A few weeks ago, I sent out an email that led to a lot of replies. Nearly all of them asked: how do you feed your family of 5 “real food” and entertain others on $150 per week?

What they really wanted to know is how is:
- How do you buy organic dairy, meat and produce on a budget?
- What foods do you buy in bulk?
- What do you make from scratch?
- What are some of your money saving tips?
It’s no secret that I cook a lot. I talk about food, read about food, write about food and eat food all.day.long. The funny thing is, that shopping for food isn’t my favorite thing to do. I wish I had a shopping assistant -or a Whole Foods near by. Instead, I have to go to 2-3 groceries each week to get all the things I need.
Example: we have quesadillas for lunch. that means I am going to need chicken and tortillas. Therefore, I am going to plan a dinner that will yield grilled chicken and another that will also utilize tortillas. I save time and money on wasted food. Win-win. By grilling or prepping what I need ahead of time I save a lot of time. I also don’t need to buy those pre-grilled chicken strips made with lord-knows-what.
Eating out and convenience foods are a lot more expensive. Proof: last Friday I had a meeting outside the office and my husband wanted me to have “lunch” with him. We went to a local deli that has a lot of healthy options and we spent $22! Yikes. On ONE meal. I thought to myself: I can feed my entire family with that for a day! OK, It was a nice lunch date.
Now you know another reason why I pack all of our lunches. I am going to apologize for the pictures that come next. They are unedited and were “dumped” from my iPhone.

This was our plan for the week:
Sunday: (B) Big family breakfast (L) grilled paninis (D) Chicken and vegetable skewers, homemade Italian baked beans, corn on the cob, homemade focaccia.
Monday: (B) banana flax bread and breakfast quiche (L) chicken quesadillas (D) Italian meatball pasta
Tuesday: (B) Homemade bagels (recipe not worth sharing, they were very…chewy) & veggie scramble (L) Ultimate morning glory sandwiches (D)Blackened fish tacos, grilled vegetables, creole slaw
Wednesday: (B) Easy homemade green egg(spinach) “McMuffin” (these were previously made and frozen) (L) Deep dish ham and veggie calzones (D) Panini Night (used last of focaccia bread, chicken and grilled veggies)
Thursday: (B) Blueberry muffins fruit (L) Avocado school sushi (no fish), strawberry yogurt dip and fruit (D) Breakfast night! I dropped the last of the eggs so it was a little bit of a flop. Not that they complained about bacon (organic, uncured and nitrate free) and my famous homemade Pillsbury honey wheat grands!and fruit
Friday: (B) raspberry “cheesecake” filled biscuits (biscuits, cream cheese and fresh raspberries), (L) egg salad sandwiches (D) Homemade pizza night!
Saturday: (B) Chocolate chip scones and fruit salad (L) Vegetable fried rice (here is where I use any leftovers veggies from the week) (D) Navy bean soup (previously made and frozen) fruit sorbet and popsicles (I take all leftover fruit from the week and make a fruit sorbet or popsicles
I made a caramelized onions, spinach and gouda quiche and a loaf of bread for my neighbor on sunday. In return, she gave me a basket of veggies from her garden. I made a double batch of blueberry muffins and froze them for another week as well.
I only mentioned the big meals. For “snacks” there is fresh fruit available (always) and I’m usually recipe testing a baked item or two for MOMables.
My weekly budget is $150. I usually spend anywhere between $130-$150. This week I splurged and purchased additional organic chicken because I knew my neighbor was going out of town and she was giving me a lot of veggies.
Ways I save:
- I make a plan. Seems obvious coming from me, right? But it’s TRUE. I sit down with my MOMables weekly plan, choose the meals I will make, add a few of our favorites with similar ingredients, and then make a list.
- I make all of our baked goods. A can of grands! biscuits has ingredients I don’t like and it’s $2.79 for 6 biscuits. I make my own for around $.86. I buy white flour but I also grind my own wheat. I have a bread machine I put to work in the hot summer months. Otherwise, My oven is on for a few hours on Sunday and every other night after dinner (almost). *2015 Update* We now have a gluten-free house. The only way to make baked goods affordable is by making them ourselves.
