After seeing this site someone admitted they (a couple) spend $900 a month on groceries. I was shocked! I'd forgotten how it can get away from you. I spend $150.00 and that includes laundry soap and some other non-food items. If I were really going for bragging rights, I'd be more careful about extracting toothpaste and dish soap from the receipts.
The way this program keeps costs low is you buy a particular set of 'supplies' and that's all. If you're always trying new recipes, you're buying new ingredients that don't get used up. That's expensive waste. Here I make the same dishes over and over and get the chance to really perfect them to my taste. So cheap doesn't mean I sacrifice taste at all.
It's fun to figure out the actual cost of frugal cooking. My son was quite taken with my 'flavorful' canned peaches. When I told him it takes three hours to can 14 jars, he immediately did the math and concluded I was saving enough that it was equivalent to earning a decent hourly wage. Bingo!
Beet & Bean Stew 13 servings cost $8.00 to make. That's $.60 a serving! 1 lb. kidney Beans $2.00 | ![]() |
Yogurt | ![]() |
I put 3 cups in 2 liters of water to make a batch of yogurt.
$2.40 for 2 liters. That's $1.20 a liter of yogurt!
This
doesn't mean we live on cheap yogurt. The milk was produced by
carbon-intensive dairy farming. That big bag of powder lasts a long time! And no plastic tubs to figure out what to do with. Ready to make some?

My conclusion is that even if I add my labour to the ingredients cost, $40 worth of store foods cost me $27.00 to make at home. This means my labour is actually worth more like $31.00, so I'm 'earning' nearly $14.00 per hour.
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