Healthy Grocery Shopping in 20 Minutes or Less
- Keep a journal. For just one week, keep a journal of how much time and money you spend on grocery shopping. Include time you spend visiting coffee shops, restaurants, fast food joints, and ordering take-out. Write about how you spend your days: Do you waste time reading tabloids, watching TV, surfing the Internet, playing video games, or doing too many errands because you don’t plan your time well? Once you’ve thought about your answers to these questions, choose a few things to change that can give you some time back. Maybe you give up watching just a half hour of some inane reality TV show a day. That alone gives you an extra 7.6 days a year!
- Make a shopping list. Have a shopping list every time you go to the supermarket and stick to it. You will save your money and your life.
- Make shopping a weekly ritual. Choose a specific day and time when you’ll shop each week so it becomes an ingrained ritual.
- Take stock of what you have. Clean out any old perishable foods from your refrigerator and determine if you can substitute something you already have for something on the shopping list. Decide which items you’d like to make a double batch of to freeze for future use. Items that are great for freezing include soups and stews, burgers, meat loaf, rice dishes, and sauces.
- Repurpose your existing stock. If you have leftovers that cannot be successfully frozen, look ahead and plan where in your week you will use them. Make sure you have plenty of storage containers. Pyrex and glass work best to preserve flavors. Take an extra few minutes to arrange your cupboards and refrigerator to reflect the order in which items will be used. It is helpful to have containers for all refrigerated items that go with a particular meal to be stored together and labeled.
- Research local favorites. Search out cheaper sources of fresh, whole foods in your neighborhood. My top choices are stores like Trader Joe’s and shopping clubs like Costco or Sam’s Club, where you can buy vegetables, olive oil, fruits, nuts, canned beans, sardines, and salmon at much lower prices than regular supermarkets or other retail chains. Co-ops are community-based organizations that support local farmers and businesses and allow you to order foods and products in bulk at just slightly over the wholesale price. This takes a bit of advance planning but will save you money and time in the end.
- Consider home delivery. Buy direct and cut out the middleman. One of my favorite places to get wild-caught seafood and lots more is Vital Choice. Just about everything else, from spices to nut butters, you will find at very reasonable prices at Thrive Market (plus receive 15% off the first order and a 2-month free trial).
- Plan a weekly menu. Note any prep to be done for the following days. Look over the week’s menu and see what items you can make ahead of time. Examples include roasting nuts and seeds; making a sauce, chutney, or pesto; or toasting grains. Plan which meals you can cook the night before or make in a slow cooker, such as soups, stews, or grains. Click here to find fabulous, easy-to-make recipes your whole family will love.
- Artichokes
- Arugula
- Asparagus
- Avocados
- Bean sprouts
- Beet greens
- Bell peppers (red, yellow, green)
- Blueberries
- Broccoli
- Brussels sprouts
- Cabbage
- Cauliflower
- Celery
- Chives
- Collard greens
- Dandelion greens
- Eggplant
- Endive
- Fennel
- Garlic
- Gingerroot Green beans
- Hearts of palm
- Jalapeno peppers
- Kale
- Kiwi
- Lettuce
- Lemons
- Limes
- Mushrooms
- Mustard greens
- Onions
- Parsley
- Pomegranate seeds
- Radicchio
- Radishes
- Shallots
- Snap beans
- Snow peas
- Spinach
- Summer squash
- Swiss chard
- Tomatoes
- Turnip greens
- Watercress
- Zucchini
- Extra-virgin olive oil
- Extra-virgin coconut butter (often called coconut oil; at room temperature it is solid, but at warm temperatures it may be liquid)
- Other healthy oils, such as walnut, sesame, flax, or avocado
- Nut butters (raw, if possible), such as almond, cashew, macadamia, or walnut
- Nuts, such as walnuts, almonds, pecans, and macadamia
- Seeds, like hemp, chia, flax, pumpkin, and sesame
- Tahini (sesame seed paste)
- Canned full-fat coconut milk, unsweetened
- Unsweetened hemp or almond milk
- Canned or jarred Kalamata olives
- Almond meal
- Arrowroot
- Apple cider vinegar
- Balsamic vinegar
- Reduced-sodium, gluten-free tamari
- Reduced-sodium broth (vegetable or chicken)
- Dijon mustard
- Sea salt
- Freshly ground black pepper
- Seasonings and spices, such as turmeric, cayenne pepper, thyme, rosemary, chili powder, cumin, sage, oregano, onion powder, cinnamon, coriander, cilantro, paprika, and parsley
- Boneless, skinless chicken and turkey breasts
- Ground chicken and turkey
- Lean cuts of beef, lamb, and bison (buffalo) meat
- Omega-3 enriched eggs
- Whole forms of non-GMO soy food, like tofu, tempeh, and gluten-free miso (organic, when possible)
- Wild or sustainably farmed, low-mercury seafood like sardines, salmon, herring, flounder, clams, crab, oyster, perch, pollock, shrimp, sole, squid, trout, whitefish etc. Avoid those fish that are high in mercury such as tuna, swordfish, and Chilean sea bass. Refer to the National Resources Defense Council website and download their wallet guide to choosing the fish lowest in mercury.
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