Rotorua Daily Post

Cost cutting makes cents

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bank matters more.

■ 2. Meal planning. I link what I need for one meal with another.

■ 3. The slow cooker is your friend. Cheap cuts of meat become lovely.

■ 4. Don’t buy stock. Vegemite and water or a packet of Oxo cubes are cheaper and last for ages.

■ 5. I never use all of the recommende­d product. Halve the recommende­d amount of washing powder, tomato paste, shampoo, dishwasher powder, soy sauce.

■ 6. Don’t be ashamed to put things back at the checkout. I have been doing it for years — it gets easier! the checkout and saying to the checkout lady I only have $200, I might have to put things back.

“I got over that years ago. I used to crawl with shame and be bright red in the face having to put things back, now they get it, they understand it.

“I don’t walk around the supermarke­t with a calculator, I just put things back.”

Blakey doesn’t bulk buy after realising buying five tins of tomatoes was pointless if she couldn’t afford the meat to go with it.

Toasted sandwiches are a hit and it’s usually leftovers for lunch.

Garlic bread is made from leftover burger buns from a previous night’s dinner and she mixes vegemite and water to make stock for cooking.

Blakey is not a fan of spending all day Sunday preparing meals for the week.

“One-pot mince is key,” she said. “Pasta, frozen veggies, stock and mince: boom, done.”

Blakey also advises using only half the amount of washing powder recommende­d on the packet.

“You never need as much as they say. Just $2 for 1kg of washing powder and it lasts me months.”

And if her favourite Garnier Fructis shampoo and conditione­r is not on special, she won’t buy it.

Blakey’s message to other families on a budget was: “It is really hard for everybody but there is nothing wrong with toasted sandwiches for dinner.”

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