Food & Drink Magazine

5 Ways to Save Money by Going Vegan

By Chuck Underwood @brandnewvegan
5 Ways to Save Money by Going Vegan

Image courtesy of Flickr and http://401kcalculator.org

A friend and I recently had a Facebook conversation involving the rising cost of food.

Her comment was “You can spend a fortune to eat healthy” compared to buying cheap fast food or  pre-packaged unhealthy junk food.   “No wonder more people aren’t eating healthy – they just can’t afford it.”

Of course my friend is not vegan and her shopping list included items like coffee, chicken, eggs, juice, and deli meat, all items that are set to continue going up in price due to a variety of reasons.

The price of bacon is surging and the cost of other morning staples, like coffee and orange juice, is set to rise because of global supply problems, from drought in Brazil to disease on U.S. pig farms.  “You should expect to see very high prices for your ground beef, and your other meat cuts.   Pork cuts will especially be higher this year,” said Donnie Smith, CEO of Tyson Foods.

Have you experienced the sticker shock yet?  It sure sounds like it’s coming.  And for those of you who are still meat eaters – I’m afraid you will be the hardest hit.

So what’s a person to do?

Save Money By Going VEGAN!

Naturally I responded to the Facebook post with some Vegan ideas for saving money.  And of course, there were replies – like ‘giving up flavor’ and ‘eating like a bunny rabbit’ …..typical comments I have grown very used to as a Vegan.

My point I was trying to make was that it CAN be very inexpensive to shop for food.

Of course if you buy the trendiest, most sought after items – like bacon, steak, milk, cheese, eggs, etc…  it’s going to be expensive. (I can’t believe how much a pound of hamburger cost these days compared to when I used to eat meat.)

And bacon?  What’s with EVERYTHING having to look, smell, or taste like bacon?  Bacon flavored envelopes?  Seriously?

So get rid of the Meat and Dairy – and Go Vegan – even if it’s only for a meal or two a week – and I guarantee if you shop smart you will start saving money.

Shopping smart – that’s the trick.  For the unprepared, navigating a grocery store can be like traveling to a new city without your Google Maps or GPS.

So in an effort to help you along, here are

5 Ways to Save Money by Going Vegan

1.  Buy Bulk

Get to know your bulk food section at your grocery store.  Here you will find bulk items like rice, beans, oatmeal, lentils, and nutritional yeast.  What makes this so much better?  You’re not paying for the packaging!

Get a good set of Countertop Canisters (like grandma used to have) and fill these bad boys up.  And if your favorite store doesn’t have a bulk section?  Try Wal-Mart.  Seriously, they may not have a bulk section but they do have insanely cheap 5 lbs bags of everyday Vegan staples like rice and beans.

2.  Shop Around

Speaking of Wal-Mart – you CAN be completely Vegan and eat healthy from Wal-Mart.  Not every meal has to be an organic gourmet dinner from Whole Foods.  You can find many ingredients to making easy, simple, and healthy meals at Wal-Mart for a fraction of the price of the big box stores.  Items like frozen veggies, canned tomatoes, beans, bags of rice, spices, etc., not to mention the produce section where you can find organic potatoes, onions, garlic, and a variety of fresh fruit.

Do you remember the kinds of food Grandma used to buy?  I bet it was bags of flour, sacks of potatoes, things like that.  That’s what we should be buying.  Hot pockets?  When do you remember Grandma ever eating a Hot Pocket?

Yeah – never.  So just buy food your grandma used to buy.  Real food.  Real easy.

3.  Simple One Pot Meals

Maybe it’s getting lazy, or maybe it’s just being more efficient (I like the latter) but many of my meals now are all cooked in a single pot.  Boil some pasta – right before it’s done add a bag of frozen veggies and some sauce.  Bam – dinner.

Here’s a quick and easy recipe that does just that – my Easy Peanut Noodles.  

You can do the same thing with rice – right before it’s done add some greens like Spinach or Kale, while the greens are wilting add a lentil or bean for protein, pour on some sauce and bingo – instant healthy dinner.

Simple ingredients, one pot dinners.

Cheap, fast, and easy.

4.  Grown Your Own

I don’t know about your neck of the woods – but here in the Pacific Northwest plants grow pretty easy.  And growing your own food is the ULTIMATE way of saving a ton of cash.

A packet of seeds is DIRT cheap compared to how many heads of lettuce, or bunches of peas, you will harvest when the season is done.  And tomatoes?  Please don’t get me started on store-bought tomatoes – I’d rather eat a tennis ball.

NOTHING taste like a sun ripened tomato right off the vine.  Mmmm.

5.  Cook

I know – the 4 letter word no one wants to hear.

But seriously, if you really want to save money you are going to have to learn to cook.  Maybe you slept through home economics (do they even still teach home economics?) or maybe you had no one to teach you.  It doesn’t matter.  Just start!

Try the one pot meal ideas I mentioned earlier.

I have quite a few Sauce Recipes I use over and over that are pretty simple to make and pretty hard to mess up.  Try those, just follow the directions.  A good sauce can spice up any meal, especially inexpensive staples like rice, pasta, or potatoes.

Get a good set of pans, and some measuring spoons/cups and you’ll be set.  The thing about cooking for yourself – you get to control what goes in it.  When you buy those pre-packaged boxes of mystery meals you don’t, and the ingredient list usually looks like something from Biology Class.

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Have your own tips?  Would love to hear them.  Be sure and comment below and let’s show those non-believers that we can eat healthy AND inexpensively too.


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