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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

How to Put On a Frugal Birthday Celebration: 6 Tips for Birthdays on a Budget

Guess who took another lap around the sun, as of this week? Yep, that would be me. Thursday is my birthday.

Since my mother is no longer around to plan my birthdays for me, I've been making my own plans for the day. And as you know, we do birthdays frugally (shocker, I know) in our family. We all want to have a special day on our birthday, but special doesn't have to break the bank. Today I'll share with you how I plan to have a fabulously frugal birthday later this week, complete with candle on a "cake" and some fun activities.

Whether planning a celebration for my kids in their younger days or a special year for one of us as adults, I consider 6 aspects where I can choose to spend or to save: venue, menu, time of day, activities/entertainment, communication, and decorations. Here's what I've chosen for my special day.


Venue

Where we'll celebrate can be the most expensive part of a celebration or not at all expensive. We can choose to dine in a restaurant, or we can choose to eat from home (whether at home or picnic from home). This year I'm choosing to eat breakfast and dinner at home, cooked from scratch. I have a couple of giftcards that we may use for lunch. Alternatively for lunch, we may buy something to eat at the little market we'll visit.

Budget Venues: public places (parks, beaches), home, free community rooms or church social halls


Menu

Even more influential in the final cost for birthday celebrations is the food choices. Restaurant dining has become rather expensive in recent years. Groceries have also gone up in cost. Yet, scratch-cooked meals don't seem to have suffered nearly as much from inflation as restaurant meals. Despite this, there are ways to enjoy dining out that are budget-friendly. Our family chooses counter-service restaurants as opposed to table service. We also choose lunch over dinner out. We tend to eat less at lunch than we do at dinner. So if we want to eat out on a birthday, a counter service lunch will be the most budget-friendly. This is also a great time to use squirreled away gift cards. for my daughters' birthday, we used a Panera gift card at lunch time and didn't even exhaust the gift card. Of course, we ordered carefully from the budget options.

As I said above, we'll be having breakfast and lunch at home. I've requested bacon, papaya, and toast for breakfast and mushrooms burgers with sweet potato fries for dinner with strawberry shortcake for dessert. I'll be picking up the bacon, papaya, mushrooms, frozen sweet potato fries, strawberries, and canned coconut milk (to make a whipped topping I can eat) at WinCo when I do my regular shopping tomorrow. Our lunch out will either be covered by a gift card or I'll use some cash at the market we'll visit.

Budget Menus: cook from home, use gift cards that you already have, potluck


Time of day

The time of day one choose to celebrate impacts the bottom line, too, but to a lesser degree. That is unless you're planning a table service meal. Breakfast or lunch out are almost always less expensive than dinner out. And coffee out (we did a coffee date for our anniversary last year) or an ice cream cone is even more frugal. The same goes for having a celebration at home. If we were inviting guests, expectations for food and beverages would be less for an event in the middle of the afternoon compared to lunchtime or evening. When we hosted celebrations for our daughters' university graduations, we set the time in mid-afternoon, when a hearty snack might be the expectation for the guests.

Budget time of day: mid-afternoon or any time a full meal is not expected, such as morning coffee gathering or after dinner ice cream outing


Activities or entertainment

Here's where our family demonstrates our birthday frugality perhaps the most. We almost always choose free activities or entertainment for parties. When my kids were little, we set up games and activities in the house for them. One year we used a bunch of packing boxes to build a castle for the kids to play in. Another year we let the kids paint on a wall we planned on painting over anyway in a few months. We had treasure hunts, picnics in the park, used passes we had been gifted to take kids to the science museum, and watched free entertainment at the Seattle Center. As adults, we've had tea parties, cookouts, beach picnics, park picnics, watched movies on streaming or dvds, played board games, window shopped in the vintage district, and visited local greenhouses and arboretums. All of the entertainment above was basically free. 

This year's entertainment will be a trip to a place my son and daughter-in-law have visited. Last year, for my birthday gift, they gave me money to spend at this place. I am just now getting to go there. It has several greenhouses, free-roaming chickens, grounds to explore, a statuary and pottery center, plants and trees for purchase, and a market that sells locally produced/raised/harvested foods and beverages. Our lunch may come partially from this market, using my gifted spending money.

