Food Stamp Challenge: The details

Ok, friends, I ran out of time yesterday, and I am so excited to hear how many of you are really excited to try this out!  So, I think some more details are in order. If this bores you to death you can skip it all. 🙂 But several of you asked questions so here’s more particulars:

  • What do I buy organic? Here’s the key: You don’t have to buy everything organic. I used the Dirty Dozen and the Clean Fifteen.  (A dozen foods that are a must-organic-buy and fifteen foods that you continue buying conventional.)  I used this as my guide.  So helpful!  So, I switched to organic apples, nectarines, peaches, potatoes, beets, leeks, carrots, meat, milk, eggs, coffee, chocolate.  After reading a bunch and asking around to some of my food experts :), I did not switch to organic grains or dried beans.  Perhaps eventually, but it seemed like much less of a priority. So I just stuck to only whole-wheat, oats, brown rice, etc. Nothing white.   The key is this: It doesn’t make sense to buy organic processed food. If a food is processed (think goldfish crackers), then none of the original pesticides (or nutrition!) are left so it really doesn’t matter.  I also stuck with Tillamook cheese. It’s not organic, but it comes from local farmers.  Plus, I love supporting them.
  • GMOs: One of my personal goals was to avoid Genetically-modified food.  More than 90% of soy and corn is genetically modified. So, I basically sought to eliminate soy and corn altogether (FYI: Food Should Taste Good tortilla chips are made with non-GMO corn).  This is a huge challenge. Soy and Corn are in probably 90% of all foods in the grocery store.  Two options for corn: Buying fresh from local farmers, or buying organic.
  • Azure: Update on Azure Standard. It is open to the public, you just have to order something like $400 at a time, so if several of you partnered together you could do it.  Check out their website (create an account, then you will be able to see prices).  Great deals on local, organic produce.
  • A Greater Cause: For me, the point of all of this is the ability to put our food dollars to good use.  This includes, of course, creating healthy meals for my family. But this also includes supporting local farmers, and “voting” with each dollar I spend.  What has struck me the most about all this is how our food industry has taken the feet right out from under developing nations.  And, if we really were able to hack our budgets down to the bare minimum, how much more financial freedom we would have to help those who have nothing, much less snacks and convenience food.  I know this isn’t for everyone, but I think it’s exciting to see that it’s not just about using our non-food dollars for good, we can use all those dollars for good.
  • Remember, Honoring your husband is a biblical mandate, buying organic food is not. I just want to make this really clear:  I am doing this experiment, and this switch, with my husband’s enthusiastic blessing. He loves it. He is all for it, and loves the changes we’ve made. He watched Food, Inc. and the Future of Food with me.  But if your husband is not for this, your biblical responsibility is to honor your husband’s wishes.  So, please hear my heart in this–no one is judging your grocery cart. 🙂  If you can make these changes, awesome. If not, joyfully bless your husband with the foods he loves.  (And suggest that your next datenight is snuggling on the couch watching a food documentary. 🙂  Anyway, first things first: honor your man’s wishes. I have found most husband’s love 1) home-cooked meals, and 2) frugal, joyful wives. Prove that both are possible!

Thanks for following along on this fun little challenge. Remember that Jesus’ mandate was, “Go and make disciples…” not “Go and preach about organic food.” 🙂 Love God, love people, and let’s seek to make every dollar count for doing good in our world.  Bless you!

Finishing the Food Stamp Challenge (and continuing!)

Well, today’s the day! We finish the one-month Food Stamp Challenge (click to read the challenge): seeing if it’s possible for our family to live on the budget of food stamps while  eating organic, local, seasonal, whole foods.

So, our official total, for one month (drumroll please!) was $186. Yes.  I know, I was astonished.  Our goal was $275, so I was very pleased. This included meat, produce, dairy, etc.  Now, let’s be very frank about more than just the dollar total.  It was eye-opening and challenging.

