Ann’s Journal Collection
Wild Foods , Green, Gardening,
More Information on Pages below
- Buffalohair’s Smooth, Rvwang/ Little Burma , Mingalaba Shows
- Film Beyond Rangoon
- Free Burma!
- Green Index
- Rennet making recipe for cheese making. Rennet from Thistles
- ‘Obama is new words, but old tricks as US acts like empire’
- A Friend
- Acai Berry ?
- Ahhhh KANU TV In Hawaii ??????
- Ann’s Journal Collection Welcome!
- Bar Code Reading and Buying. Thanks Ray
- Before You Grocery Shop Again: Food 101 with Michael Pollan
- Blogroll
- Buffalohair Medical Tourism, A Dental Adventure
- Buffalohair on Blog Talk Radio?
- Buffalohair Treasure Map Stories Archives Humor
- Buffalohair Twitter plus Shoppers Guide to Avoiding GE Foods
- Buffalohair-Jage Press: Welcome to The Grandmother’s page
- Buffalohair-Jage Press: Welcome to The Grandmothers Part 2
- Buffalohair-Jage Press: Who We Are
- Buffalohair: Earth Changes and Fry Bread
- Buffalohair: Moon Rejects New Solar System Order, NASA Attacks (Satire)
- Building Green Blog; Living Off The Grid
- Children: Reinventing the school lunch:Ann Cooper
- Clean, natural, Spring Water
- Climate Change, Global Warming? and the Built Environment …2?
- Cook This Not That
- culinary photography and Cranberry Scones &
- Diabetes-Friendly Recipes
- Earth Changes : Jet Stream Shifting
- Earth Changes,Earth Quakes, Global Warming? TV 2,Home Film
- Earth Changes: Buffalohair: Payment Due
- Earth Changes; Sweet Medicine
- Edible Landscaping – with Charlie Nardozzi
- Everything You HAVE TO KNOW about Dangerous Genetically Modified Foods
- Film of Buffalo Going Home
- Flat Belly Diet
- Flat Belly Diet and Sassy Water
- Fluffy Fry Bread recipe and Tacos II
- Fluffy not:) ORANGE HONEY BUTTER***
- Fluffy Taco
- Flying Hawk Recalls Crazy Horse
- Food Flash Mob! | Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution
- Free you say? Whats the catch? :) Maybe none!
- Fry Bread {a recipe} & Buñuelos de Cuaresma
- Gathering Wild Foods:Pine Tree Seeds
- Gathering Wild Fruits
- Global TV News, documentaries, PBS, TV Shows, and Movies.
- Green Solar Power Generator
- Green TV
- Help Women Worldwide~ URGENT
- Here it is below Zero and My thoughts go to a Healing Garden for Spring
- Home made solar cell step by step
- How to get $100 worth of groceries for 25 cents
- Hulu and other: Star Trek VII: Generations + Shows
- Humor Films
- Humor Videos Native Nations
- Humor, Games, Plus Uncle Jay Explains The News
- Live green, get your water from the air
- Melamine, Chemical Dyes—What’s the Next Poison to Spike Burmese Food?
- Money Saving Hints: 5 Ways to Save Money on Groceries
- Monk
- Mood Foods and Organic Water!
- Music Test? :)
- Native American Indian News and Links
- Native American Pow-Wow Give-Away
- Native KANU TV 99 Off Line!
- Native Storytelling at the Movies and Apples Top Trailers:)
- New Years at NativeVue! The big Delete;(
- News Paper Headlines Across the US
- Passive House Using “Recycled Energy” — And No Furnace
- Perfect No-Cook Strawberry Ice Cream
- Podbean Music Shows
- Poisoned Waters Frontline PBS
- Pollution of Mother Earth: Plastic laying around hurting Wildlife
- Prohibit U.S. citizens from fishing the nation’s oceans, coastal areas, Great Lakes, and even inland waters.
- Rick Steves’ Europe: Archive: Drinking the Water
- Safe seeds to plant For Our Gardens
- Science Information, Inventions, Solar, Wind Power
- Solar Hot Water Radiant Underfloor Heating 77
- Survival Guide to Homelessness
- Thawing frozen pipes
- This Non-GMO Shopping Guide Quick View
- Visitors
- Weather
- Weza, The Portable Human Powered Energy Source
- What Does Green Mean?
- Wild Foods Weeds for a Spring Salad
- Wild Foods: Face Cream, Smilax Bamboo Stirfry, Wild Mustard Vinegar, buckwheat
- Wild Foods: Hard Shell Nuts
- Wild Foods: Mesquite, Juneberry, Milk Weed
- Wild Foods: Pignuts, Jack-by-the-hedge, Bay Laurel, Sea Rocket, Elderberry
- Wild Foods: Sagebrush, Nasturtium, Eat The Weeds video
- סִימָן” – נדב בר”
Meta
- Mingalaba Show 104 June 12, 2010 mingalabashow
- Little Burma Show 33 May 19, 2010 mingalabashow
- Smooth Show 93 June 6, 2010 mingalabashow
- Native American Spotlight #5 May 8, 2010 mingalabashow
Categories
Recent Posts
- Hacking your fax and computer phone lines, inmates make collect calls
- Counterfeit Websites: How They Can Cost You!
