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Stop Stereotyping Couponers: The Majority Frugally Shop the Outer Perimeters of the Grocery Store

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There was yet another article about couponing, this time in “The New York Times Magazine,” (May 3, 2012) featuring the folks at Fabulously Frugal, and yet again, I’m astounded at how a topic like couponing can get people so riled up (read the comments, they are more entertaining than the actual article). Many of the misinformed comments that come after the article prejudge people who use coupons as unhealthy hoarders who are a burden to those who don’t use coupons.

A shopping cart filled with bagged groceries l...

NOT what I buy! (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I’m not sure people were so fired up about couponing before that dang TLC show about extreme couponing came along. But every naysayer thinks that people who use coupons buy loads of junk food one step up from the fast food chains. (Oh, how I wish I could find out how many people who write negative comments about coupons frequent McDonald’s or other fast food establishments I wouldn’t be caught dead in… I’m sure more than a few…). Here’s the reality of most couponers (not those on television): we save money on non-grocery and grocery items using coupons, and so we can buy good meat and fresh produce. If I can get razors and toothpaste for free-ish using coupons, that money goes towards fruits and veggies. Most of us are not like the woman in Erie, Pennsylvania, featured on “Extreme Coouponing” who has a locked door to a special room in her basement filled with cookies and snacks, called “Mom’s Cookie Room.”

One Canadian blogger tried to explain her healthy couponing in this informative, helpful article–and then she was lambasted by a reader in the comments section–you may want to read her gracious reply to this reader. Another healthy couponing article by Shape Magazine listed Lean Pockets as a healthy food to buy with coupons. I would never be caught dead with a package of highly processed Lean Pockets in my house. The article also lists Yoplait yogurt, which I know is high in sugar. My take away from these articles: we all have different definitions of what eating healthy means for us–some of us prescribe to healthy-enough while others are more strict. We don’t have to agree with each other, but let’s have a healthy level of respect for one another.

Most of us have heard health advocates, such as the Mayo Clinic, say to avoid any inner aisles of grocery stores food. So, besides buying cereals, pasta, crackers and decent cookies (when I don’t make from scratch) inside the store perimeter, ingredients for tomato sauces, and always flour, sugars, oils and other baking and condiment needs, my own cart is filled with perimeter groceries. It is most definitely not filled with fruit roll-ups (tons of coupons for those) and the like!

Speaking of perimeter groceries, there ARE coupons and sales for those! You have to find the store in your area that holds the best perimeter sales. Thankfully, ShopRite has produce Super Coupons, and besides that, I’ve been able to use manufacturer’s coupons to buy almonds, raisins, protein bars, orange juice, cheeses, yogurts (favorite is Activa), organic eggs, organic milks…with coupons matched with sales! Maybe there are not coupons  and sales for all the items all the time, but most of the time, I’m able to frugally shop the perimeter of the grocery store.

Here’s a small sampling of recent purchases using coupons/sales at ShopRite for fresh/healthy foods:

  • Sale: $1.29 a pound for organic apples
  • Super Coupon ShopRite: whole pineapple $1.49
  • Super Coupon ShopRite: broccoli or cauliflower .99 cents a lb.
  • Coupon + Sale: Blue Diamond Almonds (not in perimeter but healthy) for $1.50 a can.
  • There’s always BOGO sales on potatoes, carrots, and onions–which reminds me of the bags of baby organic carrots for $1.66 each on sale, no coupons needed.

Here is a short list of alternative coupons I used to get healthy items:

  • Groupon to Whole Foods ($10 for $20 worth of items and I bought meat and poultry)
  • Fairfield Coupon to Fountain of Youth ($9 for $20 worth of items in this organic store in Westport, and I plan to buy produce and/or meats)
  • I use the coupon booklets from Whole Foods, as well. Sometimes you get amazing deals, as you can read about in one of our posts.

    Buying frugal chicken at Whole Foods

    I bought nine packages of antibiotic-free chicken drumsticks at Whole Foods because they were affordable at .99 cents a pound thanks to a 70% off sale. Good to know that even Whole Foods has super sales! Photo: TFF

It’s always possible to buy frugally around the perimeter using coupons and sales, or just sales. To all of the coupon critics: Buy frugally around the perimeter by simply reading the store’s sales flyers!

~Marilyn, TFF

Free Event This Weekend in Fairfield: What are GMOs?

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GENETICALLY MODIFIED ORGANISM

Learn what a GMO is and why it affects all of us at a free community event in Fairfield, CT. GENETICALLY MODIFIED ORGANISM (Photo credit: live w mcs)

Information Event: What are GMOs and Why Frugal Consumers Need to Know

Scroll down for event info…

It’s tough to weigh the choices at the grocery store: Do I buy only when I have a coupon or only what’s on sale?  How much fresh food can I afford?  Organic vs. Conventional?  And now, there’s the issue of GMOs.