Hands down the biggest eye-opener for me was that whole, local, organic food is not what is most expensive.  Convenience is expensive. Snacks are expensive.  And oh, do I love my convenience and my snacks. 🙂  That’s truly where the cost is in making the switch–it costs time and it costs my craving.  We didn’t buy anything pre-made and had only whole grains. So that meant baking all bread from scratch, cooking rice, soaking dried beans, chopping vegetables, roasting whole chickens, making stock.  I found that I needed to devote most of one day (which isn’t a whole day because I was still playing and taking care of kids) to cooking for the week.  As long as I was good about planning ahead, it wasn’t really that bad. The tricky part is if I didn’t plan ahead it meant really being in a pickle come lunchtime.  But then again, that was a great motivator to get diligent about planning ahead!

When I was busy I’d often resort to peanut butter sandwiches and apple slices for the kids.  But I figured with organic peanut butter, organic apples, and homemade 100% whole wheat bread even that wasn’t bad, right?  The other tricky part is that Dutch really wasn’t into to many of my healthy creations. He has yet to find quinoa and garbanzo beans very appetizing.  Pancakes are still #1 on his favorite list.  But again, making them from scratch with whole wheat flour, organic whole milk, organic eggs, and sneaking in carrot puree, they are actually a pretty decent meal.

What I missed most, hands-down, was convenience and snacks.  We don’t have an air-popper, so popcorn was out. I couldn’t bring myself to pay the price for whole-wheat tortillas, so quesadillas were out (but toasted cheese is good!).  We didn’t buy crackers or chips or breakfast cereal, but relied on old-fashioned oatmeal and fruit or toast.  For sweets and treats I made homemade whole-wheat banana bread with real butter (yum!), and even made a few batches of cookies using ground oatmeal instead of flour (which tastes better than whole wheat, to me) and mixing in garbanzo bean puree (which is what gluten-free recipes use) and shredded zucchini.  I know, sounds gross but they were delicious.  There was no way I was going without my cookies!

So I realize this might not be realistic for a lot of families. But my goal was just to see the difference it would make, basically, if we traded convenience and snacks for wholeness and health.

And, just in case you think my children were starving, this was a fun tidbit.  Some of you know that in August at Heidi’s checkup she was supposedly in the red-zone for being underweight.  So I had to visit a nutritionist at the end of the month.  Well, they weighed her at the appointment and she’d gained two whole pounds in one month, getting her up out of the red-zone!  So yeah, apparently this worked to pork up my girl. 🙂

But yes, in the interest of full-disclosure, I will admit that this week, when we were out of a lot of things and Dutch kept asking, “Can I have..?  Can I have…?” and having me answer that no we didn’t have any of that, he responded, “Mommy, what can I ever eat??”  Ooh, poor boy.  But then we discovered that he loves omelets  with cheese so he was happy.  He even discovered that he loves salmon and loves eating chicken straight off the bone.

:: Helpful hints: Ok, so how does any of this help you.  I’m certainly not an expert after only a month, but here are a few helpful things from the past month.

  • Snacks and convenience are what break the bank. If you really are serious about low-budget and high-health, it seems that this is the key to success. I know this isn’t realistic for everyone. For for my mom, who has some physical limitations, it doesn’t make sense for her to go to all the work of roasting whole chickens and making stock when she can afford to buy organic chicken breasts and stock. But IF budget is the name of your game, this is how to go about it.
  • Similarly, just remember the less they do the less you pay. Meaning, if beans are in a can, you’re paying for the work they did to put them there. If they’re in a bag or in bulk, you’ll save lots.  This is most clear with veggies.  Whole organic carrots  are under $1/lb. at every grocery store. But baby peeled organic carrots can be $3-$4/lb.  You do the peeling, you save the money. Same goes for oatmeal, homemade bread (which is so easy with a breadmachine), etc. etc. I think you get the picture.  Health is not expensive, convenience is.