- ABORIGINAL WOMEN In past times it was the abusers who were shunned
- Buffalohair The Paranormal Side of Earth Changes
- Oil Spill Could Devastate Wildlife
- Footage of underwater tests ahead of ‘Top Kill’ operation at BP oil spill site
- Native American Programs – American Diabetes Association
- Good Choice Snapple! LOL Serious for Diabetes !
- Native American Programs – American Diabetes Association
- Red Crystal Gala – “Protecting our Native sisters
- Social Security Recipients Devastated by Bank Account Seizures
- Buffalohair Don’t Forget The Roughnecks
- Curator of T.O. museum works to better lives, understanding
- Buffalohair Boycotting Pizza Hut for the People of Borneo
- Buffalohair Medical Tourism, A Dental Adventure
Blogroll
- 1st Page The Home Page of Journal Collection 0
- Adult Space 0
- All Voices with Buffalohair 0
- Alternative Energy News 0
- Ann LRD MySpace Music Site 0
- BBC video World News 0
- Beauty In Art , The Unusual 0
- BGI Portal 0
- Bing 0
- Blog Rolls Collection 0
- Buffalohair News videos on Vodpod 0
- Buffalohair Treasure Map Stories archives 0
- Buffalohair Twitter 0
- Buffalohair’s 2006, 2007, 2008 Story Archives 0
- BURMA NEWS NETWORK 0
- CENSORED NEWS Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights News 0
- City Data Spfd MO area for shopping 0
- CNN Video 0
- Company Dirty List for Burma 0
- Correct Time Missouri 0
- Four Directions Teachings 0
- Gardening Goddess 0
- Great Green Gadgets 0
- Green Apples, Green Gardens, Green Homes, Green Is the Word ! 0
- Greneudo Press | Entertainment & Reviews 0
- Irrawaddy 0
- Little Homestead in the City, Path To Freedom, The Urban Homesteaders Journal 0
- Little Running Deer at Windows Live 0
- Live Earth 0
- Live Stream Video CNN News 0
- Mingalaba Show 0
- NAMoments 0
- Native American Indian 2009 2010 TV, film, documentaries, and theatre. 0
- Native American Spotlight Show Welcome to the world of Native American Music, not just drums and flutes, but all genres of music. 0
- Native Hoop Radio 0
- Native Storytelling at the Movies and Apples Top Trailers* 0
- nativeartsculture · Native Arts & Cultures 0
- NativeVue Film & Media caroleql's Channel 0
- NativeVue With Buffalohair Stories: 0
- NativeVue's Channel 0
- NPR 0
- Oklahoma Wildcrafting Gathering Wild Foods 0
- PBS TV Video 0
- Quoting Buffalohair Stories 0
- Radio Free Asia 0
- Redwood Forest 0
- Search Engines 0
- Shock- Doctrine 0
- Speed Test 0
- Spirit In The Wind 0
- Spirit In The Wind2 0
- Spirit2 Humor also with Mother Earth, Buffalohair's older Treasure Map Stories, 0
- Stickam 0
- Stop Watch 0
- Survival Wild Foods in the Ozarks 0
- Tanka Bar 0
- Tanka Bar 0
- TankaBar 0
- The great global warming collapse 0
- Tulalip Tribes and Tulalip Visitors' Guide. 0
- UK in China 0
- Wake_Up_Call 0
- WritingReadingReviews · Writing Reading & Restaurant Reviews 0
video on How to get $100 worth of groceries for 25 cents
|
Cutting costs with coupons
March 6: TODAY’s Jenna Wolfe finds out how to save big at the grocery store; TODAY’s Ann Curry talks to Coupon Mom Stephanie Nelson about using coupons to cut your costs. Today show |
5 Ways to Save Money on Groceries
Stephanie Nelson, founder of CouponMom.com, says it’s possible to fight the rising cost of groceries without sacrificing your favorite foods. Try her simple coupon saving strategies the next time you go to the grocery store:
Plan your meals and shopping lists around featured sale items.
- Use your store’s weekly sales ad flier to plan your menus for the week. Then, write your shopping list around the items and brands that are on sale.
- Taking a few minutes to make a detailed plan will save you the time of making unplanned trips to the store during the week—which can ruin your budget.
- Planning ahead also helps you avoid impulse shopping during your trip.
Know how your stores’ savings programs work.
- Do they have “buy one, get one free” deals?
- Do they double coupons?
- Do they offer a store discount cards that gives you automatic discounts?
- Do they have special store coupons?
- Once you know your stores’ rules, you can combine them to pay the lowest possible prices for your items, such as using two coupons with a “buy one, get one free” deal. Combining strategies can result in free items.
