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ChatterBank0 min ago
I'm particularly interested in single oldies...but anyone can answer. Pet food can be included...but not other household bits.
I've always been a shop-as-needed type...probably spending more than I should. But it kept me out and about. I strained my back at Christmas...that and awful weather led me to return to online shopping for groceries.
I've so far only done every 2 weeks...but that doesn't quite keep me going. Particularly with fresh, short dated stuff.
No best answer has yet been selected by pastafreak. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What I spend each week can vary enormously, as it's often based upon what special offers Morrisons have got on.
For example, we're now into a period where spending a minimum of £100 per week, in any 4 weeks out of a five week period, will see £38 credit added onto my More Card. So for the past two weeks I've been stocking up on stuff that I'd buy anyway (but just not as soon) and I'll be doing the same for the next two weeks as well.
That offer roughly coincides with one which will get me another £5 credited onto my More Card if I spend a minimum of £10 per day in any 6 days over a month long period. So I'm ensuring that I shop on at least 6 days, rather than just 4.
Alongside that, there's a current offer that gets me another £8.10 credit onto my More Card if I spend £50 on Felix cat food (which I buy anyway) during that month. So, obviously, in order to get to my £100 target in each of 4 weeks, I'm stocking up on Felix to do so.
Likewise, I'm also getting money credited onto my More Card by stocking up on Kenco products (which, once again, I buy anyway). There are other similar offers too that I'm currently taking advantage of.
I started out in the month-long period with £55 credit on my More Card (all of which was gained from similar promotions in the past). By the end of the month I should have roughly DOUBLED that total and, as I'm genuinely not buying a single thing that I wouldn't be buying normally, it's all FREE money!
As a guide to how much I spend on food though I always cost each meal that I eat. If I find that a main course has cost me under £1, I'm very pleased. If it's cost between £1 and £2, I'll accept that as 'normal'. If it costs more than £2, I tell myself that it's a treat and that I must try not to spend that much on a main course again for a few days.
Similarly, I'll generally allow myself 83p for a tub of quark as a dessert but I like to reduce that to 20p for just a banana on some occasions, so that I don't feel too bad if I very rarely spend over £1 on a dessert.
I do tend to put garlic sometimes in the stew or sprinkle a teaspoon of curry powder in if I fancy a slightly different taste. The meat I pick up at different times when its well reduced. But in fairness I am car mobile so able to get about to suss out the bargins. The latter can make a big difference to the weekly/ monthly spend.
essentially a main shop, nett of alcohol, of around £40 plus an average of £20 on household shampoos, bog-paper, garbage bags etc. I then spend a further £20-25 on meat and fish from local shops and top offs from the Coop or Tesco Express in the order of another 20. This overall spend is in part reduced by offers here and there and also Tesco vouchers. The bakers - around a fiver on top....