Before I cope with the two modern challenges from the Bankrate 52-week savings undertaking, I'd like to document on the very last results of the Week 15 task, which changed into to devour best neighborhood, seasonal produce. As I noted ultimate Sunday, this venture ended up being a piece complex, because the week during which we ate neighborhood failed to run neatly from Sunday to Sunday. In truth, even when I shifted the timing of the nearby-produce week to start and end on Tuesday night time, we failed to synch up with it flawlessly, because of the reality Brian ended up ingesting a banana on Tuesday. So at the same time as we virtually ate solely community produce for at least seven days, they had been not seven consecutive days.
Even if we failed to stick with the letter of the challenge, however, we truely managed to stick to the spirit of it. We ate, in the course of the course of the week, the complete contents of the CSA field we picked up on Sunday, plus approximately 3 pints of blueberries from the community farmers' market, plus a full-size sort of produce from our personal garden. In addition to our new kasha salad recipe, we made:
- A stir-fry the usage of our domestic-grown snap peas, scallions, and garlic, plus some nearby natural mushrooms from the Whole Earth Center.
- Skillet hen and rhubarb with our very own domestic-grown rhubarb, scallions, and oregano and garlic scapes from the CSA subject, observed by using way of a salad of CSA lettuce.
- Brian's traditional rhubarb pie, for a party we attended that weekend...So we enjoyed our home-grown rhubarb in every sweet and savory style.
- An omelette of nearby herbal mushrooms, with a salad of domestic-grown lettuce.
- For the other potluck party we attended over the weekend, the cold sesame noodles from The Clueless Vegetarian, with home-grown scallions, local carrots from the farmers' market, and, in the dressing, one of our new walking onions (a gift from a fellow gardener who had more than she needed) that Brian dug up specially for the occasion.
And that brings me quite properly to the subsequent Bankrate financial savings mission:
Week 17: Take your lunch to work
The Bankrate reporter covering this mission, Mark Hamrick, leads off his tale with a pardonable boast (disguised as a
If you compare this to a cost of a restaurant meal, I guess it's pretty good, but Brian and I—as we learned from last year's Reverse SNAP Challenge—eat on a budget of about $7.66 a day for all our meals. For both of us. The cost of his "frugal" lunch, all by itself, would feed one of us for a whole day.
Hamrick notes that "some days," he can "save a couple of bucks or so more by eating leftovers (from a previous dinner) for lunch." But what Hamrick does once in a while as an extra cost-saving measure is pretty much our normal M.O., as I noted in this earlier Bankrate challenge about using up leftovers. So not only do Brian and I take our lunch to work nearly every day (or in my case, since I work from home, take myself to the lunch that's is waiting in the fridge), we also don't have to do any additional cooking or shopping for said lunch. All we have to do is dish out some leftovers into a microwaveable container and add a piece of fruit on the side. In the unusual event that we don't have any dinner leftovers, we usually go with a peanut-butter sandwich (remember those?) for Brian, and maybe a scrambled egg or a can of soup for me.
Week 18: Ride your bike to work
The folks at Bankrate apparently thought that while they were on the topic of saving money at work, they might as well discuss another way to save on the cost of getting to and from work. Reporter Claes Bell says that making the shift from driving to biking to work has been "a game changer" for him (or possibly her...I can't quite tell from the name), saving about $129 a month. However, that's because the switch to biking meant that he and his wife could downsize from two cars to one, saving on gas, insurance, and maintenance. Most of the savings came from eliminating the second car, not from driving fewer miles.
For me and Brian, since we were already a one-car family before Brian took up biking to work, the savings are a lot smaller. I calculated last year that Brian's bicycle commute probably saved us about $89 a year—less than the Bells saved in just one month. However, it would still be well worth doing even if the savings came to nothing at all, because (a) it's good exercise, enabling Brian to maintain his boyish figure—or more accurately, to acquire the boyish figure he never had as a boy—and (b) he finds riding his bike through the park a much, much less stressful start to the day than driving in New Jersey traffic.
So that's two more weekly challenges that are actually no challenge for us, because ha ha, we're doing them already. Admittedly, we're not saving nearly as much with the bicycle commute as Claes Bell, but then, we're doing a lot better with the brown-bag lunches than Mark Hamrick, so I guess it balances out.