Kroger Mega Sale 10/28/09 – 11/3/09

October 28, 2009

I checked their site this morning and it just hit Houston – sounds like a hurricane, but it is really good.  And there’s an even better sale on Thursday.   I need to get more can goods and looks like there are several options.   I’ve gotta run this morning and will post more later.   If any of you find any sites that match up these sales in Houston with coupons, please post in my comments.  Looks like I can’t wait for the Grocery Game list on this sale.

Thanks and happy shopping.

Update to post:  I’ll edit and add links here that help with matchups -

http://www.hotcouponworld.com/forums/kroger-texas-louisiana/284504-kroger-tx-la-mega-ad-10-28-11-3-a.html

http://www.stretchingabuckblog.com/2009/10/kroger-unadvertised-mega-event-match.html

http://www.frugalcouponliving.com/2009/10/25/my-kroger-se-deals-1025-1031/

Here’s what I plan to get and the matched coupons s/ insert dates.  I’ll keep updating as I clip.

  • Bumble tuna with $.55 from ss 9/13/09
  • Carnation milk with $55/2 ss 9/27/09
  • Tombstone pizza with $1.50.2 ss 9/27/09
  • Hormel Chili – $2.00 / 3 ss 10/18/09
  • Land O Lakes butter – $.40 ss10/18/09
  • Advil cold – $1.00  rp 9/13/09
  • Advil PM – $1.00 rp 9/13/09
  • Uncle Ben’s – $1/3 RP 9/13/09
  • Delmonte fruit  or veggie – $1/5 rp 9/20/09
  • gatorade and propel – check for tearpads
  • Kleenex $50 SS10/04/09
  • Kotex $2.oo/2 ss 10/04/09
  • Heinz Ketsup $.75 ss 10/04/09
  • Pace salsa – $.50 ss 8/30/09
  • Smart Soure Butter blend $1 RP 10/18/09
  • OreIda fries $1 ss 10/25/09
  • Colgate Toothpaste $1 ss10/25/09
  • Pepperidge farm frozen bread – $.40 ss 10/04/09
  • Ghirardelli Brownies (check this:
  • Ghirardelli Brownie Mix, Any – Found Inside Product $1.00/3 x12/31/09 Inside Package
  • Ghirardelli Brownie Mix, Any – Found On Product, White Peelie $1.00/2 x12/31/09 Peelie

Quaker Chewy Granola Bars – $1.49/ea
Use $$0.75/2 in 10/11 Red Plum or

I’m not sure if these are in the 10 item mega sale.  I saw these items on posts for other parts of the country.  Check your Kroger store to make sure.  They were not in my ad, but many times the ad does not include all the items.  Just in case, I’m taking these coupons”

  • Nestle Toll House Morsels – $1.99/ea
    Use $0.50/1 in 9/13 Red Plum insert
    Final Price = $0.99-1.49/ea
  • Zesta Saltine Crackers – $0.99/each (no coupon)
  • Melitta Coffee Filters (#2 or #4 cone, 100ct) – $3/ea
    Use $1/1 here
    Final Price = $1.50

According to Stretching a Buck: “Dole Mandarin Oranges and Tropical Fruit (larger cans) – $1/ea
Note: Mandarin Oranges (both large and small cans) are generating a $0.50 off your next purchase Catalina. I buy these every week and have received Cats for the last 3 weeks. I’m unsure of the specifics, but I bought 10 large cans tonight and received 3- $0.50 Catalina coupons.”


Developing a meal plan AFTER returning from the grocery store

October 25, 2009

Most of us are taught the most economical way (I’ll call this ” Plan A”) to plan our meals is to make menu, then a list and get the items you need for the week in one trip to the grocery store.  Eat before you shop so you don’t impulse buy and only purchase the items on your list.  Also limit your shopping trips to once a week b/c studies have shown that the more trips you make, the more impulse items you purchase.  Sound familiar???

I no longer buy into this school of thought.  We’re not victims and we can enter the grocery store and leave without impulse items.  Time to grow up.  “But I have my kids and they’ll want this or that.”  Again, they are not victims and maybe it is time for them to learn shopping self-discipline.  It will bode well for them later in life.  Now that we’ve worked past that… here’s a post and detailed example of how I grocery clearance shop and plan a menu around these items.

