Postby ShiroiHikari » Thu Jul 31, 2008 11:08 am
Um...wow. I'll tell you straight up-- it's gonna be REALLY hard to eat healthy on such a nothing budget. Frozen veggies are way cheaper than fresh; buy those. Buy the microwave steam-bag kind. They're usually about a dollar a piece.
For whole grains, you can probably get away with buying Earthgrains breads on that budget; for one person, a loaf will last about a week and costs about 3 dollars. Kinda pricey for bread, but Earthgrains is all natural, no corn syrup or other questionable stuff is in it.
If you want something to put on it other than lunch meat (which is high in sodium), try getting Smucker's Simply Fruit-- it's tasty and also doesn't have any corn syrup or junk in it. Also, peanut butter has lots of protein. Oh, and honey! Honey is awesome.
They also make affordable whole-wheat pastas now; you can get a couple boxes of those for real cheap. I recommend the Ronzoni brand. It tastes the best of all the ones I've tried. Anyway, this would be another cheap way to get some grains.
Provided you've got the time and proper cooking equipment (i.e. a stove and a pan XD) beans are a good, cheap, healthy way to get some protein. You can buy 'em canned as well if you want, just be sure to rinse them off real good.
If you need cheap meat, the 1-pound rolls of ground turkey are only about 1.50 at the most. It's pretty lean and is versatile to work with. Ground pork is also relatively inexpensive, if you can find something to do with it.
When you buy lettuce, get Romaine as it's got more nutrients than iceberg. Rip it, don't cut it, and just leave the leaves whole until you're ready to use them. Pre-ripping them is tempting but it makes it turn brown a lot faster. Wrap it in a paper towel, put it in a Ziploc, and it should last you a good long while.
Or if you want, buy bags of raw spinach. I recommend the Ziploc-and-paper-towel method with this too, because if you leave it in the bag it comes in, it turns mushy and gross a whole lot faster.
fightin' in the eighties