Budget activities or entertainment: free concerts and dance recitals, free days at museums, art/craft at home, outdoor games like frisbee at the park, visits to arboretums and greenhouses, boardgames, movies on streaming or dvds, music through Spotify, dvd concerts played on your TV


Communication

Do you remember as a child getting a physical invitation from a classmate to their birthday party? Perhaps you helped your mom or dad address the invitations to your own party. When my kids were young, I made invitations, using colorful paper I had at home. Today you can use free tools like Canva to design professional-looking invitations. But most of us now rely on phone calls, texts, emails, or digital invites through sites like Evite. Digital invitations are a nice hybrid of digital communications like phone or text and a decorative and creative invitation reminiscent of the paper kind. Sites like Evite offer a free tier that allows access to some of the templates and offers RSVP tracking. Of course, they try to upsell you to a subscription service or paid "Premium" option. I do think physical invitations are still the norm for weddings, though. For my own birthday, a phone call is sufficient for those outside of our household.

Budget Communications: homemade physical invites free-hand or using Canva, digital invites such as through Evites, personal communication


Decorations

For the most part, if we're at home, we use what we have. We light candles or put up string lights. If serving a meal, we use our dining room, tablecloths, nice dishes etc. When my kids were little, we "decorated" with balloons, homemade banners and that was it. As adults, if the birthday person is female and are gifted flowers, then those flowers become the table decoration. While one could purchase themed decorations from Party City and other party retailers, our family prefers to either use what we have in the house already, or home-make something, such as a photo wall or birthday banner. For my birthday decorations, we'll use candles and perhaps flowers on the table.

Budget Decorations: use what have at home, such as candles, string lights, photographs or digital slide shows, make banners, centerpieces using flowers from your garden or your own nature collections

Monday, April 13, 2026

Best Garlic Hack: Mince and Freeze in Batches for Easy Weeknight Meals

I have days where creating a full family meal from scratch sounds daunting. I may have been busy in the garden, or doing taxes, or embarking on spring cleaning, and then the dinner hour begins to approach and I know I need to get busy in the kitchen.

There are a couple of specific kitchen tasks that I just don't like doing in the moment. Dealing with our garden garlic is one of those. I have to clean the cloves, peel them, and then chop. It's just a tedious chore I don't enjoy. Evidently, the rest of my family doesn't particularly enoy this task when they're cooking, either. As a result, I found myself buying garlic powder often this past winter. And yet, we have oodles of garden garlic remaining from last season.

So today I set out to prep several heads of garlic to make all of our cooking just a teensy bit easier. In addition to saving effort on a daily basis, I save a little money, too. I've often wanted to buy minced garlic in a jar. A 4.5 oz jar sells for about $2 at Walmart. That much home-grown garlic costs under 10 cents in water during the growing season. (I replant cloves saved from the previous harvest, so no cost for the "seed" garlic.) Save effort, save money. And by doing a large batch at once, I save a little time per clove.

On Monday I checked the garlic stored in the fridge and saw we still had a lot to go through before the next harvest. It was time to do something and get us to use this in the coming months.


I just grabbed a handful of heads of garlic, about enough for 3 weeks of meals in our house.

After pulling all of the cloves off each head, I rubbed them between my hands to loosen the papery skins.

It took me about 20 to 30 minutes to peel all of the cloves.


Once done, I filled almost a half pint jar with peeled cloves. I had a thought to just leave the cloves whole, but peeled in the jar. But I've had peeled cloves of garlic go soft within a few weeks. So I put all of the cloves through the garlic press.


Once all minced I had about a half-cup of ready to use garlic.


To maintain its fresh flavor, minced garlic can store in the freezer for several months. So I scooped all of the garlic into a small bag, pressed it flat, and lightly scored the slab.  Popping the bag into the freezer, I made sure it froze flat. Having the garlic mass flat and lightly scored just makes its easier to break off meal-sized pieces. Unlike jarred garlic, with freezing minced garlic, there is no need to add anything for preservation.

I now have a slight head start when cooking meals from scratch, and I'm pretty sure we'll go through all of our garden garlic in time. I'll need to do this in additional batches as we finish off what I have frozen. But I'd rather do a large batch every few weeks than deal with individual garlic cloves on a daily basis.


Is there any ingredient that you like to prep in advance in large batches? Have you ever made your own convenience products? In the 80s and 90s making Bisquick-style baking mixes was popular. I tried that a few times. It worked well. i just don't use Bisquick often enough to make a home version. I do make cake mixes occasionally. Not that we eat a lot of cake, but homemade cake mixes last 6 to 12 months when stored properly. A 3-cake batch of cake mix is easy enough for us to go through in a year, with birthdays and all. 

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