I guess it would be white rice or pasta with an egg, and a glass of milk or 1 tiny portion of carrot or 1 banana.
Bag of rice = $9 per 8 kgs = approx 35 cups
1 cup of rice = 2 or 3 meals
glass milk = 30c?
carrot = 20c each
banana = 20-30c
egg = 35c
Or unhealthy = 3 packets of NoFrills instant noodles, plus water = 26*3 per day.
It's actually not doable for more than a month - before dying of malnutrition.
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Nov 4th, 2008 01:27 AM #1
The Dollar-a-Day Diet
From the NY Post
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/1...ar-a-day-diet/
The Dollar-a-Day Diet
What would you eat if you had just $1 a day for food?
This fall a couple in Encinitas, Calif., conducted their own experiment to find out what it was like to live for a month on just a dollar a day for food. Christopher Greenslate, 28, and Kerri Leonard, 29, both high school social studies teachers, quickly discovered what cash-strapped consumers have known all along. In the United States, the cheapest foods tend to be so-called junk foods — candies, chips and other processed fare that is packed with calories but devoid of nutrients. Meanwhile, fresh fruits and vegetables are priced out of reach. And living on a tight food budget adds lots of extra time and effort to meal preparation.
“We’re used to eating some type of vegetable with every meal and fruit every day,” Ms. Leonard said. “Finding out there was very little way to fit that into our budget, that was a huge struggle.”
The couple blogged about the diet project and also raised about $1,500 for a local community center. While the dollar-a-day diet was just a monthlong experiment for the couple, health researchers say their experiences reflect many of the real world conditions people on limited incomes face every day. To read more about the high price of healthful food, read this week’s Well column, “Money Is Tight, and Junk Food Beckons,”
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Nov 4th, 2008 12:59 PM #2
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Nov 4th, 2008 11:29 PM #3
I think there was a post somewhere on RFD a while back where a few people were arguing that you can still eat healthy and cheap for $5/day. Some people were even saying that poor people eat healthier than rich folk. But, using the example above, that food has a high glycemic index and you would start feeling the consequences pretty quick.
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Nov 5th, 2008 08:01 AM #4
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Nov 5th, 2008 03:02 PM #5
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Nov 5th, 2008 07:01 PM #6
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Nov 5th, 2008 08:04 PM #7
this is old. there is a long thread about this on here already.
NVM! i think it was a 5$ a day planLast edited by XxXSnake23XxX; Nov 5th, 2008 at 08:06 PM.
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Nov 6th, 2008 07:22 PM #8
I typically have a food budget for 2 people that is in the $25-30/week range, and I guarantee that I eat a lot more than most people here.
I don't recommend this, but I'm cheap... heres some example meals:
Breakfast:
Nothing or 2eggs on a piece of toast (bought on sale)
Average Cost: About $0.50
Lunch:
2 Hot dogs (foot longs bought in bulk @ 32/$20)
$1.25
Dinner:
Pasta (bought in bulk, huge portion, sometimes the only meal of the day)
Average Cost: $1.00
By all means it isn't healthy, but sometimes you do what you need to do (not that I'm in need of doing this - again I'm just cheap
)
Some other cheap meals:
French Fries
Ham Sandwhiches ( I buy ham at $1.10/100g, 1 pound lasts for about 20 sandwhiches, whole wheat bread @ $2.00 )
Chicken breasts in bulk (I forget how much we buy, but its two big bags for $40 bucks - works out to be like 1.50 a breast - cheaper if you buy thighs and such)
Broccoli Soup (or almost any soup/stew)
Tomato Sandwhiches - good for you and very cheap, 1 tomato and 4 pieces of bread should fill you up
"Chinese food" - have egg or rice noodles with chicken chunks in soy sauce - extremely cheap
"Mexican Food" - chicken fajitas - minus the cheese (unless its on sale for under $5 a brick)
The important part is to only buy on sale, or buy in bulk - but you have to be able to eat the same thing for every meal (I can eat a ham sandwhich every day for a month... well my record is 2 weeks lol... you can switch it up and fry it one day (margarine on it and fry it on a pan) and toast it another, etc.)
Also, living near china town is important - produce there is ridiculously cheap - but frequent trips are required as it goes bad quickly
Also fruit smoothies usually take place of a meal for me, but fruit can get expensive.
All in all when I started eating cheap I gained a lot of weight - mixed in with lack of exercise. It is difficult to eat cheap and healthy, but I figure when I'm rolling in money I'll have enough to pay someone to cook healthy for me and then start from there haha_______________
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Nov 6th, 2008 11:52 PM #9
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Nov 7th, 2008 12:52 AM #10_______________
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Nov 7th, 2008 01:05 AM #11
matdwyer, you are truly RFD's poster boy
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Nov 7th, 2008 08:11 AM #12
on weekends you can eat for free at costco!
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Nov 7th, 2008 08:17 AM #13
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Nov 7th, 2008 09:36 AM #14
If you decide to cook, you can make large hearty meals that are also healthy.
It cost me $15 to make a HUGE pot of chili. The last big pot of chili I made lasted a week... There were 3 people working on it. Me, my bro & his gf. We each brought a bowl to work every day. Perfect with Dark Rye toast. Cheap, easy, and very healthy!
Its packed with lean protein, vitamins/minerals, and fibre.
You could also make some cheap stir fry dishes that you could eat with sweet potatoes or brown rice. Again VERY healthy. all it takes is 1-2 skinless drum sticks w/ some chopped veggies.Last edited by UrbanPoet; Nov 7th, 2008 at 09:40 AM.
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Nov 7th, 2008 03:55 PM #15
Good point....it took 3 people to make the chili. Thats 3 man hours. Where do you store the chili after it's made if you're buying in bulk? I dunno about the rest of you, but my fridge and freezer get filled up pretty darn quick and easily. However, I think chili is one of the few exceptions where it doesnt cost a lot to make, is very healthy, and it goes a long way.
AS far as stir fry goes, the veggies can get pretty expensive and most of the vitamins are lost after you cook, freeze, and then reheat. You also shouldnt leave the table starving either...then again, for $5 a day, you just may have to.Last edited by Pavel; Nov 7th, 2008 at 04:06 PM.
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