Disclaimer:  Plan A is probably the most time efficient.  If you find Plan A works best for you, then power to you.   If time is scarce for you, then this may be the best plan.  When I was working full-time with little kids, it was the best plan.  However, many women who have the time, claim they don’t.  They are just putting their extra time in different places.  The different place may be better, or it may need to be reevaluated.  For example, if you have credit card debt and use your extra time to browse sales at Marshalls, TJ Max, Target, Old Navy, Ross, etc; then maybe you should examine if browsing grocery stores (and cooking) instead would be a better use of your family’s resources.  Would your family prefer that marked down pillow from TJ Max or a nice homemade pot of spaghetti / meat sauce?   That is a decision for you and your husband.  I’m just providing a different perspective for you to consider.  Get a cup of coffee, sit back and enjoy… this is a wordy post.

Rather than make my plan and get the items, I shop clearance items and then develop a plan.  I probably plan my menu using this method at least 50% of the time.  Other times I prepare food from my freezer, coupon related items or warehouse items. Since my pantry is stocked (I coupon and warehouse shop for pantry items) and I’ve learned to improvise, I can make most dishes if I have the basic fresh ingredients.  For example, if I have meat – I’m always ready to make gumbo, pasta casseroles, soups, enchiladas, meat loaf, chinese fried rice, etc.  Before I go into how to make a menu from items you randomly bring home, let me explain how I shop for clearance items.

First of all, I know my local grocery stores very well.  I shop each for specific categories of clearance items.  If I’m near a certain store and have an extra five minutes, I’ll swing in and check for loss leaders and clearance items.   Your local stores will be different, but if you know their “personality” you can modify your shopping to maximize savings.   My favorite clearance / loss leader stores are:

  • Randall’s for meat and dairy.  I usually shop Randall’s  on Saturday mid-morning, so the butcher has had time to set out any reduced price meat.  When I enter the store, my first stop is the meat section.  I only purchase meat if it is less than $2 a pound.  At Randall’s I’m able to get premium meats for this price.  They key is that they have to be cooked quickly – more on that below.  My second stop is dairy.  I usually find a gallon of organic milk 50% off.  The expiration date is typically one to two days out.  But it rarely is bad at this date and usually lasts an extra day or so; which is plenty of time for our family to finish a gallon.  I also get sour cream and cheese 50% off.
  • Kroger’s for produce.  My Kroger marks down bags of potatoes to 99 cents.  It is amazing how many bags I’ve gotten for almost nothing.  I can also negotiate with the produce manager if I’m there when they are cleaning out fruit.  If they have a box of bruised apples, I’ll ask to purchase them by the bag for 99 cents.  I’ve had many apple pies with these jewels.  Once I got a ton of lemons and we had delicious homemade lemonade for pennies. I also check Kroger’s clearance table.  I’ve found really cheap gourmet salad dressing, flashlights, organic jasmine rice… the list goes on.   My local Kroger’s has better prices on table clearance items than Randall’s.  Not sure why, but my Randall’s has lousy prices on the table clearance items, and they don’t offer their damaged produce at clearance prices.    I have not seen dairy marked down at my Kroger’s.  They do mark down meat, but don’t get near as low as Randall’s meat markdowns.   Kroger’s has great deals on clearance breads, but I avoid these since we make our own.
  • HEB.  I live near a small, dirty, local HEB Pantry.   This small store carries many of the Central Market products, but does not have the customer base that buys Central Market overpriced gourmet junk.  I love to buy gourmet junk for pennies:).  Since these products sit too long on their shelves, they put them in the mark down buggy.  I’ve purchased Italian gourmet coffee, organic almonds, organic brown sugar, and the list goes on.   If I bought these full price at Central Market, it would have cost a fortune, but I paid a small fraction of these prices.  My HEB also has organic milk marked down to $1 on a regular basis; again they don’t have the customer base demanding $6 gallons of milk.

When I’m shopping meats, I think about my day.  Do I have time to prepare these right away?  Will we be home this week to eat pre-prepared dishes?  Do I have room in my freezer?  Do I have ingredients to make ___ out of an item?

If my afternoon is clear and there’s a few great finds, I’ll come home and start cooking.  If I find whole chicken roasters, they are easy to pop in the oven and serve for lunch that day.  Then any leftover chicken can be transformed into other dishes within the next couple of days.  If I find great deals on ground beef, I’m make preformed patties and individually freeze on a cookie sheet, then place in a freezer baggie for later.  Or I’ll make a meatloaf, chili, meat pasta sauce or meatballs.  If it is steak, I’ll remove meat from the bone, and boil the bones for broth.  Then I’ll slice the meat into strips; season and dredge in cornstarch and brown in a thin layer of oil.  You can make southern dishes (steak fingers with gravy), Italian steak soup or chinese (Mongolian beef) with this simple prepared meat that is waiting in your fridge.

