You Are What You Eat:
Healthy Eating Tips That Save Money
Find out ways to eat healthy at a minimal cost

A healthy diet helps to keep you well and reduces the risk of serious illnesses such as cancer and
heart disease. The good news is that there are lots of ways of introducing beneficial foods into your
diet without making big, unpalatable changes, and at minimal cost.
Healthy diet, healthy wallet
Although choosing the healthier alternative can save you money, a few foods that offer the best
nutritional value can be expensive, but you need only use them sparingly.
Go easy on meat Make meat go further by cooking it in casseroles or stir-fries bulked out with
cheaper ingredients such as beans, pulses or seasonal vegetables.
Cheap, healthy ingredients Basing meals on starchy foods such as rice, pasta and bread is not
only good for a balanced diet but offers excellent value for money.
Five a day for less
Doctors agree that we should all eat five portions of fruit and vegetables each day. Here is the best-
value ways of ensuring those five portions are a part of your daily diet.
Canned and frozen count too Your daily intake can include fresh, frozen, chilled, dried and canned
foods, the health properties of some (like tomatoes) are even better in a canned form, as well as
often being cheaper. Save more by buying the supermarkets own brand - it's just as nutritious.
Just juice One - but only one - of your portions of fresh fruit can be taken in the form of juice.
Keep the goodness in
Don't squander your money by making the effort to buy fresh fruit and vegetables and then carelessly
destroying their nutritional benefits.
Fresh is best Eat fresh fruit and vegetable as soon as possible rather than storing - or use frozen.
Minimal cooking Don't cook vegetables for too long as you will overcook them. Cover to keep in
steam.
Don't dilute vitamins Boil vegetables in as little water as possible without boiling them dry, and then
use the water as a nutritious stock for making soup.
Clever storage Cover and chill cut fruit and vegetable and don't soak or vitamins and minerals can
dissolve away.
Grow your own
Even if you don't have a vegetable plot, you can make savings by growing fruit and vegetables in your
garden.
Be selective Don't grow vegetables you can buy cheaply in the shops, go for those that are sold at a
premium, take up little space, yet are simple to grow. French beans, mangetout, sugar snap peas
and cut-and-come-again (or 'loose leaf') salad, such as 'Salad Bowl', will net you the biggest savings,
especially if you grow them from seed.
Pot-sized plot if you have a courtyard or very small garden, you can still grow some fruit and
vegetables in pots. In a 23cm-25cm (9in-10in) pot you can grow one aubergine, pepper or tomato
plant, four climbing French or runner bean plants; 32 carrots; or three strawberry plants.
Save on herbs Grow the herbs you use most frequently in a window box, pot or a garden bed by the
kitchen door so you can harvest them as and when they are needed. Many have nutritional and
therapeutic benefits.
Get your essential fats for less
The omega-3 essential fatty acids are beneficial fats that can reduce the risk of a heart attack or
stroke. You can increase the amount in your diet at minimal extra cost.
Swap meat for fish Replace at least one meat meal a week with oily fish. You don't have to go for
expensive fish such as tuna or salmon; mackerel, sardines or herring are just as good, and canned
sardines have the bonus of being high in calcium, too, as the bones are edible.
Vegetarian option Top up your omega-3 oils by scattering a handful of pumpkin seeds on a salad or
eating a few walnuts. Or eat 1-2 tablespoons of ground flax seeds a day: buy the seeds and mill or
grind them yourself rather than taking expensive flax oil or ground flax seed supplements.
Drink Water
Aim to drink up to 2 liters a day - and the more of it that is water the better as this ensures good
circulation and digestion and prevents dehydration and the fatigue and mental fuzziness that usually
accompany it.
Top tips best buys
To make sure you don't end up paying more for your healthier diet; you may have to make a few
modifications to the way you shop.
● Bargains at food market although supermarkets often offer value for money, traditional food
markets can be cheaper for healthy alternatives. Some products can be found at half the price
compared to the price in the supermarket.
● Buy dried not canned Pulses such as kidney beans, chickpeas and lentils work out about 50%
cheaper if you buy them dried rather than canned. But you do need to remember to soak them before
cooking.
● Buy fruit not fizz a can of a fizzy drink may contain up to 8 teaspoons of sugar, which encourages
weight gain and is bad for your teeth. For a healthy alternative that contains valuable vitamins, mix
500ml of unsweetened fruit juice (orange or apple), with 500ml of water, chill and serve. It will cost
just a quarter of the price of a canned fizzy drink.
source: rdasia.com
3 Comments
wow!i had fun reading it!thanks sis!
Very useful tips. I like to have to my own fruits and vegetable garden. So you know that you are eating healthy foods and not pesticides.