great answer -- add eggs to veg , and along with cheese can make some lovely inexpensive omelettes !!Eggs. Eggs, veg, cheese and more eggs. I love eggs. Cheap and cheerful. But I have no idea how much they are in the Netherlands.
I had a quick look, and nothing popped up.I once did a shop on Tesco online just to see if I could do it for £25 and posted it on here - I got quite a lot for my money - I have no idea how to find the post though - @Brunneria you are ace at searching can you help - lol - I will look but don't hold out much hope
Eggs. Eggs, veg, cheese and more eggs. I love eggs. Cheap and cheerful. But I have no idea how much they are in the Netherlands.[/QUO
I'm currently trying to orientate myself into starting a partial low carb diet. I became fully insulin dependent as of a month ago and am still in my adjustment period so I haven't changed my diet yet to get a good idea of what my body does.
As it stands right now, I'm on a fixed income due to disability, and my weekly grocery budget is small. After taking care of necessities like toilet paper, cat litter and food and hygiene products, I average €25 a week that's left for food purchases. No car, only a bicycle for transport which means my store choices and carrying capacity are limited. I'm very dependent on sales and seasonal vegetables and fruits to get me through the week, besides cheap staples like brown rice, potatoes and whole wheat pasta.
Carbs are definitely cheap and I'm not doing poorly on a moderate carb diet, but if I can work 3 days a week into my budget where I low carb, I'd be very happy to try it. I'm just wondering, what sort of low carb recipes work on a small budget? Food for an entire day can't really exceed €3.50 (breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks) so I'm a bit lost as to how to make this work.
If it matters, I live in the Netherlands.
Try eating liver, sardines, eggs, pilchards, cheese.
Any green vedge you can afford.
Avoid fruit except for berries. In season try to find wild blackberries, strawberries and raspberries if you can. Also wild dandelion leaves.
No bread, no rice, no flour. Try cauliflour or brocoli when they are cheap. Try the markets just before they close when they are giving things cheaply. Any chicken, fish or meat are low carb. Tree nuts: almonds, walnuts, pecans. Sometimes when almost out of date these are cheaper.
Visit Facebook: Type2 diabetes rebels - they are very helpful. Good luck.
Errm - I have had a look too can't find it - it had everything on for a full weeks shop for £25 - lots of eggs - veg - chicken. To be honest I wished I'd saved it because it took me a while to do but it was very comprehensive- I had a lot more time on my hands then lol - thanks for your help, I thought it might be a bit of a long shot anyway - is may be on one of the sticky threads in low carb forum - will have a look around when I have more timeI had a quick look, and nothing popped up.
Can you remember any items you put on the list?
I usually end up searching for posts containing key words, by a specific poster.
Try doing that, if you can remember any food items...
Hi there @lovinglife I think this is the post you refer toErrm - I have had a look too can't find it - it had everything on for a full weeks shop for £25 - lots of eggs - veg - chicken. To be honest I wished I'd saved it because it took me a while to do but it was very comprehensive- I had a lot more time on my hands then lol - thanks for your help, I thought it might be a bit of a long shot anyway - is may be on one of the sticky threads in low carb forum - will have a look around when I have more time
powerful you are jedi carb master !! follow the force !!
If you have a slow cooker or can get a used one for free or cheap you can get cheap, fatty cuts of meat and turn them into a nice meal with whatever veg you like. As an added bonus it is easy, quick to throw together, and less dishes to do. One run of the slow cooker can give you multiple meals. Throw in a chunk of meat, your veggies, and a can of broth or tomatoes and some spice and let it simmer all day. The tomatoes will make cheap meat come out very tender.
@DaftThoughts do you eat fish? Is that any cheaper?
I rarely eat fish, but the bulk of my money doesn't even go to meat for these plans (only 5 euros). I just don't have access to a wide variety of stores and am limited in what greens I can eat so it cuts into the budget super hard to go for the alternatives. :/
getThanks everyone for the information!
We don't have Tesco over here so I'm dependent on the local supermarkets which, from the list I saw shared, run pricier than what Tesco has to offer (so jealous! How is your peanutbutter THAT cheap?!). But as my plan is to start with 3-4 days a week rather than a full 7 days a week, I think I can manage to do at least that.
(I have issues with a lot of vegs due to stomach problems (e.g. broccoli give me painful cramps where I can't even sit or breathe properly and I can't tolerate a bunch of other greens for the same reason) so I gotta fiddle around a bit with what I can and can't eat without causing myself pain. I also don't eat pork, and beef very rarely, so my main meat is chicken (which is super expensive here) but I always try to buy extra when it's on sale and freeze it. We'll see how that goes.)
I have a slowcooker and I love it. I like making casseroles with it, as well as stews. I wish I was a bigger soup eater because I'd eat that all day if I could.
I'm going to see if I can implement 3 days next week where I don't eat more than 60g/carbs a day to start with and take it from there.
Thanks everyone for the information!
We don't have Tesco over here so I'm dependent on the local supermarkets which, from the list I saw shared, run pricier than what Tesco has to offer (so jealous! How is your peanutbutter THAT cheap?!). But as my plan is to start with 3-4 days a week rather than a full 7 days a week, I think I can manage to do at least that.
(I have issues with a lot of vegs due to stomach problems (e.g. broccoli give me painful cramps where I can't even sit or breathe properly and I can't tolerate a bunch of other greens for the same reason) so I gotta fiddle around a bit with what I can and can't eat without causing myself pain. I also don't eat pork, and beef very rarely, so my main meat is chicken (which is super expensive here) but I always try to buy extra when it's on sale and freeze it. We'll see how that goes.)
I have a slowcooker and I love it. I like making casseroles with it, as well as stews. I wish I was a bigger soup eater because I'd eat that all day if I could.
I'm going to see if I can implement 3 days next week where I don't eat more than 60g/carbs a day to start with and take it from there.
If you have or could get hold of a soup maker I bet you'd eat more soup! If you haven't seen one they look like a large upright electric kettle. You can make any kind of soup just chuck everything in and 20 minutes later perfect soup! It makes 4 or 5 cups and freezes really well.
get
DaftThoughts, many people find LC is initially a bit more expensive, because they are buying in "special" ingredients, or spices, such as coconut oil (just an example), but so many of those things last an age, so many subsequent uses of those pantry items are "free". Once in a way of eating, replacing those items just tends to spread themselves out, naturally, by usage. Some folks sometimes forget that when they're eating lower carb, they're not eating (or buying) those carby elements they've given up, so that cash can also go towards their overall food budget.
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