Yesterday I went to Randalls and my receipt indicated I saved 60%.  I didn’t use any manufacturer coupons.  I spent $25.79 which was my week’s grocery expense.  Last weekend Dave hit Costco and spent $160, so we averaged less than $100 for both weeks using no coupons.  BTW, the $160 also included a couple of non-grocery items.   My Randall’s trip was productive:

  • 2 racks preseasoned baby back pork ribs
  • 3 ribeye steaks
  • 3 round sirloin steaks
  • 4 chicken breasts stuffed with cheese and asparagus
  • bleach
  • 18 eggs
  • 1 gallon o organic milk (50% off quick sale)
  • red bell pepper
  • zucchini
  • green onions
  • frozen pie shells

I knew I was getting eggs, b/c Randall’s had a 99 cent coupon for 18 eggs.  I already had about 2 dozen in my fridge, so I needed to plan a dish for to use a few of these quickly.  I decided to make Quiche.  In my fridge, I know I had 1/2 and 1/2, a pound of bacon from Costco and 4 pounds of cheese (2 weeks ago Randall’s had cheese as a loss leader).  All I needed for the Quiche was a pie shell and green onions.  I also noticed that zucchini was on sale at Randall’s for 99 cents a pound.  Zucchini bread goes great with Quiche, so I got a few of these.

I knew I could come up with something for the remainder of the meat, so I picked up the kids and started cooking.

First was the ribs.  They are a stand-alone dish.   These were already seasoned so I put them in a shallow dish, covered with foil and popped in the oven.  Since I had the aluminum foil out and the oven on, I wrapped a few potatoes and put in the oven with the ribs.

Then I cooked the chicken.  These were stuffed chicken breasts from Randall’s butcher counter – regularly $4.99 a pound.  I got these for about $1.50 a pound.   I baked these in the oven with the ribs.  But I’m not a fan of baked chicken breasts, so I did a search on the internet for chicken and asparagus and found this:  http://www.ifood.tv/network/quick_easy_chicken_asparagus_soup_rice/recipes.  It is a really good recipe for Asparagus chicken creamy pasta casserole.  I didn’t have the amount of asparagus called for in the recipe, so I just used the amount stuffed into the chicken and it worked fine.   It made enough for two dishes.  I froze one and cooked one for lunch.  It was very very good.

chicken1

After I finished the chicken, I put in a sheet of bacon into the oven.  I also barely cooked the pie shells.

My next step was the steaks.  I decided to make two dishes.  One soup and one Mongolian beef.  I cut the meat from the bones and started boiling the bones for the soup.  Then I cut some of the meat in strips for the Mongolian beef and the rest in small cubes for the soup.  I browned all this in a thin layer of oil.  I put the strips in the fridge for later.  Next I strained the broth; seasoned, added dried onions, garlic and carrots; and added the meat.  I have the base for a really good soup.  I removed some of the broth and froze the mixture in two bags.  I plan to make beef barley soup.  When I prepare, I’ll cook the barley first in the extra broth, then add the meat and veggie mixture.

My next step was the potatoes.  I love having leftover baked potatoes in the fridge.  In the morning I can make hash browns in an instant.  Or in the evening I can place in a skillet with olive oil, onions and garlic and have a wonderful side.  For these, I opted to make potato boats, or also called twice baked potatoes.   I had the extra bacon and was grating cheese for the pasta casserole and Quiche, so making these didn’t mess up more dishes.  You slice the potato in half and scoop out the flesh.  I seasoned with butter, salt, pepper and 1/2 & 1/2 cream (I was out of sour cream).  I topped the potatoes with bacon and cheese.  These went into a freezer baggie and are in my freezer.  I can take out as many as I need for a great side dish later this week.

Next I made the Quiche.  While that finished baking, I made the zucchini bread with a new recipe.  This recipe is very moist.  I used more zucchini than called for.  Next time I’ll cut back on the sugar b/c it is too sweet for me.  The texture and moisture is great and I’ll be making this again soon.

In half a day I have the base for at least 9 meals for under $40:

  • 2 bacon Quiche
  • 2 loaves of zucchini bread
  • 1 large pot of beef / barley soup
  • base meat for Mongolian beef
  • frozen chicken casserole
  • chicken casserole in fridge
  • frozen potato boats with cheese and bacon
  • pork baby back ribs ready to be reheated

So the point of the story you may be wondering????  You can cook on a budget and be creative if you are willing to try new things and keep a stocked pantry.  I got the base for 9 dishes for a family of 5 (soup would probably feed my family twice so this is really is probably 10 meals) for under $5 a meal.  If you were budget conscious, you could finish each of these and have several nice meals for under $5 a meal.   For example, a can of green beans (50 cents on sale) with the chicken pasta would be a meal.  Or cornbread (jiffy mix prepared is less than $1) with soup would be a complete meal.  (my numbers do not include electricity or natural gas costs)

I hope this inspires those of you who are not in the kitchen.  You can do it!  Even if you don’t need to now b/c you’re financially secure, any day any of our situations could change.   It is better to have this skills before we need them than to learn during a harder time.  And it will help prepare your children to manage a home on a budget.   And it makes your house more of a home.  Take out is not the same as a really good cooked meal by mom.  This week my family gave me the ultimate gift.  Check out my new Life is Good t-shirt:

shirt

 

For other great ideas on saving money, join Life as Mom for Frugal Fridays.


