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Friday, June 5, 2026

Why This Frugal Blogger Refuses to Buy the Cheapest Item in the Dairy Aisle

Freshly toasted thick slice of wholegrain bread with creamy golden butter melting into the top on a blue and white china plate on top of a straw mat with a silver knife and silver tray of butter.

Standing in the dairy aisle at Walmart,  I can't help but notice the price difference between their Great Value butter ($3.06/lb) and Imperial margarine ($1.24/lb). The margarine is clearly the budget winner at a fraction of the cost of butter. My frugal brain says, "get the margarine, get the margarine." But my gut (quite literally) says, "no! Don't do it!" The thought of eating margarine gives me shivers. You know I'm a frugal person. You read here daily how I cut corners to save money. But frugality without a few boundaries isn't wise, it's a downer. My boundary line is in that dairy aisle. My boundary is real butter. 

I think we all realize margarine is a manufactured, chemically altered oil product. Just how processed is margarine? If you'd like a peek into how margarine is made, here's a 10-minute video that shows the process, and oddly, presents it in a positive light.  We all make our own choices and have our own preferences, but for me, I refuse to put chemically altered oils into my body in the name of saving 2 bucks.


Why My Body (and My Tastebuds) Refuse Fake It


Artisanal bread in a basket on a wood cutting board with a crock of fresh creamery butter.

image: Bao Menglong on Unsplash


Real butter has a great mouth feel. And the flavor can't be matched by margarine. I can taste a hint of dairy cream in real butter. There's even a cow on the box of butter. (And manufacturers wouldn't lie about what's in their product, now, would they?) With margarine, I taste oil and salt. 

Butter adds it's creamy richness to everything I bake and cook. Meanwhile, margarine has a relatively high water content and can ruin the texture of baked goods or even a slice of "buttered" toast, in my opinion. Here are the actual ingredients as listed on the package for a box of Imperial margarine: Vegetable Oil Blend (Palm, Soybean, and Palm Kernel Oils), Water, Salt, Distilled Monoglycerides, Soy Lecithin, Potassium Sorbate and Calcium Disodium EDTA (Used to Protect Quality), Pea Protein, Citric Acid, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Vitamin A Palmitate, Beta Carotene (Color). If that's what is fit for a king, I guess I'll settle for being a butter-eating pauper.


The Butter Budget: Where I Shave to Afford the Good Stuff


Overhead flat-lay view of affordable whole-food baking ingredients including a heaping cup of white flour, fresh brown eggs, and a prominent bowl of cubed butter on a kitchen towel draped on a rustic kitchen counter.

image: LAUREN GRAY on Unsplash


At $3 (or more) per pound, butter isn't cheap. I mean, I can buy chicken for less per pound than butter. So how do I, as a frugal person, afford my family's butter fix? You know I don't buy packaged processed snack foods, frozen meals, or soda. By skipping those items, I free up enough of our limited grocery budget to buy a pound of real butter every week. I still buy the store brand of butter. It's my frugal heart's dream to someday buy a roll of Amish Country butter. It doesn't come packaged in sticks, but in one large 2-lb lump, at a pricey $12.79/2 lbs. Pricey butter, yes, but I suspect it has a taste and creaminess to blow the budget for.

I can't say I use less butter than I would margarine because the quality is so much better with the butter that I need less. I smear my piece of toast thickly with butter so I can really enjoy that taste. We have a little debate in our house, which is better, butter on cold toast so the butter doesn't melt into the cracks or butter on hot toast so the butter permeates the slice? I fall on the cold toast side of the debate. As one of my daughters used to say at age 4, " I like butter you can see."


In the end, frugality isn't about saving the most possible money. This isn't a game where he who saves the most wins. Frugality is about making choices that improve our lives while being financially responsible. Choosing real butter isn't a lapse in financial discipline. It's a conscious choice to prioritize my health and well-being while satisfying my tastebuds over the savings of a few dollars. By not putting pre-packaged snack foods, frozen dinners, or soda pop into my grocery cart each week, I create breathing room in my grocery budget for something that matters to me, creamy, delicious butter. Frugality should make your life better, not sadder. As I see it, life without real butter is just a little too sad for me. Real butter is my non-negotiable.

