Life

10 ways to make your food shop healthier and your money stretch further

Break unhealthy habits with little changes to your food shop

Inflation has eased for many everyday groceries, including bread, eggs, rice and tea.
Plan your way to a healthier shopping trolley (Alamy Stock Photo)

Let’s face it. Most of us push our trolley down the same aisles, buying the same food week after week. Things are starting to change as we become more aware of the impact of ultra-processed foods and too much sugar, but there are some simple ways that you can make little changes to your food shop to help you build a healthier diet.

1. Don’t shop when you are hungry

We have all been there. Piling our trolley with foods that are appealing to our belly hunger are unlikely to be the healthiest choices. You will probably buy more than you need and spend too much of your hard-earned cash on food that you are unlikely to eat.

2. Menu plan

Whether you plan it or wing it, putting a little bit of consideration into what you are going to eat for at least two or three days ahead will save you money, time and effort. See what you already have and build meals around those ingredients. Use the same ingredients to make different recipes, or at different mealtimes – for example, if you add some roasted Mediterranean veggies to have with some fish and spuds, make extra for tomorrow’s lunchbox. Perfect with couscous and feta, or as part of a filling for a wholemeal pitta pocket.

Close Up Of Man Reading Shopping List From Mobile Phone In Supermarket
Keeping a shopping list in the notes page on your phone helps you to avoid over-buying or making impulse purchases (monkeybusinessimages/Getty Images)

3. Make a list

Keep a shopping list in the notes page on your phone, or on your favourite supermarket’s app. That way, when you run out of something it goes straight on the list. You won’t end up over-buying, or going short.

4. Separate your big and fresh food shops

Do a ‘big shop’ for the non-perishable, longer lasting foods and shop a couple of times a week for fresh food like fruit, veg, meat and fish. Buying fresh food more frequently means that it is less likely to go off. Food waste is estimated to cost families around £800 a year, so anything you can do to reduce this means more money in your wallet.

5. Check dates

Look at the date on perishable items and choose those with the longest shelf life. A yellow sticker might not be much of a bargain if you are not eating that food before it goes off.

Food waste is estimated to cost families around £800 a year, so anything you can do to reduce this means more money in your wallet

6. Check prices

Look at the price per kilogramme or per 100g. Sometimes foods that appears to be the cheaper one isn’t really when you look at the smaller print.

7. Add in more frozen fruit and veg

Supplement your diet with more frozen fruit and veg. The more variety we can pack into our diet, the better our nutrition and the better for the balance of bacteria in our gut microbiome. Frozen fruit and veg is so handy and helps us to eat a wider variety of foods. Look out for frozen herbs, wholegrains with veg and frozen edamame beans - a great way to add a pop of protein to meals.



Frozen fruit and veg is so handy and helps us to eat a wider variety of foods (Creativ Studio Heinemann/Getty Images/Westend61)

8. Pack some snacks into your trolley

Oatcakes, houmous, cottage cheese, peanut butter, natural yoghurt, nuts, seeds, dark chocolate (at least 70% cocoa) and olives are great ingredients to add to your trolley for those times when the munchies kick in.

9. Choose low sugar

Not ‘no-added-sugar’ or ‘less sugar’ - take a closer look and you may be surprised that some foods labelled high protein, no added sugar or reduced sugar have more sugar than you think. Aim for foods with a sugar content of 5g per 100g or less – low sugar does what it says. This is a legal term – the others are marketing terms, trying to get you to put that food into your trolley.

10. Add in more fibre

Pack your trolley with more fibre. Pick up some brown rice, wholemeal or red lentil pasta. Add a few tins of pulses to add to curry, stews or soups. Pop a bag of chia or flaxseed in there too.