Baking Day

October 21, 2009

I love the smell of fresh baked bread in my home.  Today we have that and more.

bakingday


Product Review: Shelf Reliance Thrive Creamy Chicken Noodle Soup

October 19, 2009

This summer we had a “dry run” of eating from our pantry.  When we arrived home from vacation, virtually no fresh food in the fridge.  So for about a week I made do with our freezer and pantry.  I learned more about “food storage” that week than I could have with hours of research.  One thing I learned is that we eat a lot of fresh produce, especially fruit.  And canned fruit cocktail is not an acceptable replacement.  I also noticed this during Hurricane Ike.   We were the last group to get electricity in Houston and our suburb friends brought in supplies – at the top of our list was fresh bananas.

So I’ve been trying freeze dried products from various companies – on our penny.  I recently ordered from Shelf Reliance.  I have fruit, veggie, barley and a few other products to try.  It was not an inexpensive adventure, but I did have 20% off my order and no shipping.

One splurge was the Creamy Chicken Noodle Soup.  It is regularly $26.60, less 20% made it $21.28.  It contains 47 (the can states 47 servings but the website states 43 servings) 1/4 cup servings (or 8 ounces of soup); which equates to 45 cents per cup using 47 servings in my calculation.  I think 45 cents is expensive for a cup of soup compared to making from scratch.  However, I splurged b/c I wanted a quick and easy soup in case we all came down with the flu.  The shelf life is one year after opening the can, so I’ll still be able to use this during flu season.

The description states “full of yummy noodles and good veggies, including carrots and celery, swimming in a sizzling chicken broth.”  The pic on the front of the can shows lots of noodles.  However, there were very few noodles or chicken in my first batch of soup.

thrive1 thrive2

Maybe the noodles and chicken dropped to the bottom during shipping / settling.  However, for this review I followed the directions (until I modified at the end).  There were no instructions to take soup from can and remix for settled products.  The mix is very easy to make, you just add one cup of soup to 3 cups of water.

The finished product was very creamy.  The picture on the front of the can shows a thinner broth with lots of noodles.  After I the soup was made per the directions, there was not enough noodles to feed the girls lunch, so I heated the soup and added a few noodles from my pantry.  Here’s the soup with noodles added:

thrive3thrive4thrive5

The noodles from the Thrive soup are an egg noodle.  The pic on the front of the can shows a flat noodles.  The pic on the can is not the same soup I made.

I liked the soup, but the girls politely asked if they could skip lunch.  The soup is much creamier than my homemade chicken noodle cream soup (made with coffee creamer).  If you like a really creamy soup, then I think you’ll like this.  It is much better than the creamy soup I’ve tried from the nice can soups (cambells select, etc).  It does not have the can taste.  I liked the flavor of the cream and the consistency.    If I were sick and wanted a mostly liquid soup, then this would be good.  If I were really hungry and wanted a soup full of noodles, veggies and chicken, then this would not  be filling.


Chocolate Cake from The Chocolate Cake Doctor

October 19, 2009

Mama’s in a good mood today.  When I’m happy, I bake..  We’re having chocolate and potatoes today.    We’re having the HUGE potatoes hubby got at Costco.  They are in the crockpot for tonight.  I love it when my day is organized.  We’ve finished Bible, Math and part of language.  Ran the dishwasher, cleaned the sink, made & cleaned up breakfast and have a fresh cake.  Now the kids are pretending to be horses in the back yard.   Life is good.

BTW, this cake was made from mostly pantry items.  I used a devils food cake mix, mayonnaise, and a few other ingredients.  Since I got this recipe from a cookbook, I can’t share without copyright infringements.  If you’ve never used the Cake Doctor by Anne Bryn, I highly recommend.  This is from The Chocolate Cake Doctor:  the Ever-So-Moist Chocolate Cake on page 37 with Fluffy Chocolate Frosting – page 108.

