some recipes for garbage

How is everyone doing with reducing the amount of food you waste/throw out? I can say my amount is rapidly decreasing, and I’m much more aware of the perishables I’m purchasing each week. I’m also getting much more creative with repurposing food. Here are a few ideas:

Fruit: depends on the type of fruit that has bad spots or is about to go bad. There are lots of different things you can do with apples–from an easy apple crisp made with corn flakes, to this recipe for sauteed apples. And I have successfully used most apple recipes, except substituted pears, and they’ve all been good. Bananas make banana bread of course, or make the pudding thing with Nilla wafers. Also, if you stick a banana in the fridge, it will remain in it’s current state, for about another 48 hours. Even if the skin gets brown/black, on the inside it’s fine. Berries and stuff like that–give them a quick whiz in the blender with some yogurt, any flavor that’s compatible, to make a smoothie.

Veggies: Like fruit, it depends on the veggie. Last night I made this recipe. It was very good! It also served as sort of a garbage-pail soup–it used up the chicken from the roast chicken I made on Sunday, and used up whatever veggies were in our veggie drawer. I used fresh broccoli, not frozen. I also happened to have some tortellini in my stockpile, plus free broth and soup! Egg noodles would have worked just as well, or rotini or pasta alphabets.

Other things I do with veggies: Peppers-diced them up (sometimes grill them first) and in a pan with some olive oil and garlic. Put in pasta or as a topping for homemade pizza. Use eggs and make either a fritatta or a quiche. Quiche has a crust, fritattas don’t–so depends on whether I have any pie crusts in freezer. But the pizzas, quiche and fritattas also serve to use up eggs that may be nearing an end-date, as well as left over scraps of cheese. Or omelettes. I usually just do an internet search for recipes then modify it to what I have on hand.

I’ll post more ideas that I’ve gathered later on–right now I have a baby to tend to!

ETA: Just as I posted this, THIS popped up on my yahoo feed.

Acme this week

Sorry I’m late in posting but there are a few good deals at Acme this week.

First, General Mills promo–$10 back when you spend $25. Working on shelf prices. I was excited about the Green Giant frozen veggie boxes, we’re brand loyal to these. They are on knockdown for $1, so I bought 25 boxes for $25, get $10 back. Makes them $0.60 a box each which is a great price. I also had 8 of the $0.60/3 which doubled, so only paid 15.40, got 10 back–brings them down to about 10 cents per box! Going to make more room in freezer and go back. I mix the sauce-less corn, peas and green beans in to almost everything my kids eat. Some day they’ll eat some place else and realize not all spaghetti and mac & cheese comes with veggies mixed in.

If you have the GM coupons from last week, lots of great deals to be had. Very cheap stuff even if you don’t have any coupons. Most of the yogurts are shelf price 3.79, sale 2.00. So you pay $14, get $10 back, for 7 boxes of yogurt.

Lately lots of different Perdue things have been in the 19.99 deal. I always try to find something that we want, and then the biggest portion I can find, before it goes down to 4 for 19.99. I got an $8 Perdue chicken, then it got marked down to $5, then there are lots of $1 and $0.75 perdue coupons out. All the 19.99 items are specially marked in the meat dept and on the front page of the flyer.

Crest & Reach items-$1, use the $1 coupons from last week and 9/26=free!

Use the $2 Quaker printable on printablecouponspot, it’s on sale for 2.50. Look for blinkies for $1 off produce when you buy 2 Quaker oatmeals. I got 2=$5. Used two $2 printables=$1 for both boxes. Used the $1 blinkie for my produce, or think of it as getting the oatmeal for free and just purchasing produce you’d normally purchase anyway! Broccoli is on sale this week for $1, which is almost half the normal price (1.88) and something I get almost every week anyway.

Tropicana has a deal, get a free Trop 50 when you buy 2 Tropicana premiums. We’re brand loyal to this, so I got 2, got the free one, blueberry pomegranite. Hubby really likes it, says it would be much better with vodka.

Dove coupons in last week’s paper (I think) and there’s a 5/15 dove deal if you need the stuff. Works on shelf prices too.

Happy shopping! Still 3 whole days left to take advantage of sale. I went yesterday, got $243 worth of groceries for $104 and I have $15 in catalinas. Not bad!

consignment shops

Consignment shops can be a great place to find great deals, and make some money. If you’re interested in consigning your clothes, here’s a bit of information to get you started.

Percentage: Most shops work on a % basis. Your items stay there for a prescribed time period and whatever sells during that period, you earn a % of the price. At the end of the consignment period, you are either responsible for going and retrieving your items or they become property of the shop and get donated. Encore in Kennett pays a 65/35 split, but their fees are a bit higher-$15 a year and $2 per visit. The Growing Tree in Kennett pays 50/50 and then $0.10 per item processing fee. Once Upon a Child in Pike Creek pays a flat rate. You get cash on the spot, but you have completely relinquished your items and imo, their payouts are lower.

