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"Fresh food with the best nutrients is expensive. Cheap shit tinned and frozen food filled with water and sugar is much more available within budgets. Convenience counts too. The hours people have to work to support a household and then the maintenance on top means fe people have the time to plan, buy at the correct time and prep whole healthy meals." Add to that the cost of electric or gas to cook, plus many don't have the skills to cook healthily depending on the upbringing. | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? " Vegetables are good value at supermarkets. Including Cabbage, brocoli, cauliflower (other Vegetables are available), frozen veg is good value too. | |||
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"A microwave pasta meal for one is about £2.50. A big bag of pasta is 85p. Tin of tomatoes, chopped veg, maybe a bit of cheese, tuna, ham or sausage added. The home cooked meal is a fraction of the price and much healthier. " And what is the price of the upbringing and education needed to know - or even to care about - all of that? The cost of the education and opportunities needed to have a job that pays for a home with a decent kitchen? The price of a lifestyle that affords you the freedom to even have half an hour spare to spend cooking it? Cost isn’t as simple as a price tag. There’s more to it. | |||
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"A microwave pasta meal for one is about £2.50. A big bag of pasta is 85p. Tin of tomatoes, chopped veg, maybe a bit of cheese, tuna, ham or sausage added. The home cooked meal is a fraction of the price and much healthier. And what is the price of the upbringing and education needed to know - or even to care about - all of that? The cost of the education and opportunities needed to have a job that pays for a home with a decent kitchen? The price of a lifestyle that affords you the freedom to even have half an hour spare to spend cooking it? Cost isn’t as simple as a price tag. There’s more to it." I think the education is there though if people actually want to make a difference in their diet. YouTube videos about meal prep and making food stretch has been my education having grown up on convenience foods due to both parents being too busy and those videos are an easy source for anyone looking to start in my opinion. | |||
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"Reading while eating Pringles for breakfast ![]() What flavour ? | |||
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"A microwave pasta meal for one is about £2.50. A big bag of pasta is 85p. Tin of tomatoes, chopped veg, maybe a bit of cheese, tuna, ham or sausage added. The home cooked meal is a fraction of the price and much healthier. And what is the price of the upbringing and education needed to know - or even to care about - all of that? The cost of the education and opportunities needed to have a job that pays for a home with a decent kitchen? The price of a lifestyle that affords you the freedom to even have half an hour spare to spend cooking it? Cost isn’t as simple as a price tag. There’s more to it." This is very interesting. When my parents were young, right into their adults lives, what you describe above wasn’t any kind of privilege, it was the only way to live. Have we really lost the basic skills to survive, such as being able to cook pasta on a hob, in just two generations? What does that say about the priorities of our society when people cannot - either through a lack of education or kitchen utensils - cook for themselves a basic meal using simple and readily available ingredients? If true, what an indictment of the utter failure of society. | |||
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"Reading while eating Pringles for breakfast ![]() Smoking BBQ Ribs. The spicy ones | |||
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"I don't have a freezer am i doomed? ![]() Yes. You won't be able to freeze yourself cryogenically whilst waiting for resurrection. | |||
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"I think the education is there though if people actually want to make a difference in their diet. YouTube videos about meal prep and making food stretch has been my education having grown up on convenience foods due to both parents being too busy and those videos are an easy source for anyone looking to start in my opinion." All true, but you have to reframe your point of reference a bit. ‘Everyone’ could be more inclusive. Imagine your only Internet access is through your phone. That’s pretty common. And your pay-as-you-go credit has to last until the end of the week. (You always live week-to-week. That’s when your money comes in.) You have to keep credit on your phone so that you can phone about work shifts. Or childcare. You can’t afford to use it up watching YouTube. If you want to watch YouTube you’ll have to go do it at the library. But that means getting a bus and you’d have to take the kids with you because you can’t leave them at home and you can’t really spare the money for the tickets. I’m taking this to extremes to make the point, but … people’s daily realities can be very different from our own. It’s healthy to try and see things from other perspectives now and then. | |||