- I buy rice, wheat and beans in bulk. We eat legumes once a week. I don’t buy a small bag for that week or a can of beans. I pay on average .58cents per lb of beans. I buy in bulk, store and make. I also make double or triple the batch and freeze is 1 ½ cup portions (like a can). Huge savings.
- I don’t use coupons. Shocking, I know. I rarely find coupons for real food. Instead, I stock up when things are on sale like the organic boneless skinless chicken breasts at $3.99lb! I also find that using coupons leads to spending money outside of my meal plan. Note: if you use coupons, that is totally ok. I rarely do. The only times I use coupons is on bulk coffee, organic yogurt and some cheeses. There aren’t a lot of coupons for those of us who shop the perimeter.
- Limit dairy. Yes, kids need dairy and all that… but not as much as you think if you make your own breads, eat a varied diet and eat your minerals from other sources. I insert a lot of nutrients in my baked goods. I buy a big tub of yogurt instead of the 6pk ones (unless I have coupons and they are on sale). This is organic too.
- No juices. If I buy juice it’s usually Martinelli’s by the half a gallon and when it’s on sale. It’s US grown, it has a strong apple flavor and I dilute it.
- No boxed snacks. I make nearly all of our snacks. You can find a lot of them in our pinterest page and our subscription members are getting ready to have a homemade staples “guide” made just for them. I do have a box of goldfish from Sams at all times because we have kids that come play at our house and often ask for “boxed” snacks (oh well).
- I buy 1lb of organic “lunchmeat” for the week at $9.99-10.99 per lb. That’s it. This forces me to get creative with my lunches (good thing that’s what I do). Some weeks, I don’t buy it at all.
- No boxed cereals for breakfast. I buy 1-2 boxes of cereal per month (with a coupon). It’s the one late night treat my husband can’t give up. Cereals are filled with a lot of non-necessary ingredients, are expensive and well, they use milk (also expensive). I make a nutritious bread, scramble eggs..etc.
- Buy cheese in bulk. I buy 2.5lbs of Cheddar cheese that is antibiotic and hormone free for $9.99. Behind the deli counter is that much per pound! I slice it or grate it myself. It lasts 2-3 weeks (depending on what I’m cooking)
- I buy the produce we’ll eat. I don’t just “buy” fruit and veggies, I figure out which ones I need and then buy that. Some weeks I get it from a neighbor, or, I’ll switch ingredients in certain dishes (like spinach instead of broccoli) because it was cheaper that week (and organic).
Other ways I save around the house:
- I use cloth towels to clean and pick up all sorts of messes. I rarely use paper towels. A $16 pack of paper towels from Sams lasts my family 6-9 months.
- I don’t buy the expensive detergent. I pre-treat all my stains and use an eco detergent that is much cheaper (like half the prize) form the orange detergent.
- I use cloth diapers. I’ve cloth diapered all my kids and used disposables when they were being cared by someone else. Baby G uses disposable while he is at school and cloth at home.*2015 update* we are no longer cloth diapering.
- I get $20 haircuts twice a year and color my own hair.
- I buy in bulk with my mom. You could do this with a friend. That 25lb bag or rice of flour you dont’ have room to store? split it with a friend.
- I shop Amazon for specialty items. Things like coconut flour , oils, organic items and spices (among others).
- I shop online for vitamins. Vitamins and drugstore stuff can add up. I shop Vitacost for a lot of my organic items.
- We drink water. Sounds funny but it’s true. Drinking water saves you a lot of money. Plus it’s good for you!
- Reuse our clothes. I have a one-outfit-per-day policy with my kids (of course unless they get soaked or spill something). They change in the morning and stay in them until night time. If they are clean they get used again. Saves the clothes, saves money on water and electricity…etc.
- I buy used clothes, swap clothes or stock up in clothes for next year after the season. I’ve bought many clothes for my kids “for next year” for as little as 98 cents! I don’t go to 20 stores to find the best deal, I just go in after season and stock up. Same thing with school uniforms. I buy the following year’s uniform in Sept/October when stores are clearing them out.
- $1 store deals. I buy birthday cards, zip bags and a few other little things at the dollar store.
I know there are many more ways to save, but these are just some of the ones I do to help us stay on budget. Our $150 is spent on food only for a family of 4. *2015 update* We are now a family of 6 and the budget is $200 per week.
