Yes Wellie you are right,
"I haven't seen such significant increases, though, but I go shopping every week, so it's a more gradual thing for me." I understand that when things only go up 10¢ here and there you don't see it. However when you kind of drop out of the economy and then drop back in you do see it.
Here are a few recommendations:
> If you do not have a chest freezer buy one. They cost around $100- and I have seen them for as
cheap as $79.95. They remain super cold even when the electric goes out. This time of year
you could even wheel it out to the porch to keep it cold even if the electric goes out.
> Buy in bulk. When chicken thighs are 99¢ a pound buy 20 #'s and freeze them in manageable
chucks. For us that's 3 thighs per meal. If people come over pull three thighs per two adults.
> Occasionally, frozen veggies are on sale. Buy 'em up and put them in your freezer chest.
> Buy pasta and cans of pasta on sale. Both store well. I would recommend you store your unopened
box's of pasta in zip lock bags to keep beau-weavels down.
> When something is on a great sale - Buy it! We have about 10 lbs of butter in the box freezer along with three
4# bags of sugar and similar in flour on the shelf. Yes we have umpteen canisters of wheat put
away BUT that is for another day.
> Hunt! Some of the best protein you will ever put in your mouth comes from the woods. Will deer
taste like a well marbled Angus steak - No! Is it good in it's "mother naturalistic sense"
ABSOLUTELY! It just needs to be cooked a bit differently.
With that said, wild turkey is the best turkey you will ever put into your mouth! There is
none better even an organic raised Bourbon Red at $5- a # from the health food store can't
compete.
MrsMac squeals when I bring home a rabbit as she much prefers that over chicken. To me I would
rather have the chicken.
I love squirrel as it tastes like pot roast to me if cooked
properly. Nutty and deep with flavor. MrsMac does not like them as much as she thinks of them as
"tree rats." What I keep explaining to her is they eat only great stuff like nuts and such. Funny
thing though is she cleans the plate.
Then there are ducks and geese. Wild ducks and geese (goose) are nothing like the store bought
cousins raised on the farm. To my palate served med-rare to medium they taste like lamb. So
treat as lamb with plenty of garlic, olive oil and rosemary.
I am sorry as I am going off topic here. Bottom-line, buy when the price is down, store it away and hunt. A morning in the woods with even only a squirrel or a rabbit hanging on your belt is worth even more to me then spending a hour or so in church.