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"If you batch cook it's cheaper to eat healthily and great for those evenings after work when I really can't be bothered. " Batch cooking isn't as helpful if you don't have the freezer space and many people on low incomes can't afford or don't have space for a freezer. You have to batch cook a large amount for a family of 4, for example. We are lucky to be able to have a large chest freezer that is kept outside. | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? " Not in my experience | |||
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"If you batch cook it's cheaper to eat healthily and great for those evenings after work when I really can't be bothered. Batch cooking isn't as helpful if you don't have the freezer space and many people on low incomes can't afford or don't have space for a freezer. You have to batch cook a large amount for a family of 4, for example. We are lucky to be able to have a large chest freezer that is kept outside. " Also - freezers cost a bloody fortune to run! Most of my electricity goes on my fucking freezers | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? " I'd say it is more expensive, I can buy unhealthy food much cheaper | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. " You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. " they also didn't answer.. yes you can knock a reasonably cheap meal together that's healthy but.. it is still cheaper to put a meal together from unhealthy stuff | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. " Just wow | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. " Yep. We consider ourselves very lucky to have the means, the equipment etc to eat healthily. We don't have huge amounts of time but we do have a slow cooker and the means to store batch cooked food and to buy in bulk to reduce time spent shopping. We are very aware not everyone has those luxuries. | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? " No. It isn't. Especially if you batch cook. I eat *really fkn well* and most of my meals come in at just over £2-2.50. And my protein intake is higher than most. | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? " Not at all. Healthy meals prepared from scratch cost us about £1 per head per meal. Easy, cheap, nutritious and varied. | |||
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"is expensive. I've seen this written and heard people say it many times. Is it more expensive than eating 'unhealthyily ' ? No. It isn't. Especially if you batch cook. I eat *really fkn well* and most of my meals come in at just over £2-2.50. And my protein intake is higher than most." Any recipes you have i'd apprieciate if you'd like to share some i'm on tight budget & want high protein healthy meals | |||
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"It depends what you class as 'healthy' eating?" fruit is more expensive to buy than crisps or biscuits | |||
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"A microwave pasta meal for one is about £2.50. A big bag of pasta is 85p. Tin of tomatoes, chopped veg, maybe a bit of cheese, tuna, ham or sausage added. The home cooked meal is a fraction of the price and much healthier. " How do you stick the foil down before you microwave a home made one? | |||
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"A microwave pasta meal for one is about £2.50. A big bag of pasta is 85p. Tin of tomatoes, chopped veg, maybe a bit of cheese, tuna, ham or sausage added. The home cooked meal is a fraction of the price and much healthier. And what is the price of the upbringing and education needed to know - or even to care about - all of that? The cost of the education and opportunities needed to have a job that pays for a home with a decent kitchen? The price of a lifestyle that affords you the freedom to even have half an hour spare to spend cooking it? Cost isn’t as simple as a price tag. There’s more to it. I think the education is there though if people actually want to make a difference in their diet. YouTube videos about meal prep and making food stretch has been my education having grown up on convenience foods due to both parents being too busy and those videos are an easy source for anyone looking to start in my opinion." I’m a qualified personal trainer and I’ve studied nutrition. I can cook healthily from scratch from a variety of cuisines. I also know how to prep food for the freezer, and how to cost-effectively batch cook. At any time I usually have around 40 portions of healthy and balanced meals in my freezer. I still can’t cook for my small 5ft body as cheaply as I can buy junk food. | |||
