what is the most extreme frugal behavior you practice?  Have you done anything above normal like buy thirty bags of goldfish crackers?

Pantry Survivor: Introduction And Two Days

February 12th, 2008

Organized PantryMy wife and sister came up with the idea of the Pantry Survivor competition wherein they would attempt to go to the store once in an entire week (at the beginning of the ‘stunt’) and then combine that with whatever was already stashed in the pantry to create meals for the family for as long as possible.  The super-challenge in all of this is that it is four adults and two children (plus one on the way – no, not us, my sister).  As previously stated somewhere my sister and her husband are staying with us until they can move into a new condo they’re buying.  So the food needs to feed the whole family and last as long as possible until they just have to go to the store.  The competition stands to see what they can create, what they can make stretch, and what they can concoct out of substitutes as needed.

The first step was to organize the pantry and make sure that there was an inventory.  My sister handled this, which was good because we had a pretty crazy pantry.  I unfortunately only have pictures of the post-organizing results.  My sister, whom I will refer to as ‘Preggers’, had a pad of paper and listed item-by-item what was in the pantry and fridge so that when she and my wife went to the store they could only buy what was needed for some basic meal preparation.  Preggers is actually a great cook, as is my wife, so this isn’t a huge challenge because they have a lot of ideas between the two of them.  The challenge is that they had to have enough of a plan to have bought enough food at the store to complement what we already had to make up enough meals to last a targeted ten days with one meal having company of another family of three.

PorkDay One:  Smoked Pork ‘Que
Alton Brown of the food network enticed me to put together my own frugal smoker last year and so we smoke meat every couple months.  This last week we smoked some Pork Butt and it has been a cheap way to add protein to salads, sandwiches, and in this case, a barbecue pork sandwich.  I have directions and recipes for those who are interested – just shoot me an email to randy@watchmymoneymaker.com.

Chicken Pot Pie FillingDay Two: Chicken Pot Pie a la ‘Preggers’
My sister made a tasty variation on chicken pot pie, but instead of making an actual pie, she made a chicken soup type dish and some tasty, tasty crust rounds with a cookie cutter. You placed the soup in the bowl and garnished them with the crust ‘cookies’ (not sweet, but oh, so tasty. Have you noticed I think they’re tasty?).  Preggers did a great job with this dish, but since she made it up I have no recipe.  It did contain white pearl onions which are one of my favorite soup ingredients.

By the time anyone reads this we’ll be on day three with a week left to go.  I don’t know what we’ll run out of, but I’ll post the results as we go through the experience.  I challenge you to try the same and see if you can clear out any old ‘stuff’ that you have in your pantry to keep your budget frugal, and your frugal budget interesting in the kitchen.

Coming Soon To A Blog Near You!

February 6th, 2008

Next week my wife and my sister are going to play ‘Pantry Survivor!”  It won’t be as funny as Lost-Vivor, but it will be educational.  The goal is to buy a very minimal amount of produce and staple type items and empty our pantry of some of the junk that it has in it.  Their goal is to feed my family and my sister and brother-in-law (who are temporarily staying with us until their condo purchase goes through) for the week on about $75.00.  I don’t think it will be hard, but it will be amusing to see what happens.  I plan on posting pictures throughout the week of meals created and guesstimating their cost.

Good Cof, Bad Cof

January 28th, 2008

Yesterday I spent approximately fifteen dollars on coffee.  An excessive amount, I know.  But it was an experiment.  I’m a coffee snob – not a Starbucks coffee snob, but a roast-your-own-beans if you can (I can’t because my roaster died and I haven’t had it repaired yet) type of coffee snob.  So I decided to test out the difference between the cheap 24 ounces for $7.99 coffee verses the $11.99/pound freshly roasted stuff at my local Whole Foods.  Here’s my dilemma: I, as a snob, need to figure out the cheapest way to consume high quality, tasty coffee.  Here’s what I’ve come up with so far:

  •  Cheap coffee always tastes bad to me
  • Starbucks coffee usually tastes funky to me (burninated) so its out
  • The cheaper good stuff at whole foods is still $10.00 a pound
  • Yes, I can taste a significant difference between a fresh roast and a not-so-fresh roast
  • I like medium roast coffees the best
  • I refuse to do various things to thin out the coffee ground usage: if you’re going to have coffee make sure it isn’t garbage.  If you’re looking for cheap caffeine go with tea – it’ll still taste good, but not have nastiness like cheap coffee.
  • I need to fix my roaster because then the beans can be had for several dollars a pound instead of 12 dollars a pound
  • I do like Peet’s coffee, but it is as expensive, or more expensive than Starbucks

What things do you do to make sure you get a little luxury, but at a frugal price?  Do you let yourself have a little luxury?  When you go to the store do you wrestle with these things?  I tend not to, but I find that when I have to buy coffee (which I actually drink sparingly contrary to what this post may imply) I convince myself to spend more every time.  My expensive/cheap experiment proved again to me that I can taste a difference and prefer the good stuff.  Help!

