Good morning, everyone.
Is it really the 11th - a third of the way through January. Crazy!
Time is flying and I don't seem to have made much of a dent in my stores but I'm using stuff up slowly but surely. I think February will definitely be another low spend/no spend month.
What will I do with the money I save? Well - I will use some to restock with self stable stuff, some to donate to our local food bank and I will shove some into longer term savings, I think.
When it came to lunch, I decided I would do a frittata rather than a tortilla so the can of new potatoes remains intact.. It looks loads but apart from two eggs, one bacon medallion and 30g cheese, it is all speed vegetables. It was lovely!
I made up the Vietnamese pork as the recipe said apart from using spray oil and subbing red pepper and mushroom as the veg and, as expected, it made loads. I have two more portions which I can bulk out with more veg because I served up more than a third of the red pepper - note to self: next time, do a whole pepper, not half.
It was very filling so I didn't have any yogurt.
To poach, put some just boiled water into a Ninja proof bowl with a bit of vinegar and a bit of oil, crack in the egg and air fry on 200 for six minutes.
So I can sync the two trays so they should finish at the same time and while they are Ninja-ing, I can make the toast.
Watch this space!
SW: one healthy extra B for toast
SW: six syns for the pork, half a syn for yogurt
What is low spend, no spend?
All I will buy through January is essentials - and by that I mean food such as fresh fruit, veg and dairy/eggs. All other foods will come out of my existing supplies and, to be honest, that may not be much of a challenge. Also included in any low spend essentials are cleaning products and toiletries although I think I am fine for the latter.
Also anything else essential that I won't think of until it lands!
That is the low spend part.
Everything else, unless it is either a regular bill/payment/commitment, will not happen. No sneaky little Amazon purchases, no 'bargains' from the supermarket, certainly no clothes . . .
That's the no spend part.
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