What are some of your tips to stay on budget?





sam says
I’m about 5 months away from becoming at first time mama at 39. I’ve been married for 12 years and am trying to figure out how I’m going to give up my DINK card gracefully and still live well! Love the thorough information and all the comments are inspiring me to challenge myself to being a good mom and wife by helping us stay on budget while I transfer to being a SAHM. Thank you!
Pam M. says
We have a child with a fructose restricted diet (reacts to it kind of like a lactose intolerance)so a lot of these things are a must in our house. This also makes eating out a challenge but it does save us $! No juice (or rarely), very few processed and packaged foods helps A LOT! I too make my own bread, using the machine to make the dough and I finish in my oven. Just a personal preference to the way it turns out. I sometimes make dough ahead, freeze, thaw overnight in the fridge and bake in the a.m. Smells wonderful too. I can control the ingredients (I add flax, whole grains, local honey from my sister in law). In regards to CSA’s some insurance plans will reimburse you for those. I don’t subscribe to a CSA yet but am considering and using my insurance reimbursement for that even though I grow a lot of food over the summer and freeze &/or can. I am a teacher so I have a big garden and I raise chickens for eggs. I don’t know that I save much $ on eggs but I do know they are organic, antibiotic free, free range etc. so they are not the $.98/dz. eggs if you know what I mean. I know I save $ on my herbs and some of the produce that I grow. I mix my own dry whole grain pancake and waffle mixes ahead, store in the fridge or freezer; adding the liquids when I’m ready to make them. I make more than needed and freeze the extras for quick breakfasts etc. I don’t grind my own wheat but I do grind oats in a blender for oat flour which I use in my mixes. I have a sweet potato biscuit recipe that I love, is quick to put together and saves $. Thank you for all of the great ideas!
Melanie says
Thanks for the on-line ordering tip! I hadn’t thought of that. Most of the other tips I use as well and rarely spend $100 a week for a family of 4, including a teenage boy so he should count double. I don’t have a bread-machine, but I do have an 11 year old. She measures and mixes and puts the covered dough in the “quiet spot” after breakfast & I do the rest in the afternoon right after picking up my son from school. We grow a garden, even though our “yard” is the length of our house and 3 feet deep (we live on a canal) and we live in a strict community concerning landscape. It is easy to grow some tomatoes, onions, herbs, cukes, and peppers as “decorative” or container food. I never buy juice, but we do have a lemon tree that provides lemons for our water most of the year for free. Thanks for the great site…
Laura Fuentes says
wow!! I can’t wait to put my daughter to work when she is a little older! thank you for your nice comment Melanie. 🙂
Kim White-Davis says
In our house we feed a family of 10 people for right around $200 per week using a lot of the same methods. I admit we do couponing, in addition,we eat meatless 3 to 4 nights per week. Even the staunchest carnivores among us go nuts over the black bean burgers, and vegetarian enchilada bake we make. With a large family of picky eaters,lactose intolerance and gluten sensitivities, being creative is a must since eating healthy is our main goal.Your site is a great inspiration when eating the same old recipes just gets plan boring o either cook or eat. Thanks!
treasa says
I have a family of 8 help I don’t know what I’m doing but I want to start eating healthy and clean but I have so many picky eaters . We do foster care so we have alot of different back grounds and I need to be creative
Laura Fuentes says
What a great thing that you are doing Treasa, those children are lucky to have you! My biggest piece of advice is to use simple foods and make one meal for everyone. Pickyness diminishes when less options are on the table. good luck!
Janis says
Kudos to you, Laura! Wonderful how you are doing this. I am not one to usually give criticism, so please don’t think of this like that.Just a suggestion.I see that you don’t buy much juice. However, when you do buy Apple Juice, please be aware that just because it comes from the U.S. doesn’t mean it’s OK. Apples are among the top pesticide sprayed fruits, so Organic apple juice would be a better choice. Also do you buy all organic vegetables, especially the corn? I think you’re doing an amazing job! Thank you for sharing this. :)!
Laura Fuentes says
Thank you Janis!
The apple juice is not organic but I might buy it once a month or every other month. The reason it’s from the US is because there has been mold found in juices from overseas -even organic juices. criticism not taken at all. thanks for leaving a post! 🙂