First…a little history on why this event is important: Fourteen years ago, genetically modified (GMO) crops were introduced into our food system.  Since then, studies point to evidence that shows that ingesting GMO ingredients leads to the basis of many health problems ranging from food allergies to infertility. Based on this research, over 50 countries of the world label any food product that contains GMOs.  Find out about the documented health risks of GMOS here: http://www.responsibletechnology.org/

According to national polls, over 90 percent of American consumers want GMOs labeled. Connecticut is one of several states currently considering mandatory labeling of foods containing GMOs. Bring your questions and concerns, and learn more at this free community event:

What Are GMOs and What Does the Bill Mean for Consumers?

CT GMO Labeling Bill Informational Meeting and Q

Saturday, March 10th

10:00 – 12:00 Noon, Pequot Library

Free and open to the public

Representative Tony Hwang, a member of the Environment Committee, will discuss HB 5117, An Act Concerning Genetically-Engineered Foods, and the state legislative process.

Analiese Paik from the Fairfield Green Food Guide will share testimony she delivered to the Environment Committee, which was reported in the Wall Street Journal, and discuss ways to support the bill.

Tara Cook-Littmann, a holistic health counselor, will discuss GMOs, how prevalent they are in everyday foods, and how the labeling bill supports our right to make informed choices.

Aimee, TFF

 

Organic Strawberries Now on Sale at Shoprite (and Stop & Shop)

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Fragaria × ananassa 'Chandler,' a short-day co...

You may not be able to see the difference between conventional and organic strawberries. Image via Wikipedia

Why is the $3.49/lb sale for organic strawberries at Shoprite in Fairfield a great price?

Organic strawberries can be found as one of the “Dirty Dozen” list for being one of the most pesticide-laden produce, according to the Environmental Working Group. Download the app or wallet-sized list here: http://www.ewg.org/foodnews/guide/

But do you know why it’s on that list? Conventional strawberries are sprayed with a chemical called Methyl Iodide, a most deadly pesticide. Methyl Iodide is the chemical scientists have used to deliberately cause cancer in laboratory cells for research purposes. That is how powerfully dangerous it is! Experts are calling for its ban in agricultural practices.

Until then, Frugal Fairfielders, head to Shoprite for your organic strawberries this week!  It happens to be $.50 cheaper than Stop and Shop’s sale price.

Better yet, learn how to grow strawberries yourself.  It’s on my list to try, but that is for a post for another day…

~Aimee, TFF

Fairfield Coupon Debuts and Offers Local Group Discounts

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Fairfield Coupon

Sign up with Fairfield Coupon for hyper-local deals and discounts.

Can’t get enough 50% to 90% off deals around town? Turn to Fairfield Coupon for your fix.

You might be wondering about those pretty, retro pink-and-blue Fairfield Coupon signs you’ve been seeing around town. We wondered, too. It’s a new service—a more localized Groupon-type discount service—that wants to support the success of local, small businesses in our area by offering great deals.

Fairfield Coupon is taking suggestions about what businesses you’d like to see deals for in and around Fairfield County (and parts of Westchester County). Now, if anyone was lucky enough to get in on that Whole Foods Groupon deal a while ago, and we’re all hoping for another round at that, by all means, give your thoughts to Fairfield Coupon! (I mentioned the Whole Foods deal to Fairfield Coupon and hoping really hard that they try to get the market to do another deal like that.)

In fact, one of Fairfield Coupon’s recent deals was $9 for $20 worth of organic food and natural products from the Fountain of Youth in Westport. Of course TFF missed that one! But hoping for more goodies like that.

Make your way to the site and sign up, support them, and by all means, offer your suggestions!

Marilyn–TFF

Free Seed Packet Area Now Open at Fairfield Woods Branch Library

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seed drawers

A patron looking through the vegetable seed packet drawers. The top one holds "easy" seeds for beginner gardeners. Photo: TFF

Don’t miss this annual springtime opportunity to gather free organic (and some heirloom organic) vegetable, herb and flower seeds at the Seed-to-Seed Library in the Fairfield Woods Branch Library in Fairfield. The Seed-to-Seed Library has seed packet donations from Comstock Ferre in Wethersfield, CT, the oldest operating seed company in the U.S., and other generous seed companies. There’s plenty to share.

The area is on the first floor near the Resource Desk and is run in partnership with the Fairfield Organic Teaching Farm. The drawers are categorized with seeds that are easy to difficult to plant, there’s a sign in sheet, tutorials, handouts and more. Open a packet, take out a few seeds and place in the little envelopes provided by the library.

flower seed packet drawer

Some of the packets of flower seeds at the Seed-to-Seed Library. Photo: TFF

Please remember to sign in so the library can track how well-loved the program is for future grants.

Funding for this program was generously provided by Fairfield Earth Day Committee.  Seeds for the Seed-to-Seed Library were graciously donated by Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Co., Mansfield, MO;  Comstock Ferre in Wethersfield, CT, oldest continuously operating seed company in the U.S.; and Renee’s Garden—Gourmet Vegetables, Kitchen Herbs, Cottage Garden Flower in Felton, CA.  A grant from New England Grassroots Environment Fund has helped to establish the seed library.

 

~Marilyn, TFF

Surprise Sale on Chicken at Whole Foods Market Friday, February 17th, 2012

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If you want a good buy on whole organic chickens, head over to Whole Foods Market’s one-day-only sale.

Limit 10 chickens at $1.99 lb. Remember, they are organic chickens!

More info, click here.

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