We live about 35 km out of town and also I drive into town
to work Mon-Fri, I don’t really like shopping. We make mealplans and we know
what we’re going to eat but I just don’t like to have to buy all the stuff. So
when my friend and I went to Bargara for our long weekend, I stopped in at Aldi’s
on the way back to do a big stockpile shop. We don’t have an Aldi’s in
Rockhampton just yet. One has opened in Gladstone (1 ½ hours away) but since I
drove by the Aldi’s in Bundaberg anyway, I just stopped there and did a HUGE
shop. I bought all dry products such as pasta, rice, cans, flour, sugar, oil,
toilet paper, paper towels and so on. This is my trolley after the first shop –
all dry articles.
I went in a second time for all our cold products – frozen vegetables,
cold products such as cheese and the likes. All up I spent less than $300 but I
know this will last us for the rest of the year.
Now I have stocked my pantry up and I keep an eye for the
weekly catalogues of the supermarkets to see what they have on special. If they
have something on special we like, I go and get it. Like the Bonne Maman jam.
It’s really nice jam and it normally costs $5.50. Coles had it on special for
$2.50 – that less than half price! So I bought 6 jams which easily will last us
for the rest of the year. Last week, Mexican food was half price and so I
bought some of that. From now on this is how I’m going to keep my pantry full
and stocked up. Hopefully by the time I run out of sugar and flour, we will
have our own Aldi here and I can re-stock from there.
Aldi prices are about 1/3 of the local supermarket giants,
so it’s definitely worth while shopping there.
Obviously not dry foods, but fruit and veg are the most important
part of the diet. I try to grow everything we use and what will grow here.
Living in the so called dry tropics can be challenging and also I have
successfully grown red cabbage, things like brussel sprouts, most cabbages and the
likes will not grow here, it’s just too hot, even in winter. I try to grow most
of my food from seed as it is cheaper but with some I haven’t had a great
success, so I will have to experiment some more. I will show you what’s growing
in my garden next week, for now I’d like to stick to the stockpiling. I was
able to cheaply purchase an entire bag of apples for $1 and the oranges are
leftovers of our monthly fruit and veg box. I will be using the apples for my
daily porridge, feat some to the chooks and bird and use them for apple strudel
and other yummy cake recipes. I’m not sure yet what to do with the oranges yet
but probably a nice cake as well or orange and poppy seed muffins or maybe
orange and almond cake/muffins since I actually haven’t got any poppy seeds. Do you have any nice recipes for me?
These tomatoes were also really cheap - $2.49/kg instead of $7.90/kg
(or$1.11 EACH!!!) and they’re ripe and yummy! I’m going to make some chutney
out of them. I love chutney with some fresh ham or a quiche – hmmm. But so far
I have been eating them raw with some fresh basil or on my bread spread with
cream cheese.
Bread! I’ve been making bread for a while now and I finally have
taken the next step to making sourdough bread. This bread is out of a book and
took over 27 hours to prepare! And the best thing is that this bread looks
exactly like the picture in the book!!! It tasted fantastic and even Mr S liked
it! I’m very proud and I’m glad to announce this is the end of store bought
bread!
So far, I discussed stockpiling of dry products as well as
fruit and veg – so what’s next? That’s right – meat! We both love eating meat
and so does Janus. Unfortunately, these days there’s a lot of additives in meat
and you don’t always know if the animals were kept in good conditions. I don’t
mind eating meat as long as I know the animal had a happy life and didn’t
suffer. So I’ve been looking around where to get ‘good’ meat from and found it
at Dawson Valley Free Range. As I said before I hate shopping – finding a park, walking
around the aisles, queuing at the register is just not my idea of fun, so I try
to avoid it as much as I can. Therefore we needed meat. This is how ½ cow and ½
pig looks like in boxes…
This is my little station - all the meat is packed in huge bags, I have to make the bags, pack it for the 2 of us, seal it, label it and then freeze it. I spent 8 hours doing that! I liked my little sink on the left, so I can wash my hands in between or clean my equipment. Mr S was responsible for labelling, freezing and exchanging the water. That chest freezer over there is now full to the brim with goodies!
Another good thing about buying local meat is that the
animals don’t have to travel far for their final destination and that you get
everything there is. The poor animal gave its life – the last thing I want is
that parts of it are being discarded. I want to keep it the same way as our
Grandmothers and their mothers did – make use of everything! I make liverwurst
out of the liver. Janus absolutely loves to chew the hooves. I make dog food
out of the heart and kidney. I make oxtail soup out of the tail. I will make
lard out of all the pork fat. And I will make bone broth and stock out of the
bones. And this time I even received the pig’s head as well as the trotters, so
I will make brawn – for the very first time ever! Wish me luck!
Janus behaved really way and was lucky enough to get a few treats as well as this bone which he enjoyed eating.
So now all I have to buy on a weekly basis is milk and cheese - everything else we have at home. What a nice feeling! It also means our weekly shopping bill has reduced from about $100-150 to about $30-50. THAT I'm the most pleased with!
Please leave some recipes in the comments if you like.
WOW you´re very busy this days!!! But I think thats a good idea, a shopping-day at aldis. So you can spare money and time. About the meat, it´s so important to buy local meat and you know where it comes from... So now you can spend more time with things you like so much...
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