Use grocery coupons, ideally when the item is on sale.
- Buy the Sunday newspaper—75 percent of grocery coupons come from the newspaper. Buy two to three copies per week to save dramatically.
- Go online—grocery stores often have their best deals and printable coupons on their websites.
- Many stores offer electronic coupons that go directly on your store discount card.
Stock up on common items when they hit their lowest price.
- Don’t buy a year’s supply, just enough to last until the next sale (two to three weeks).
- Boneless chicken is on sale every other week at Stephanie’s grocery store, so she buys two weeks of boneless chicken every other week to store in her freezer. This habit saves her family of four $325 a year on this one item.
Be flexible about brands and stores.
- Buy the brand that’s on sale with a coupon, or get the store brand if it’s less expensive.
- Shop at the store with the best prices for your items that week.
Get more money-saving advice from viewers all over the country.
Weekly flyers online
Posted on: 3rd of February 2009 in Uncategorized | | Comments (1)
1 Comment »
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.


Video to watch it happen!
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/29468915/
How to get $100 worth of groceries for 25 cents
Coupon Mom reveals her top five tips to cut your grocery bill in half
Video
Cutting costs with coupons
March 6: TODAY’s Jenna Wolfe finds out how to save big at the grocery store; TODAY’s Ann Curry talks to Coupon Mom Stephanie Nelson about using coupons to cut your costs.
Today show
By Stephanie Nelson
CouponMom.com
TODAY
updated 2:32 p.m. CT, Wed., March. 4, 2009
You can cut your grocery bill in half when you know how to use coupons and store promotions along with sale prices on your favorite items. For a family of four, that may be a savings of $100 per week, or as much as $5,000 per year. Coupon Mom Stephanie Nelson demonstrated how to combine sales, store promotions and double coupons and paid only 25 cents for $100 worth of common grocery items. Stephanie’s top tips to save are:
1. Plan your shopping trip before you leave home
* Use the store’s sales circular and look for featured main dish sale items, such as chicken at 50% off. Plan a few meals for the week around sale items and buy extra for the freezer to avoid paying full price next week.
* Have a complete list for everything you need for the week’s meals to avoid costly, unplanned trips to the store mid-week. Even if you take an hour to plan your meals, make your list and cut coupons, you’ll end up saving time overall by avoiding extra trips that blow your budget.
* Be “store-flexible.” You don’t need to go to more than one store per week to save, but you should review the advertising circulars for a few nearby stores and shop at the store with the best prices for your items each week.
Story continues below ↓advertisement | your ad here
2. Let other people do the hard work for you
* Find a Web site that lists the best deals and coupon bargains for your store each week. You’ll save an hour or more taking advantage of someone else’s research.
* CouponMom.com lists the best grocery deals at thousands of grocery and drugstores nationally. Select and print the deals you like for your store in a few minutes.
* You can also go to Google and type in the name of your store and the term “deals” to find local Web sites that may list deals for your store.
3. Maximize your coupon savings easily with the ‘no clip’ system
* 80% of grocery coupons come from the Sunday newspaper coupon circulars, so to save the most you need an easy way to manage them.
* Use the “no clip” system to save an hour a week: Save the newspaper circulars, write that day’s date on the front and keep them in a plastic shoe box or file. Save the entire circular instead of cutting out a few coupons and throwing the rest away because you never know which items will go on sale in future weeks.
* When you select and print your deals list from Web sites, each deal will reference the date its coupon came out. Cut out only the coupons you need for each trip, rather than cutting out and organizing all the coupons every week.
* Buy 2-3 copies of the Sunday paper to increase your savings during weeks that the circulars have many coupons you would use.
* Also print coupons and use electronic coupons.
4. Time it right — wait until the item goes on sale to use the coupon
* If you use the coupon on a full-price item, you may end up paying half price. But if you wait and use your coupon when the item goes on sale for half price, you may end up getting it free. Many “coupon items” do not hit their lowest sale price until a few weeks after the coupon came out.
* In the taped piece, many of the coupon deals used coupons that came out a full month ago. Had we used them a month ago on these items, we would have paid a lot more than 25 cents for our $100 cart of groceries.
5. Know how your store’s promotion and coupon policies work
* If your store has a loyalty card, sign up. Be sure to provide your complete mailing address because you may receive personalized coupons for items you purchase.
* Pay attention to special promotions and combine them with coupons. Check the store’s sales circular for promotions such as “Buy 10 participating frozen items and get $5 off your order.” Use coupons on promotion items to really save.
* Find out how your stores’ coupon policies work. Do they double coupons? Up to what amount? Is there a limit on the number of coupons that can be used per order?
* Does your store have its own coupons and if so, where can you find them?
For more money-saving tips and gift ideas, visit CouponMom.com.
Read more:
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/29468915/%20%20%20#ixzz0hevk3tUt
Comment by Ann LRD — March 8, 2010 @ 10:43 pm