This is NOT an essay on produce.
May 5, 2010
That has been officially pushed back until sometime near the end of May.
To throw you a very small bone in keeping with the theme, though, I have two nifty links tonight:
1. A ridiculously beautiful photo essay of agriculture all over the world
2. A handy-dandy and oh-so-cute printable chart to keep with you so you’ll always know when to buy organic (sent to us by extremely alert reader Carrie!!)

I will delve deeper than most of you ever cared for me to go into the topic of organic produce later this month, but today I wanted to touch on it briefly, in a gut-feeling, not-yet-completely-edumacated kind of way, for our ongoing “To Coupon…or Not to Coupon?” series.
Largely driven by having a new, relatively unsullied and ever-eager mouth to feed in the family, I have over the past few months placed an increasingly high priority on the intangible “savings” of feeding that mouth, and the mouths of her parents, food that has not been sprayed with tons of pesticides and preservatives. After all, what is more important to me? Doing my best to ensure that all three of us live long and healthy lives or ensuring that I can go on an annual cruise in my retirement (that would then no doubt be cut tragically short by colon cancer)?
(Quick requisite disclaimer: I acknowledge that having a choice between options such as these is a privilege many cannot imagine, and I in no way believe that families who are struggling to make ends meet should be worrying about whether or not their lettuce comes from a family-owned organic farm (unless they want to, of course). By the same token, I think we would ALL be a lot better off if the families who CAN afford to think about such things do, as those families have the power to drive the market for everyone else into healthier, more affordable directions. (Wal-Mart’s numerous and insidious societal sins aside, their recent move toward supporting organic and local produce comes to mind here as a result of the mainstreaming of organics. (Let’s not take time right now to ponder whether they’re price-gouging those small farmers, k?)))
While I like to get as much organic stuff as I can, I also don’t want said organic products to send my grocery bill skyrocketing. I like to find the right balance between reasonable prices and a grocery cart with as few toxins as possible.
(Just one other aside before I continue: I am also lucky to live near a Whole Foods as well as a Superfresh (A&P) that has recently launched their own totally decent organic store brand (Green Way). Larms will probably have a few choice words for me and all of us at some point about how tough it is to even FIND varied options like these out where she lives.)
Here are a couple rules of thumb (in no official order of priority–I’m still working out the hierarchies myself–any advice on that welcome!) that make me feel pretty comfortable:
1) If the organic version is no more than 10% over the conventional price, go organic. So if the organic can of beans is $1.09 and the coventional is $.99, I’ll choose the former–10 cents on the dollar seems like a worthwhile tradeoff for my health.
2) If it’s an everyday staple of our diet, go organic. For instance, I eat oatmeal every single morning, so whatever toxins are in conventional, I’d be getting a huge dose over time if I didn’t mostly stick to the organic version.
3) If it’s primarily for the kiddo, go organic. Now that she drinks milk, we buy the organic stuff for her, even though it’s ungodly expensive in comparison. Here is a case for me where the price difference is so much that it doesn’t seem quite worth it for the adult milk in the house, given how little of it we actually drink, even though it makes the dreaded list in Rule #4 below.
4) If it’s on this top 12 list of foods that retain pesticides, go organic (unless otherwise decided due to another rule taking priority–although looking at the original article and seeing the list of known side-effects associated with the pesticides in these foods, I might be changing my mind on that soon). It’s not all bad news. These are the top 10 foods where organic doesn’t matter so much. (If you’re trying to make a tropical fruit salad, you’re GOLDEN.)
5) If it really seems important to go organic (like with the meats) but organic is wicked expensive, just don’t buy it very often. We have meat with our meals only once or twice a week. This saves a good deal of money and means that when I do buy it, I can splurge to get the good stuff like grass-fed beef or free-range pork, or whatever seems less shady than steroid-infused chicken parts packaged in China. Or if it’s not the good stuff, at least it’s not going into my body every single day. (On that note, my husband is SUPER-psyched about the advent of the Elevation Burger fast-food chain and wants to let Corporate know that they BETTER be bringing their Philly franchise to a block near us).
