Besides the half a steer we buy a year and the one hog we raise, we do a good job buying things when on sale.
We have bulk storage of rice, wheat, oats, etc, etc. however for daily needs, we buy in bulk when items go on sale. Some examples are...
> When chicken parts are on sale ~.99 cents a lb, we buy enough future use. Our goal is to have 21-days frozen
on hand. We buy, wash, trim, and freeze in two people portions.
> We buy processed flour when it goes for $1.89-$1.99 for a 5-lb bag. We try to keep 5-6, 5-lb bags in reserve.
> Similar with sugar, we try to keep 5-6, 4-lb bags on hand. We buy when the price drops to $1.99 for a 4-lb bag.
> We buy other cooking supplies too when on sale,
- 1 gallon cans olive oil
- Baking powder & soda
- Brown sugar
- Chocolate bits
- Bread Machine yeast
- Salt,
- Etcetera.
All on sale.
> We use a local restaurant supply facility to buy spices in 16-ounce containers,
- Whole pepper corns,
- Garlic powder
- Rosemary
- Paprika
- Etcetera.
> Vegetables, we wait till canned 14-oz veggies go on sale for .50 cents a can. Buy up about a case of 24 cans per
veggie. Which lasts about half a year for us.
We date everything and of course rotate our products.
I could go on and on however, you get the idea. Buy as much as you can afford when the items (s) is on sale.
A friend of mine who he and his wife live on a very thin revenue stream, they buy chuck when on sale and "cold
pack" 32-oz canning jars and pressure can them. He told us that canned chuck makes the best stew he has ever had.
There are a lot of ways to store and buy food.