Kaz wrote:Suff wrote:Own brank cola, own brand chocolate, own brand crisps, budget pizzas, lasagne, ice creams. This is what is making the poor fat. It's cheap and it's a disaster. I noticed this a long time ago, when trying to diet away from home. Pretty much anything which is not good for you is cheap, anything which IS good for you tends to be expensive.
I absolutely agree! I could feed my family for about £30-£40 per week I reckon if all we ate was the above, plus cheap own brand white bread and butter. Most of the BOGOFs tend to be on 'junk' although I have noticed that improving lately As it is I spend over £100pw on good meat, fresh veg, juices, yoghurts, seeded breads, good cheese, nice wine.................I'm lucky to be able to afford it, and also to have the ability if we fell on harder times to cook most things from scratch, so I could feed us well for rather less
The bottom line is that to feed a family cheaply and healthily takes effort (to source the best deals) and skill (to know how to cook it) and many people are unable or unwilling to use either
Not surprisingly I disagree with Suff and Kaz, and now Cromwell. I do not think that £30 - £40 would keep a family "full". They would have to top-up... with even more expensive fast food.
Cheap junk or fast food does not exist. It is junk all right, but it is anything but cheap - that's the urban myth.
If a person stays away from packets and tins and the freezer cabinets, and goes for fresh, they can, with only basic cooking skills, feed a family for a fraction of the cost of processed glop. It is not that hard or time consuming.