I get no revenue from recommending… just thought I share one of my favorite cookbooks.  I like b/c she transforms cake mixes into made from scratch tasting creations.  Thanks Sherri for telling me about this book… I’m still using.  Are you???

choc


Costco Emergency Buckets

October 18, 2009

Dave and I been trying to prepare our home and family for unexpected events:  hurricanes, economic trouble, flu, etc. for the last year.   As a newbie to this, last March I found that Costco sells an emergency bucket and I was thrilled.  I thought, great… we’ll be prepared just by buying the bucket.

A few months down the road, I have a very different view.  I’m writing  this now b/c Costco has put these on special and I’m getting a lot of search engine hits looking for info on these.

You can look at the contents of this bucket in at least two different ways.  I used to look at servings (per costco), but now I look at weight or calories.  In this bucket, you 275 servings for $75.99 delivered.  Not so bad for someone who wants it all done with a bow.  However, these servings are very high in salt.  And if you look, it will take more than one serving to fill your stomach.

Now look at weight:  23 pounds of food for $75.99.   At this same store, you can buy 50 pounds of  blueribbon rice (about $20?), a huge bag of pinto beans – 20 pounds? (about 50 cents a pound), case of canned green beans ($6), case of canned diced tomatoes ($6) – and you still have about $25 till you hit the $76 bucket cost.

So, think hard b/f you buy overpriced  junk in a bucket.


Wives, be detailed in your grocery list for your husbands

October 17, 2009

Today I’m at my mom’s in the Conroe area.  The weather is great and I took the kids to a fall festival.  Dave stayed home b/c he had a few things to take care of.  He did offer, however, to pickup a few things at Costco for me b/c he planned to be in that area.

Hmmmm, should I leave a short list and be glad he’s offering?  Or should I seize the moment and go for it?  I compromised and made two lists — one of what we need,  and the other which included ‘would be nice’ items but not necessary.   Most of the ‘we need’ items were from Costco’s latest coupon booklet.

One item in the coupon booklet was a feminine product.  On the list I referenced the brand and the coupon — s/b easy, right?  I was in a hurry to get out the door and didn’t really consider what adventure I was sending my marathon running husband into.  He stood looking at the mountain high pallets of multiple products (all same brand) and had this face I can just visualize.  My fault b/c I didn’t specify anything but the brand and each brand has many options, if you know what I mean.  Finally, a female shopper approached him and asked, “Sir, do you need some help?”  He said, “my wife sent me for these and I have no idea what to buy.”  She looked at my list and attempted to assist as well as explain the differences (tmi).  If “good Samaritan” lady is reading my blog, Thank You.

As a luxury item, I included salmon.   I always buy FROZEN salmon from Costco.  But hubby didn’t realize this b/c it is never frozen when it shows up on his plate.  So I now have a beautiful container of FRESH salmon waiting in our fridge.

I also asked for a bag of potatoes.  Another little detail was missing — russet? red? yellow? baked?…

We are in a country with so many options.  Just writing a shopping list for someone takes 5 pages to fill in the specifics.  I’m not complaining, just observing.  Today it made me realize what I already knew – but in a fresh way.

BTW, marathon running hubby got every item on both lists plus a couple other items.  I’m one lucky lady.


2009 Holiday Guide – Ebay

October 17, 2009

If you’re looking to clean out the closets and sell toys this Christmas, check this out. My friend is Bonus #4.    My friend said any profits go to dried beans and ammo – I know many of my readers will smile at that one.

I sure wish beanie babies were hot items this December.  Oh well, one day I may use them for fuel on my charcoal.  Or how about a Tickle me Elmo?  Or even an American Girl Doll with a new look (Maggie chopped her hair off).

I’ve become a net seller, versus buyer of “stuff.”  I had stocked up on cheap toys for birthday parties, but they took up so much room I recently left them at my favorite resale shop.  They are more packaging than substance.  I’m also thinning out clothes.  We’re still storing lots of stuff, but the stuff is changing.   I think these times are making many of us reevaluate what is important in our homes.   Many people’s priorities took a major readjustment the last 12 months.  I’m not alone.  The hurricane, economic conditions, political environment, terror threats and potential pandemics have made many of us wake up and think about using our resources more wisely.


Firearm Salesman of the Year

October 15, 2009

obama


East Texas Savings blog

October 14, 2009

I have several readers from East Texas.  If you’re in the land without Krogers / Randalls triple coupons – it can be challenging to save at the grocery store.  I grew up in Hemphill which only had a Brookshire Brothers and at the time “Perrys.”   Walmart was at least an hours drive.  So check out this site:  http://thrivinghomelife.blogspot.com/. It looks like a new blog that might be helpful to my east texas friends.