Fees: As I stated above, be certain of what fees you’re paying in addition to the % that the store is getting.

Earning: Typically, as a consignor, you can expect to earn about what you’d get for the items if you had a yard sale, without all the hassle of a yard sale.Items are generally priced at 30-50% of their original cost, and then you’ll get about half of that, so 15-25%. That is usually what yard sale items are priced at, 15-25% of their original cost.

Brands: Many shops are only interested in higher-end brand names. Leave your Circo and Faded Glory at home. Since those items can be gotten so cheap at Target and Walmart, they have little resale value. For kids clothes, think Gap, Baby Lulu, Polo for the best returns. Many places will still take Carters and Osh Kosh if it’s in good condition. For women, Ann Taylor, Talbots, Banana Republic and brands like that do the best.

Items: Encore takes housewares as well as clothing. The Growing Tree takes women’s and kids’ clothes, accessories, handbags, toys and books. Once Upon a Child takes many different baby items. So does Baz on 896 in New London. Baz also takes maternity wear.

Condition: Clean your items and press them. They need to look like new on a hanger. Would you purchase a shirt that had spots, was wrinkled or missing buttons? Probably not, unless you were at Goodwill. Only bring them seasonal items. Even though you’re cleaning summer stuff out of your closet right now, it won’t be eligible for consignment until after the holidays. But as I clean out my closet and the kids’ closet, I create three piles: consign now, consign next season, donate.

Shopping: Many stores keep an account running of your earnings. You can then either receive payment or use it as store credit. It’s a fun way to shop, think of trading in your old stuff for new stuff.

Great Buys: I have found some terrific buys at consignment shops. A cashmere twin set from Ralph Lauren for $8. Timberland hiking shoes for $7. Melissa & Doug toys for $3.50. All are in great condition. I also got new winter coats for the boys-L.L.Bean and Lands End, for about 25% of their original cost.

What to look for: Look for great quality toys. Winter coats and boots, specialty wear like holiday outfits and Halloween costumes. For women’s clothing, you can find many great things. You know how it is, you buy something, take it home and you just don’t care for it or for the way it fits. Many items come to consignment shops for just that reason and many are new with tags.

My 2 cents: I’ve visited several shops in this area. Most are like an outlet store–hit or miss. Sometimes you go and find lots of great deals, sometimes nothing. I’ve consigned things at Once Upon a Child and at the Growing Tree. The pros about Once Upon a Child are that you leave with cash and you don’t have to be bothered with retrieving your items if they don’t sell. The cons are that I think their payouts are less, I don’t find their staff to be particularly friendly and they are very hasty in going through your items. In their defense, they do purchase them from you, so they are stuck with them if they don’t sell, hence the reason they might be more selective and pay out less. I haven’t gone to Encore because I feel their fees are too high, plus they only take items on certain days of the week and I’ve heard it’s a madhouse, moms get there an hour before opening to get in line. No thanks! I’ve shopped at Baz and I think her prices are a bit too high for the quality of items she sells. I saw two identical ride on Fisher Price toys. One at Baz was $22 and it was out on the porch, quite sun-faded and dirty. The identical toy was at The Growing Tree for $25, but was in excellent, like-new condition. I like the atmosphere at The Growing Tree and Baz much better than OUAC, which is very warehouse like and impersonal. I haven’t been to Plato’s Closet just because my kids aren’t in that age group (teens and tweens) but it’s worth a look if you have kids that age. Plato’s and OUAC are chains/franchises owned by the same company.

Overall, I just find it fun to do and it is a great way to save money on some things and get back some of what you’ve already spent. Good luck!

A few more freebie websites

Here are a few more websites you can sign up for to get free things. A few of them I already mentioned as part of the post I did on surveys.

Bzzagent: They offer you the chance to try new products in exchange for you “buzzing” about them. In other words, you try it, hopefully you like it and encourage your friends and family to purchase it. I’ve gotten lots of cool things from bzzagent, including organic vodka!

Pssst: This is only General Mills products. When they come out with a new product, they send it to you, or send you coupons. Again the idea is that you’ll tell friends and family about it.

Vocalpoint: same as the two above, but from various companies. More likely to get coupons than products. And when you do get products it’s usually just a sample size unlike Pssst which will send you a full size box of something.

Houseparty: This site has the best products but is the hardest to get. You apply to host a house party to debut a particular item. Recently I’ve had two friends get a few hundred bucks’ worth of Fisher Price and Star Wars toys. But you have to apply–and thousands apply but only 3-10k are chosen, depending on the product.

Free Stuff Finder: I don’t have a direct link to this site. If you are on Facebook, look for it and “like” it. I don’t particularly care for it because most of the free stuff you get is trial sizes. The last thing I need is for my house to be junked up with tons of trial sizes of things.

To be honest, I don’t really consider any of these things to contribute significantly to my grocery savings. But, it takes very little time and it’s fun to get free stuff in the mail!