Anyway, I thought it best to skip my big, two-week stock-up shopping last Friday and focus on painting all day. One daughter was going to Walmart for something for herself. I asked her to pick up a gallon of milk and a small block of cheese for the family. And that was it for shopping for the week for me. So, a grand total of $6.90 spent last week on groceries.
If I'm going to skip a stock-up shopping, this is the time of year to do it. We have so much fresh produce coming in right now. I eat several figs, apples, and tomatoes each day. In fact, when I'm outside painting and hungry, I pluck a fig off one of the trees or pick a handful of cherry tomatoes to snack on without even going indoors.
Here's how our kitchen fridge looks without any meaningful shopping in a couple of weeks. Don't ask me to tell you what's in all of the jars. We have a couple of mystery jars lurking in the fridge right now. I'll deal with those in a week.
As you can see, no one is in danger of going hungry any time soon. It's probably a good thing I didn't go shopping last Friday, don't you think?
I have a dentist appointment mid-day tomorrow, so I won't get a full day of painting in. Which means I need to work as hard as I can on painting Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Monday. This will give me a few days of cure time before the next forecasted precipitation.
I'll skip major grocery shopping this week, too. Perhaps I'll ask a family member to go get more milk and cheese for us. Any Labor Day celebrations at our house will use what we have on hand -- meat from the freezer, produce from the garden/orchard, grains and other baking ingredients for dinner rolls and a pie.
So, what have we been eating since Friday morning (when I would have done the big stock-up shopping)?
We've had versions of cabbage/carrot/green onion salads (cabbage and green onions from garden), apples, pears, figs (all from orchard), blueberries and blackberries (from berry patch), peanut butter, cheese, tuna salad, frozen sausage, frozen beef, homemade bread, homemade pizza, various frittatas, oven fries and baked potatoes, Spanish rice, cooked garden vegetables, tomato/lettuce/cucumber salad (from garden), smoothies, cooked oatmeal, blueberry pancakes.
As it turns out, we have lots of food in my house. Not that I ever doubted that. But we're no where near boring or repetitive meals. I think those would begin in about a month and a half to two months (as the garden harvest and our meat supply began to dwindle), if I did minimal grocery shopping of only milk, cheese, and eggs.
This will make my August grocery spending total rather low, with just one big stock-up shopping at WinCo and a few small stops at Walmart. The great thing is I've been able to put more hours into my painting project, hopefully finishing up well ahead of any rainfall.
Here's my question to you -- how long could you make interesting meals with just bare bones grocery shopping (like my milk, cheese, and eggs)? I know many of us could eat for a couple of months, but I imagine the last couple of weeks would consist of redundant ingredients.
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