I know it only costs 13 cents, but what if I don’t want it?
March 29, 2010
Larms got us off to a great start by pretty much summing up my own thoughts on and experiences with couponing, give or take some driving all over town for various city-block death-marches instead. “Lucky” for me, I do have all three major drug store chains within a 4-block radius–but do I actually want to hoof it around that radius, child in tow, for the express privilege of spending my post-work afternoon standing under fluorescent lights and listening to bad elevator music? I’ll pass, thx. Also, to be completely fair, you should probably add in some additional lame and discouraging planning failures on my part–I seem to be the queen of not realizing that a certain sale doesn’t start until the next day, or arriving on the last day of a sale only to discover a looted wasteland with only flavors nature never intended left.
Here’s my feeling about 90% of deals out there: They exist because a mega-company is trying to get you to buy, and then become a loyal customer of, a new product you in no way actually need. If you really needed it, you wouldn’t have to be given an incentive to buy it. In other words, if the bulk of its ingredients weren’t made up of nutritionally useless corn products or corn by-products whose subsidized production now outpaces our population’s reasonable ability to consume them, its makers wouldn’t be so desperate to unload these empty calories on us so cheaply. (And yes, I just stole the bulk of that thesis from Michael Pollan.)
Thus I’ve found that even when I do make the effort to poke around on the coupon websites or clip things out of the circulars, at best I come across a small handful of deals to set aside, and more than half of those I don’t end up remembering to use before they expire (since usually they are for items I only sorta-needed in my ambitious imagination anyway). Our blog’s little side-project of going chemical-free hasn’t helped matters, since cleaning and beauty products were the last bastion of coupon-eligible items I did “need” from time to time. Blast you vinegar! Why you gotta be so all-purpose?
So what IS a woman to do who’s decided that for her, coupons just don’t make sense, but would still like to be frugal while feeding her family responsibly-sourced, healthy food whenever she can?
In a nutshell, here are three strategies I stick to that complement my limited abilities to follow directions and plan ahead, but help fulfill my desires to keep it simple, make us healthier and not completely break the bank:
Simple: I go to only one drugstore and two grocery stores (which happen to be across the street from each other, so it’s almost like one). I try to find the best deals I can at those places, but I don’t spend time worrying about or looking for what opportunities I’m missing in other stores.
Healthy: Unless I have a very compelling reason (like friends are coming over and we want chips and dip), I follow the rule of sticking to the outside edges of the grocery stores. This ensures that I buy mostly real, fresh food and that I don’t buy things we don’t need (usually manufactured by companies I don’t want to support).
Cheap: I go to the grocery store about twice a week and only buy what we will actually eat in the next few days. This has really revolutionized my life in the sense that we almost never, EVER, end up wasting any food. Sometimes I’m astounded when I think back over a month and realize that in that time we threw away exactly one-half of a wilted carrot and maybe a quarter cup of leftover rice. When your fridge and pantry aren’t so full that you can’t see everything in there, it’s really easy to make sure you use up everything you have before you go out to get more. This has actually become a pretty satisfying game for us–and, unlike deal-seeking, is one I actually have a real talent for! And let’s face it, it’s just more fun to do things when you can dominate the crap out of them.
A couple of months ago I came upon the discovery of an entire online community I had no idea existed – coupon/sale/budget blogs! Now, I don’t completely live under a rock – I knew about the general concept. But I did not realize there were entire websites devoted to things like matching up coupons with sales and rewards programs at grocery and drugstores with the goal of getting things crazy cheap or even free. (If this world is totally new to you too, some standard starting spots are here, here, and here.)
A common approach is to use these coupon/sale/rewards strategies to buy things, often for little to nothing or in some wild cases even making money, and make a point to use whatever there is and stockpile things you prefer or need. You can get Crest toothpaste for free, that’s what you use. You can get four boxes of whatever cereal for 25 cents, buy them and use them. Of course, there’s a lot of variation. There are folks who do that, and there are also those who work to do it on an organic or veggie lifestyle too, and many who focus more on just getting things they actually would buy otherwise (although my suspicion from my own experience is that this is a lot less fruitful).