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"It depends what you class as 'healthy' eating? fruit is more expensive to buy than crisps or biscuits " I agree | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. Yep. We consider ourselves very lucky to have the means, the equipment etc to eat healthily. We don't have huge amounts of time but we do have a slow cooker and the means to store batch cooked food and to buy in bulk to reduce time spent shopping. We are very aware not everyone has those luxuries. " Most people have a stove/cooker and a couple of pans/saucepans, a small amount of money and a shop they can go to. I'm sure there are some marginal people without those luxuries but the vast majority of people have access to a basic cook set up. You don't need any fancy plug in contraptions to make good cheap grub. You can do it whilst camping in fact on a fire whilst living in a cloth bag nailed to a field. I despair that people thing making something healthy is something technical or requires a load of equipment and time. | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. Yep. We consider ourselves very lucky to have the means, the equipment etc to eat healthily. We don't have huge amounts of time but we do have a slow cooker and the means to store batch cooked food and to buy in bulk to reduce time spent shopping. We are very aware not everyone has those luxuries. Most people have a stove/cooker and a couple of pans/saucepans, a small amount of money and a shop they can go to. I'm sure there are some marginal people without those luxuries but the vast majority of people have access to a basic cook set up. You don't need any fancy plug in contraptions to make good cheap grub. You can do it whilst camping in fact on a fire whilst living in a cloth bag nailed to a field. I despair that people thing making something healthy is something technical or requires a load of equipment and time." Harsh but accurate. | |||
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"There are two types of cost. Capital costs and revenue costs. Think of one being equipment whilst the other is ingredients and energy. Plant milk in the shops is very expensive. Mine costs pennies but I use a plant milk maker costing £180. I am well in profit over the long term. I also have a bread maker (5 ingredients rather than 13-15 ingredients from shop). Then there is the air fryer to reduce energy costs. A slow cooker, cheap as chips in energy terms and ingredients. A soup maker for leftovers. And there are other items of kit. Yes, healthy eating is as cheap or cheaper as long as you have got £1,000 in equipment." Soya milk is about 60p in Sainsbury's and Lidl. No equipment needed. | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. Yep. We consider ourselves very lucky to have the means, the equipment etc to eat healthily. We don't have huge amounts of time but we do have a slow cooker and the means to store batch cooked food and to buy in bulk to reduce time spent shopping. We are very aware not everyone has those luxuries. Most people have a stove/cooker and a couple of pans/saucepans, a small amount of money and a shop they can go to. I'm sure there are some marginal people without those luxuries but the vast majority of people have access to a basic cook set up. You don't need any fancy plug in contraptions to make good cheap grub. You can do it whilst camping in fact on a fire whilst living in a cloth bag nailed to a field. I despair that people thing making something healthy is something technical or requires a load of equipment and time." We are both perfectly capable cooks, thank you for your assessment. We use the slow cooker to batch cook while we are out at work because I cannot stand up to cook for long and my husband doesn't have time to do absolutely everything. Therefore, I put the slow cooker on while I work from home. It enables this family, with one disabled adult (and main income earner) to cook healthy food. | |||
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"You've gotta be a bit thick if you can't put together a decent healthy meal for cheap. You gotta be a bit heartless to not read the above!! Heating, utensils, time, energy, bulk buying, storage, transport…. Yep. We consider ourselves very lucky to have the means, the equipment etc to eat healthily. We don't have huge amounts of time but we do have a slow cooker and the means to store batch cooked food and to buy in bulk to reduce time spent shopping. We are very aware not everyone has those luxuries. Most people have a stove/cooker and a couple of pans/saucepans, a small amount of money and a shop they can go to. I'm sure there are some marginal people without those luxuries but the vast majority of people have access to a basic cook set up. You don't need any fancy plug in contraptions to make good cheap grub. You can do it whilst camping in fact on a fire whilst living in a cloth bag nailed to a field. I despair that people thing making something healthy is something technical or requires a load of equipment and time. We are both perfectly capable cooks, thank you for your assessment. We use the slow cooker to batch cook while we are out at work because I cannot stand up to cook for long and my husband doesn't have time to do absolutely everything. Therefore, I put the slow cooker on while I work from home. It enables this family, with one disabled adult (and main income earner) to cook healthy food. " What assessment? I was just pointing out it's a piece of piss to make cheap healthy food with a minimum of equpment or fuss. I don't care how you personally go about it. | |||
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