On Not Lunching Out....!

in #inleo10 days ago

I've got a bit slack recently buying lunches out.

My achilles heal is the <£4 Tesco meal deal, ever since they've upped their game and allowed for a relatively healthy option.

So for just under £4 you can get a decent sandwich or wrap (I typically choose the later, some kind of chicken or bean thing), always a supergreen smoothie, and then a protein bar to top it off, which for the money and the convenience is pretty good.

My last job didn't help either, which involved a lot of travelling and so a fair few cafe visits, and PROPER lunches, for which you'll pay at least £10, sometimes almost double that, depending on where you go and what you have, obviously!

And since my current job started and being in the office a couple times a week I've been going to the local deli where all you get is a sandwich for £4. It really struck me last week when I'd basically been working 6 hours straight and then got a late lunch from the cafe just across the road, perfectly nice ham and cheese sandwich, but I added on a caramel shortbread (fuckin' love those!) and it came to £7!

That REALLY made me think, and do the MATH...

The math....

So £4 a pop, say 4 times a week, I can do that NO PROBLEM..... and then add on a little because I'm always gonna upscale if I'm in lunch out mode, that's £80 a month, that's A CHUNK OF MONEY RIGHT THERE.

Making my own, the alternative...

Now let's assume I allow myself ONE £5 lunch a week, so that's £20, I should be able to make a VERY NICE lunch for £2 a go, probably less than that, but let's say £2, and £2 by 4 by 4 = £32.

So £20 (minus the one meal deal a week and round down as I've been generous) plus £20 = £40, that's a £40 saving a month if I can just get into the habit of making my own damn lunch MOST, and not even all of the time!

That's around 2% of my monthly expenditure saved, NICE!

Making a start on this, quite literally....

I'm going in easy....making a greek salad...

Ingredients for around 4 lunches....

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Around £6 for the fresh ingredients, so £1.50 a meal thus far. I also added a pitta with some humous, and a salad dressing, so around £0.50 extra, so my £2 a lunch target is bang on here!

Half used for 2 days and half stored for tomorrow's lunch

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I don't add the dressing until eating, no soggy salad for me, thank you!

And a dressing.....

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I bought these bottles a while back, I'd be happy to make salad dressing up to week in advance, I'm sure it would keep for longer, I need to check this out...

Final thoughts...

It is a bit of hassle making one's own lunch, but TBH what I've got here is more like an £8- £10 lunch if you were gonna eat it out, so I'm upscaling significantly from a mere sandwich.

And when one only has to be in the office twice a week, all I have to do is get in the habit of doing a shop the day before, making a double lunch and then I've got my workaday lunch and a £2-£6 saving, depending on how you want to calculate the difference!

It really doesn't take that much longer to double up.

I am going to myself a nice bento style lunch box too, so I can add in some chopped nibbles like nuts and carrots and fruit to make it extra yummy and nutritious.

So happy days!

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Supermarkets are getting really expensive. The bill has almost doubled from 10 years ago. It's getting unsustainable for a lot of people. There's a lot of people looking for deals to do their everyday purchases.

It's true, that cost of living is catching up with more and more of us, everyone having to tighten their belts!

Crypto will save us 😊

We're (not) banking on it, right?>!?

🙃🙃🙃

And no UPF..bonus!

I am starting to remind myself of my grandfather..lol!, when I was in Uni, I could go out on a fiver and get nicely sloshed. Three bottles of Newcastle brown at 85p a bottle, 10 fags for 80p and a bag of chips on the way home for 50p, ahh!!, 1988 ancient history now

Quite, only a few years after that I could fund beers and cigarettes on my doll money, I think that was around £65 a week!

It is always cheaper to make them meals at home. But if you travel it is another story. I pestered the management at my work until they bought a mini-oven, the proper one, which I mostly use to warm up or cook my food. I do not like microwave oven, that is. Plus, the benefit is that I can make a sandwich with what I like, and put more into it, like double cheese or my favourite vegetarian pate. It is cheaper, especially long term. If you work 5 days, monday to friday, spend 30 min Sunday doing all the five lunch packs, if you use cook food.

Tell me how it goes.

Or even just 3/5 or 2/5 you save yourself a fortune!

Well, I only work 3 days a week, is easy for me.

Nice way to be!

I've made my own sandwiches for years and must have saved a lot over buying them. I was inspired by some TV show about people trying to pay off their mortgages quicker, but would have had to do more to make a real difference. I am more of a sandwich than a salad guy, but I try to mix it up with fillings and make some of my own bread.

Ooh yes home made bread is a proper nice way to go! I like a sandwich and a salad! Variety is key for sure! Bento Box is best, a mix!

Well done with the food prep. If I lived near a Gregs I would be in there for a sausage roll or pasty every day... Damn I miss those.

< £3 for a bacon roll and a late, can't go wrong! Everyone loves a Gregs!