I have to acknowledge up-front that this post itself is coming from a place of privilege – we have the luxury of not having to scrimp like crazy on groceries, personal care or household products. Not throwing money around and eating out every night of the week, but we are very comfortable compared to many families, I know. So this is my approach to this issue as a mostly optional exercise – just an opportunity to save. It is only my own measure of the activity as it relates to my own situation and time. My perusings around the related blog-world, especially the blogs of those families who use these strategies out of necessity or to enable major life choices like having a stay-at-home parent, living debt-free, etc., left me with great respect for the energy and creativity people put into it (and the often seriously impressive results!).
Unable to resist the prospect of such bargains and quaking in my sensible shoes as we face starting to pay for full-time infant daycare in a few months, I thought I’d dabble a bit and give it the occasional whirl. I mean, from spending a bit of time on these blogs you do get the distinct sense that having ever paid more than 25 cents for a bottle of shampoo makes you a complete tool.
Well, after a couple of months of these sporadic efforts, I can say with confidence that trying to emulate the most hardcore shopping strategies of the coupon/sales/rewards budget shoppers is not an efficient use of time for this working almost-mom. No offense whatsoever to the moms who do put time into it, who have incredibly organized strategies and totally dominate the sales and their budgets. I actually am in total awe of them (that’s why I got so fired up to try!), and wish I had the time and drive to be better at it.
For my life, here’s a quick point/counterpoint on it:
Pros:
- Things for cheap! Free! Mad crazy bargains!
Cons (for me):
- Multiple stores, for me, can mean a lot of driving. Driving = money and time and pain in the ass.
- I apparently suck at it. Several of my attempts have failed – I do something wrong, don’t plan properly, don’t realize that you can’t just use $3 in such-and-such rewards with a manufacturers coupon, etc.
- It can be complicated, especially at the drugstores where big parts of the deals are various rebates (which require sending them in/registering them online AND then a trip to the bank once the stupid $3 check comes in) and “register rewards” that give you coupons for your next purchase in a fairly short period of time. I just went out of my way to a drugstore I don’t usually go to to buy some stuff for cheap, and part of getting that stuff cheap was a coupon that I have to COME BACK and buy more stuff to use?
In addition, I found myself often tempted to buy things I might not have even bought otherwise just for the deal. Of course, that’s clearly just my own failing – the experts would never make such amateur mistakes! But I do think it’s one of the central issues for me. Our overspending, which has gotten worse over the past few years, was more about buying stuff we don’t need than spending too much on actually necessary purchases – I wonder how common that is?
Realizing that was important, though. While I’m not feeding us both on $20 a week in groceries, I am making more of an effort to plan complementary meals, be less wasteful about food, and scale back our spending on personal care-type and cleaning-supplies things. Does our household really require every bizarre cleaning-product invention in order to be clean (Antibacterial Dishwashing Plus Rinse Agent Air Freshener Disposable Automatic Toilet Cleaner Wipes, anyone?)? Um, no.
Also, as I think Olivemom will be looking at, many coupons do indeed fall into the category of “stuff you don’t need” (or in our case, stuff I didn’t really want or that I otherwise would not be buying). Lots of various processed food items (Pillsbury refrigerated biscuits…various odd yogurt products…PopTarts…you get the drift) and cleaning supplies or household products I’m either trying to use less of already or are just completely unnecessary (whatever freak motion-sensor-flameless-candle-air-freshener product Glade has just released).
So, while it’s too much for me to keep track of sales and coupon matchups for food, personal products AND cleaning products at like seven different stores, this hasn’t been a total bust. I have been able to at least commit to keeping track of diaper prices/sales/coupons and have saved quite a bit using Seventh Generation coupons to make the switch to less toxic cleaning products, and I think this combination of trying to buy less in general + pay attention to coupons/deals for items we really do use has been an improvement for us. Whatever product I need and may have a coupon for at the moment might not be QUITE as cheap at Target as it would have been when it was on sale at Walgreen’s on the other side of town three weeks ago if I paid closer attention, but I think I’ll live.