Personal deals: If you live in the NW, here’s what I found:

  • Safeway has whole organic chickens for $2.99/lb, and if you keep your eye out you can get ones that are near their freshness date and they’ll be 30% off. Then, if you can take advantage of that $10 off $50 coupon from Safeway, you’ll be getting that chicken for about $1.67/lb, which is a great deal.
  • I was able to buy produce through a friend at Azure Standard. I don’t think that’s open to the public, but definitely worth investigating other online food sources. I got all organic, local produce delivered to a private drop-point in Tigard, for amazing prices (all produce around $1/lb.). Safeway and Fred
  • Oops have to cut this short, we don’t have internet at home right now so I’m writing this at the Honda dealership while our car’s getting maintenance.  Time to go!  More later, perhaps, but that’s the gist of the challenge. I think we will continue!!

Filling in my blank: A Journey (1)

On the wall above my desk is a small, lined, yellowed piece of paper in an old wooden frame. At the top, in careful childish cursive, is the title,“Life Goals,” with a little squiggly underline and a sticker of a little girl with a bow in her hair. At the corner of the page is the date: Sept. 6, 1989. Yes, I wrote them more than 21 years ago. Then there is a quote by Victor Frankel (I write it here exactly as I wrote it there): “Not having a goal is more to be feared than not reaching a goal. I would rather attemt to do somtheing great and fail than attenpemt to do notheing and succeed.”

Yes, my spelling has improved. 🙂 Below that are four categories and my life goal for each. Here is exactly how it reads:

God: pray and read the Bible every day.

Family and church: Obey my parents.

Self: Save money and earn money. [Ha! I was frugal from my youth!]

World:

Pretty basic, and funny to see how much I am the same person as a thirty-year-old mother and ministry wife, as I was as a nine-year-old girl who loved bunny rabbits and ballet. You may, however, notice, that the World goal is blank. Interesting.

And most interesting is the fact that that has largely been my life goal for the world—nothing. Yes, God so loved the world. Yes, I’ve done some short-term missions and traveled to a number of different countries. I have family from Japan, Bangladesh, Calcutta.  So I can’t say I haven’t seen the world.  But a heart for the world? A love for the world?  A goal for how my life impacts the world? Not at all. I’m content reading my Bible and praying every day, obeying my parents, and saving money. 🙂 It makes me chuckle just sitting here, to see how my 9-year-old goals have truly set the course of my entire life.

At least, I pray, until now.

I feel like very slowly God is beginning to fill in that blank on my yellowed sheet of notebook paper from 1989. It has been blank for far too long. So while I am not an expert on the world, on poverty, on missions, on compassion—I am a 9-year-old girl again asking God what He wants me to do about the unfinished business on that page.

And I’d love to share the journey with you. I know it’s not complete; in fact, I have no idea where it will go. But just as a baby Christian shares her newfound faith before she knows all the ins and outs of theology and doctrine, I share my heart with you as someone discovering a tiny glimpse of God’s heart for the world.

Will you join me as I pencil in that blank?  Many of you already have beautiful goals penciled into your page.  But if you, like me, find a spot that is still blank, perhaps God will pencil something in for you as well.

I'm still here, just simmering. 🙂

Hi, friends!  God is so good and has so much going on!  I feel like in my heart I have four big pots on the burner simmering but none are quite ready to serve. 🙂  So, for now I’ll say that the Food Stamp Challenge is amazing me–I actually think it is cheaper to eat that way (whole, local, organic, seasonal).  It’s changing the way I see a lot of things.  I’ll also say simplicity seems to be a huge theme in my life right now, and the idea that less is more.

So, I think the pots are almost done, but I’ll let them simmer a tad longer. 🙂 What’s simmering in your life? What are you talking to God about, learning about, challenged about? What’s breaking your heart lately?  I’d love to hear.  Thanks, friends.  Talk to you soon.

Kari