Everyone has that one thing. It's where they draw the line, that one food or product where they just won't compromise for the sake of frugality. Logic flies out the window and quality wins. It might be soft and cushy bathroom tissue, the blue dish soap that cleans even oil-slicked seabirds, or farm-fresh organic u-pick strawberries. 

True confessions -- are you team butter, or do you secretly have a tub of Country Crock in your fridge? (No judgment!) What is that ONE food or household item where you just won't cheap out, no matter how tight the budget? Drop your confessions in the comments below. I'll be hanging out here all weekend (expecting lots of rain) to read your non-negotiables and reply.


Thursday, June 4, 2026

Why Planning for Christmas in June Is a Total Game Changer

A melting snowman standing where the sandy beach meets the ocean's edge.

Image credit: Kostiantyn Li on Unsplash


When summer meets winter. I'm planning Christmas 2026 already. I know it feels early for planning for the holidays, but I want to explain why. I set my budget now, while I still have months to save and I choose gifts in advance, eliminating last-minute gift-buying fatigue. What I gain is incredible peace of mind knowing the how much, what, and the timeline I'll follow.


Crunching the Christmas Numbers in June


A sunny patio table with a calculator, sunglasses, pen, and open planner for early summer Christmas budget planning.

I need to budget for our expenses. Coming up with a budget right now means I won't make sentimental over-expenditures as the holidays near. And this allows me time to set aside money in cash, so I have the whole holiday prepaid. I am including our Christmas dinner and Christmas Day brunches in this figure, as well as the gifts.

I know how much I will spend in total. The money will come out of two different funds, one the grocery fund and the other a holiday fund. I will set aside money every week to meet both categories.

For the extra grocery items I will want for Christmas Day meals, I will put $2 every week from my grocery budget into an envelope. By November 20, I will have that $50 and can use Thanksgiving sales to fill out parts of our menus. What does saving $2 per week look like for my family? It looks like beans and rice one night per week (we already know I have a lot of rice to use up right now), using our garden produce to its fullest this summer, and using all the little bits, such as pickle liquid and rinsings from ketchup and mustard containers. I could even make our own ketchup just for the next few months and save a couple of dollars every 6 weeks or so. 

Since I grocery shop with cash, the dinner and brunch savings will be easy to do. I'll take $2 out of my grocery envelope each Friday and slip it into the Christmas dinner envelope. With the gifts, I'll need to dedicate a portion of our monthly income to Christmas savings. This will all be on paper, and not in cash, as I often buy Christmas gifts online.


Finding Perfect Gifts (Without the December Panic)


A stack of beautifully wrapped Christmas gifts sitting on a sandy beach next to the ocean for early summer holiday shopping inspiration.

Image credit: Nataliya Melnychuk on Unsplash


Today I brainstormed ideas (with the help of google AI) for gifts to my siblings (we exchange inexpensive, usually consumable, family gifts). I came up with an idea that will work for both of them. I also searched online for best price and found what I will be ordering when the cool early-October air hits our area. I also came up with what I will send to my nieces, nephews, and grand-nephew. The mail-away gifting is all figured out. I didn't come up with ideas for my immediate family. We typically do that in late November, via shared "wish lists." But I have a budget for each of us included in my master budget.


The Priceless Benefit of Early Preparation


A relaxing hammock swinging in a shady backyard garden,   representing the peace of mind gained from early holiday preparation.

image credit: Steph Quernemoen on Unsplash

Every year I struggle to come up with ideas for my extended family members. I tend to not think as rationally as I should, and often overspend out of guilt "for not being early" or trying to match their lifestyle, which is more affluent than my own. By pre-planning gifts that are meaningful to each recipient and nice in their own right, I have interrupted that faulty line of gift-thinking. I have gained peace of mind in gifting.

The bonus to all of this planning is, as a person who needs to have some certainty in life, I can fully appreciate knowing how much all of this will cost, what I have to do and when, and how we will pay for the holiday. 


Taking the time to plan for Christmas in June might seem early, but the financial peace and mental space it creates are entirely worth it. By setting up a savings plan and selecting the gifts now, I am giving myself the ultimate December gift: time to reflect on the meaning of the season. 

Now I want to hear from you: When do you typically begin your holiday planning, or do you prefer the thrill of the last-minute rush? Let me know in the comments.


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