Food & Home Storage deals for the Low-country
Kroger: Sales run Sunday to Saturday, this sale started on Nov 27th and ends Dec 3rd, customer card
4x the fuel points for gift cards (Nov 20-Dec 11th)
tuna 5 oz can .69
BS chicken 1.99/lb
eggs 1.38
Publix: sales run Thursday to Wednesday, Dec 1st to 7th
Uncle Bens 5 lb bag rice B1G1 (7.79)
Nestle toll house morsels B1G1 (3.15)--good price to stock up on chocolate chips
General Mills cereals B1G1 (3.99)
Piggly Wiggly: sales run Wednesdays to Tuesdays, Nov 30th to Dec 6th
ground chuck 1.99/lb
Food Lion: sales run Wednesdays to Tuesdays, Nov 30th to Dec 6th
Holly Farms chicken breasts or tenders 50% off
General Mills cereals B1G1
Bi-Lo: sales run Wednesdays to Tuesdays, Nov 30th to Dec 6th
triple fuel points for select gift cards
Scott tp 5.99
Walgreens & other pharmacies: many of the pharmacies have great sales on Christmas items, batteries and children's toys this time of year. If you need batteries, wrapping paper, generic boy/girl toys, etc. Walgreens often runs B1G1 deals on these types of items this time of year. They also have action figures and hot wheels cars on sale this time of year. Stocking stuffer items like candy and other small items are often a good price during this time of year as well.
Grocery Shopping Tips:
- Basically the more you can stock up when things are on sale, the less over-time you will be spending on groceries. Stock up ONLY on things your family will eat and be able to use before the items go bad.
- Know what the prices of products are at your favorite stores, so when you get the ads, you can compare the price. Compare prices with Sams club, online prices, etc. Stock up when the sale price is less than the cheapest price elsewhere.
- Write (or type) the prices down so you have them available. Prices of produce can change quickly, but in general expect price changes every month or two on produce items that are seasonal. Other products, the prices do change (and sometimes by quite a bit), but usually they stay close to the same price over a period of months. As you keep a price list--both of regular prices and of sale prices, you’ll be able to see patterns in sales and prices--when things are cheapest, how often things come on sale, etc.
- Sales ads: some things are drastically on sale--called “loss leaders”--to get you in the store, other things aren’t necessarily marked down in price, they are simply “for sale” so just because it is in the ad does not mean it is on sale or even a good price. Remember a bargain is only such if you can and will actually use the item, it still costs money, but less than full-price.
- Meats & produce: set a per pound price that you are comfortable with paying and find deals that are at or below that price. Example: meats $2/lb or less; produce depends on the type, but in general $1.50/lb or less. For some more examples of produce see this post.
- Cereals, breads: set a price per unit (box, ounce, loaf) that you are willing to pay and then find the deals that are at or below that price. Example: cereal--$2/box or less; loaf of bread--$1.50/loaf or less.
- Menu Shop: In a previous post I mentioned how to save on grocery bills by making menus, see that post here. But in general, when making a menu follow these steps:
- First: what perishables do you have on hand that need to be used
- Second: what sales are available
- Third: Food Storage items to rotate into meals
- Fourth: Special Occasions--birthdays, holidays, potlucks, etc.
- Using coupons? For some things combining a coupon with the sale price at pharmacies and stores is a great deal. Buy one get one free sales are a great way to use coupons! So are stores that offer double coupons: Kroger and some other stores offer double coupons up to 50 cents. (ex. if you have a 50 cent off coupon on a cereal, you get the 50 cents then Kroger takes off another 50 cents automatically--yeah!) Not always is the product with a coupon the cheapest option, but combined with sales or with double coupon deals, often the price of the brand product is much nearer or even less than the generic brands.
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