The Mail on Sunday

Beware! Cooking a roast can cost you half the price of the ingredient­s

And making yourself a cuppa could be five times the charge for the bag

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By TOBY WALNE

THE soaring cost of energy could cripple many households over the coming months – as we face record-breaking bills for electricit­y and gas averaging £2,500 a year. A year ago, this average was just £1,335.

Reporter Toby Walne explores the bizarre new world of how the amount of energy we use to accomplish a household activity, like making a hot drink, can cost even more than the key ingredient­s – such as the humble tea bag. As we face soaring bills, he calculates the expense of day-to-day tasks – and discovers valuable tips to save hundreds of pounds a year.

BOIL JUST ENOUGH FOR A BREW

THERE is nothing like a fresh cuppa to prepare for the challenges of the day. Already feeling the pinch, I sailed past the household-brand favourites of PG and Tetley’s at my local branch of Tesco in the Hertfordsh­ire town of Bishop’s Stortford. I opted for a cheap ownbrand pack of 240 bags costing £2.70 that worked out at just over a penny a brew – half the price of some of the big-label offers.

Flicking on my 3 kilowatt-per-hour (kWh) kettle full of water, it took three minutes and 20 seconds to bring to the boil. This might not seem long, but every second counts in this expensive energy bill age. Energy companies have been told they must typically limit charges to no more than 34p per kWh of electricit­y used since the start of this month. So I calculate this kettle would use £1.02 (3 x 34p) of electricit­y if left on for a full hour. But, of course, taking just over three minutes to boil meant this brew used under 5.7p of electricit­y (calculated at 1.7p per minute). This is over five times more than the cost of the tea bag. But when I filled the kettle a quarter full – just enough for a brew – it only it took a minute to boil and this cost 1.7p. I did not bother taking any milk or sugar.

VERDICT: The energy for a cup of tea cost more than five times the price of a tea bag when the kettle was full. Using only enough water for a brew saved me about 4p.

FACTOR IN OVEN COSTS

I USED to enjoy my middle-class fight against animal cruelty by purchasing a free-range hen for a tenner. But facing a winter of austerity, all that virtue-signalling flew out of the window when I discovered a 1.2kg chicken from Tesco could be bought for £3.27.

I shoved the bird in the oven after ten minutes of heating up the 3kWh Neff electric oven to 190C to be fan cooked. After an hour and 20 minutes, I pulled the golden-brown hen from the oven, having calculated it took £1.53 of electricit­y to cook.

Buying and cooking the chicken totalled £4.80, but it still worked out cheaper than a supermarke­t precooked chicken at £5.75. Half a kilo of potatoes cost 41p, and 250g of carrots 12p, with the same weight of broccoli 43p. These were each

boiled on their own stove ring. Boiling the spuds took 30 minutes and the other vegetables were given 15 minutes each – using 1.4kWh of electricit­y that cost about 48p. VERDICT: When totting up a grocery bill, remember to add extra for cooking ingredient­s that might add a further 50 per cent to the final cost. Pre-cooked chicken does not work out cheaper.

DITCH DIY BREAD

ENCOURAGED to find new ways to save cash, a growing number of households are making their own bread – a habit from lockdown. But does it make financial sense?

I have a fancy 0.5 kWh Panasonic bread-maker that takes five hours to bake a decent loaf, so may use about 85p of electricit­y. The ingredient­s of flour, salt, sugar, butter, water and yeast put together to make that tasty loaf were 60p. It meant making my own bread cost £1.45. Tesco wholemeal sliced is 80p and a crusty white 400g farmhouse loaf 90p, so this hobby is quite expensive. I then toasted the bread. My 1kWh Dualit toaster took a couple of minutes to brown the toast at a cost of just over a penny. VERDICT: It may taste better, but home-made bread can now cost more than that purchased from a bakery, thanks to the latest price energy price hike. But you can console yourself with slices of bread that cost 1p to toast.

DON’T TAKE A TUMBLE

DOMESTIC chores are no fun, but thanks to modern timesaving gadgets it is no longer the hassle it was in years gone by. After ensuring the dishwasher was stacked full of crockery and glasses, I put in a dishwasher tablet – a packet of 40 costs £4, so it worked out at 10p a wash.

The Siemens dishwasher groaned into life. The 1.2kWh machine took two-and-a-half hours to make the dishes spick and span, using just over £1 of electricit­y. Washing dishes by hand in cold water would have saved money but seemed a task too grim – even in a crisis.

Then I threw a full load of clothes into the washing machine. The nonbiologi­cal tablets worked out at 15p each. The 2.2kWh Beko machine took one hour and 24 minutes to wash a mixed load at 40C. This also worked out at about £1 a wash. But had I opted for a ‘daily quick’ ecocycle, it would have taken 39 minutes at 30C and used closer to 50p of electricit­y. Although there was a chill in the air, it was not raining outside, yet I still piled the clothes into a Siemens tumble-drier.

The 3kWh machine took two hours. It used £2.04 of electricit­y. Had I gambled on the weather, drying would have been free. VERDICT: Washing tablets can be about a tenth of the cost of the electricit­y required to power the dishwasher and washing machine. The drying power of the fickle British weather is free and the £2 of energy used by the tumble-drier would have been better spent on a new clothes line.

WATCH SHORTER FILMS

MANY of us can no longer afford to go out. Hikes to our mortgage payments and rampant inflation hitting us the moment we step out of the door – on everything from a pint of beer to a restaurant meal – mean it is time to draw the curtains and settle down for a movie.

Streaming services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime have been badly affected by the economic downturn, costing from £6.99 and £8.99 a month respective­ly, so I have ripped up my contracts.

After bargain-hunting in my local St Clare Hospice charity shop, I picked up a DVD of the 1955 timeless classic The Night Of The Hunter, starring Robert Mitchum, for just 50p. My 0.5kWh Panasonic 50in TV used 26p to enable me to enjoy this one hour and 32-minute film noir. Spinning the DVD on the 0.2kWh player cost 10p. VERDICT: The cost of electricit­y to watch a 50p movie worked out at 36p – but had the movie been more than two hours long, it might have worked out more expensive that the film. So watching shorter films saves you money.

CONCLUSION

THERE is going to be nowhere to hide this winter with the cost of energy rocketing – but we can at least ease the pain.

I worked out that by being frugal filling the kettle, economisin­g with the supermarke­t shop, staying in more and not using time-saving gadgets unless necessary, it would be possible to knock more than £400 from my annual energy bill.

Checking out the manufactur­ing labels at the back of devices – or looking through their instructio­n manuals – enabled me to get a better understand­ing of how much energy they potentiall­y used and gave me some practical tips on how to make savings.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R COX ??
CHRISTOPHE­R COX
 ?? ?? READY TO ROAST: Toby with his golden supermarke­t chicken and, above, preparing two 1p slices of toast
READY TO ROAST: Toby with his golden supermarke­t chicken and, above, preparing two 1p slices of toast

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