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Liberate $400 from that Lunchbox!
by Tawra Kellam
Tawra is known on the Internet for her expertise in frugal
living. She publishes the frugal living web site, www.notjustbeans.com,
participates in group discussions on several simple living and frugal bulletin
boards and advises people regularly how to save money.
The average school lunch cost $3/day or $540 per year and what mother hasn’t
wondered if those lunches actually get eaten? In her book Not Just Beans, frugal
cooking expert Tawra Kellam provides solutions to jazz up those lunches and save
up to $400 in the process. Here are some sack lunch tips that help guarantee you
will be able to retire the "starving kids in Ethiopia" lecture for
good.
Those snack sized bags of munchies cost a lot! Make your own by:
- Pre-packaging chips, pretzels, animal crackers, vegetables etc. into
sandwich bags at the beginning of the week. (Have the kids help on the
weekends.) Keep them in a big container/basket and simply throw them in the
lunch box in the morning.
- Let the kids create their own pizza lunch kits- Toast bread and cut out
little circles with a biscuit cutter. Add a small container of pizza sauce,
cheese and other toppings.
- Make fruit gelatin and pudding and put in small plastic containers for the
week. Make a large batch of granola bars, cookies, pumpkin bread, banana
bread or muffins. Divide and put them into individual sandwich bags. Freeze
and use as needed.
- If you don’t have time to bake, buy cookies on sale and re-package them
for the week.
- Brownie bites are simple to make. Bake brownie mix in mini-muffin pans and
put three "brownie bites" in a sandwich bag for each child's
lunch. They freeze well too!
- Fill a thermos (not glass) half full of juice the night before and freeze.
In the morning, remove from the freezer and fill the rest of the way. The
juice will be cold when they are ready to drink it and the thermos keeps
their food cold too.
- Purchase cheese in blocks, cut into cubes and put in sandwich bags.
- Save the extra napkins, catsup and mustard packets you get from take-out.
Use in lunches.
Before you make another peanut butter and jelly sandwich, check out www.notjustbeans.com for more recipe ideas.
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