Dead (Bulb) Man Walking

January 24th, 2008

Save a dollar in electricity each day (which is a number I’ve totally made up because there are too many variables involved) and take a walk through your house/abode before leaving it.  Check for lights on, TV’s on, VCR/DVD players on and most importaly stove burners and appliances that might cause a fire.

I frequently find lights abandoned in the ‘on’ position and left to consume watts that I’d prefer to not consume.  A quick walk down the hallway can add up.  Of course if you leave compact fluorescent bulbs on all day long you’ll save a lot in your electricity leak ;)

Va-Cash-ion

January 22nd, 2008

Mt. St. Helens SmolderingI arrived back from the West coast today at the Denver International Airport around 2:30.   A family trip mixed with a vacation that was all cash based.  We had to sell some stuff online and cash in some frequent flyer miles to get the whole family there, but it cost us what we could afford to go on the trip.  A vacation like this is something I would have scoffed at just a year ago simply because our finances were such a jumbled mess.  We got to spend some time with family and with that family we got to go see some beautiful wildlife – and Mt. St. Helens which erupted the weekend before we visited it.

iPhone picture of crab legsWe ate some stellar food at the Red Rooster Bakery, Mo’s Chowder, and contributed cash into the family’s grocery budget to eat crab [we had a connection that got us the crab at dirt cheap prices like $4.00/pound for huge legs], pork crown roast, and had a fantastic time.  The whole time was fun, low stress, and since it was all with money we had in the bank I had no fears of what the next month’s statements would look like.  This trip was a mix of frugality where needed and some splurging in places to make sure that some coastal events were maximized.  Let’s face it, sea food at restaurants is just expensive (barring Long John Silver’s and such).

Red Rooster Bakery ItemsTo her credit, my wife did a great job of planning out the trip, finding great airline deals,finding a hotel that was low cost, but with great amenities for us in Newport, OR.  What sites do you use to make sure you’re getting the best deal on trips, travel and vacation?  I’d love to be able to add to resources she has [which I'll make sure to get to post here].

How to Practice Safe Socks

November 27th, 2007

As I was putting on my socks this morning I had a recollection of a conversation I overheard one day when I was traveling through LAX airport. It was a conversation that caught me off guard but one that has stuck with me and now as a frugal blogger is relevant, but funny.

The Setup

I was in a terminal at LAX and I was waiting to get on a flight to head to Reno, NV, which was the closest airport to home at the time. I was sitting there probably tired since that’s usually the way airports make me feel when I saw a tall cowboy hat wearing man and his son walk past us, and then curve around to some seats behind us. I didn’t think much of their sitting there at the time and minded my own business. I try not to eaves drop too much lest I make it a habit or find out things I ought not to know. When you work around confidentiality long enough you begin to learn that knowing the dirt isn’t useful very often because its a liability.

However, I was at once awakened by the sound of the father chewing out his son for taking off his socks and boots. The son was scolded and told to put his socks and boots back on. What happened next is the part that has stuck in my mind over and over replaying to my own private comedy theater: the father scolded the son for putting his socks on the wrong way. Not the wrong foot, not inside out, not on his hands… but the wrong way. You see, there is a frugal way to put your socks on.

The correct method to put your socks on helps preserve the sock, make application to the foot simpler, and saves cowboy daddy hundreds of dollars in socks, I’m sure. To correctly apply the sock you must use your thumbs on the inside of the sock and roll it down into a very short tube in contrast to the long tube of a tube sock. You then put your toes into the small cup that you have created and slowly pull the sock up your leg unrolling the tube as you go. This serves two purposes: 1) It allows you to be a perfectionist about how your sock goes onto your foot and 2) it preserves the elastic bands in the sock so as to allow the sock to give you decades of good service. Assuming that a growing boy, which in this case was the case, wears the same size sock for decades.

I find this amusing, but do you think this is great frugality, normal for you, or super cheap?

Cheap Genes

November 21st, 2007

Today I ran into Target to buy some new jeans.  My wife was telling me to wait until Friday for the ‘black’ deals.  However, I needed new jeans and I wasn’t going to be fiddling with my pants (I forgot belts on this trip and I need jeans anyway).  I ran in and looked at the rack and there before my eyes was a sale tag telling me that the jeans were on sale for $14.99 USD.  Awesome!  I got a brand I know for a price I like.

I used to buy my pants at Old Navy but you won’t find the style I like at Old Navy any more.  Apparently in my old age of thirty million I’m out of fashion.  So I bought the low priced jeans that look like I need and fit me due to the last year’s weight loss.  Cheap?  Not really.  Frugal – you betcha.