Grocery Master List by Liz Weishaar

Psst--Want to save money on your groceries? Want to spend less time grocery
shopping? Want to have an organized pantry that works for you? Try the
Grocery Master List.

A Little Prep Work...

First, tape a piece of paper to the fridge. For a week or two, write down
everything you eat or take out of the pantry to cook with.

You may want to ask your spouse and kids to participate, as well, depending
on their ages and eating habits. In fact, asking your kids to do this
exercise along with you can give you a good idea about your kids' preferred
eating habits, so you can nip poor habits in the bud.

After a week or two, you'll have a pretty good list of most things you and
your family eat or cook with: milk, bread, chips, soda, popcorn, ice
cream--hey, where are all those fruits and vegetables we're supposed to be
eating!

A Little Categorizing...

Categorizing is the most important part of creating your master list, but
you already have all the information you need. Sit down with your list from
the refrigerator and rewrite it into
categories. It's the categories that will make all the difference in
shopping thriftily and quickly.

Categorizing gives you a quick way to see your shopping list the way you
think about it. Do your categorizing thoroughly, and you can pretty much
coast afterwards.

Our Grocery Master List is categorized by meals: Breakfast, milk, cereal,
dried fruit, oatmeal; Lunch, sandwich bread, ham, cheese, turkey, pretzels,
cookies, canned cola; Dinner: chicken,
hamburger, lettuce, tomato, salad dressing, pasta, spaghetti sauce; Drinks;
seltzer water, 2-liter colas--you get the idea.

You may want to organize your Grocery Master List by grocery aisles, or by
individual, or by some hybrid method. Whatever makes the most sense to you.

And You Can Coast!

Now that you have your Grocery Master List, or GML (like everything that's
important in modern life, we can give it an acronym), worked out according
to your categories, you can use it to handle everything having to do with
groceries--and I mean everything. I use mine as a guide when I select
recipes for the week, when I'm making my weekly grocery list, when I'm
deciding what to put into my shopping cart, to help me remember to look for
things I like to buy on sale, and even to organize my pantry. Let's see how
this works.

Meal Planning--Your GML obviously lists the foods your family likes best, so
it's easy to plan recipes and meals based on the list.

Weekly Grocery List--You can use your GML it to check your refrigerator and
pantry before you go to the store. Sure, you always remember to check the
milk before you shop, but do you remember to check if you have enough of the
popcorn your 15-year- old just can't live without? With the Grocery Master
List, you can walk through the kitchen and pantry and just mark the things
you're low on. You'll have an instant list every time you go to the store.

At the Store--Now you can walk confidently--and quickly--through the grocery
story, putting into your cart the things on your list--and you'll get
everything you need, without missing anything. This sort of pre-organization
can save a lot of time, especially if you bring children along.

Buying on Sale--Knowing in advance exactly what you buy, you can plan to buy
it when it's on sale. Having checked your refrigerator to see how much ice
cream you have, you can decide to get some extra when it's on sale this
week, so you won't have to buy it next week, when the prices are back to
normal.

Pantry--The GML can help you organize your pantry, especially if you get
into a rhythm of buying larger quantities of items when they're on sale--you
buy up to the limit per customer when foods
go on sale, right? If your kids are cereal hounds, you may want to keep 8
cereal boxes' worth of shelf space open.

Try the Grocery Master List--for a little up-front effort, you can save a
lot of time and money at home and in the store.
_________________

Liz Weishaar <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wholeheartedly embraced the frugal
lifestyle when her husband declared he wanted to have retired 5 years ago.
She wishes he'd mentioned this earlier! Her latest challenge is weaning him
off those $4 coffees. Liz has two decades' worth of experience writing in a
variety of fields.

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