Stop Throwing Money in the Trash

Stop Throwing Money In The Trash

How often do you throw away spoiled milk, stale bread or rotten vegetables?

If you tallied up the cost of every half-eaten meal or moldy fruit you tossed in the garbage, how much would it add up to this week? This month? This year?

If the answer to those questions comes out to anything more than zero, it’s time to take action and stop throwing money in the trash.

1. Plan.

Get into the habit of planning your meals the same way you plan every other event in your life.

If you have to write them down in a planner to remind yourself, do it. If you have to cook in bulk on weekends to use your produce before it rots away over the course of the week, do it.

If you have to freeze some of your grocery haul until you’re ready to use it, do it.

Find the strategies that work for you and implement them in a way that uses all of your food before it goes bad.

2. Organize.

Vegetable and fruit drawers are the black holes of refrigerators.

Rather than tucking away the most perishable items where you can’t see them, try putting some of your condiments and other long-lasting fridge items into the drawers and your fruits and veggies on the shelves.

You’ll be more likely to actually use them.

“Start putting money

where your mouth is.”

3. Take inventory.

It’s good to check in on the food supply every so often and see what’s nearing its expiration date.

Once you’ve made note of the inventory, you can reorganize appropriately and plan to use those ingredients as soon as possible.

4. Cleanse.

Fridges and pantries that are always restocked before they’re emptied out tend to become full of random odds and ends that never get used.

Every so often, challenge yourself to use up everything in your fridge before going out for another grocery run.

The condiments can stay, but the lone carrot and leftover vegetable broth have to go. Think of it as an “Iron Chef” challenge where you have to concoct a meal out of random ingredients.

By implementing these strategies, you can stop throwing money in the trash and start putting money where your mouth is.

Photo source: wallpaperpics.net

Advertiser Disclosure

BadCredit.org is a free online resource that offers valuable content and comparison services to users. To keep this resource 100% free for users, we receive advertising compensation from the financial products listed on this page. Along with key review factors, this compensation may impact how and where products appear on the page (including, for example, the order in which they appear). BadCredit.org does not include listings for all financial products.

Our Editorial Review Policy

Our site is committed to publishing independent, accurate content guided by strict editorial guidelines. Before articles and reviews are published on our site, they undergo a thorough review process performed by a team of independent editors and subject-matter experts to ensure the content’s accuracy, timeliness, and impartiality. Our editorial team is separate and independent of our site’s advertisers, and the opinions they express on our site are their own. To read more about our team members and their editorial backgrounds, please visit our site’s About page.