Wednesday, December 4, 2019

November Money Review


I started my October Money Review with the observation that if (if) we spent $175.00 in both the month of November and the month of December, we would finish the year with an average monthly outlay for groceries and household items of a little over $180.00 a month. We would have to spend $140.00 or less those last two months to bring the monthly average to $175.00, my target. I then sagely noted, "I'm not sure we will hit that mark."

We did not hit that lower mark ($140.00) or even the higher mark ($175.00) for November. We came in at $236.13, all but $2.14 (two boxes of tissues) in food. Our monthly average year-to-date? $186.98.

I made some quirky marginal notes about our November shopping patterns  that I will share here. On the first day of November, we spent $9.75 on "candy." The candy in question was delicious gourmet dark chocolate peanut (or almond) bark from The Milk Shake Factory, a stunning fixture in Pittsburgh for over a century. There were two turkeys, one thawed for our unexpected Thanksgiving, the other still deep in our freezer. Those came to a little over $10.00 because Meijer was selling their brand frozen turkeys for 33⍧ a pound. There was almost $36.00 worth of butter purchased at $1.99 a pound because butter has been sky high and we have room in our freezer. There was a little over $10.00 worth of food costs related to two events I hosted or co-hosted. There was also $9.00 worth of Krusteaz boxed cookie mix because Krusteaz mixes are delicious and when baking for something that comes up quickly, they do the trick.

And then there was the Thanksgiving Eve dash to the store to replace a can of canned pumpkin. For the first time ever in my life, when I went to open an ordinary can, the contents first hissed and then oozed up through the first opening I had made with the can opener. (I thought the lid had looked a little flexed, but I wasn't sure.) I'm casual about food safety but not stupid. What was stupid was opening the can of coconut milk (I use a pumpkin pie recipe that calls for coconut milk) with the same can opener and realizing too late that there was pumpkin ooze now contaminating the coconut milk. Both went down the sink and the resulting run to the store cost $3.59.

Note: The pie was delicious. 

Further Note: The Thanksgiving turkey carcass was made into delicious dark stock that Very. Same. Day.

So if you add up those little marginalia notes and then subtract them, our food costs would have come in below $160.00.

There was a grocery triumph or two, nonetheless, the greatest being the almost $40.00 worth of groceries purchased for $4.92, thanks to a combination of coupons and a quarterly rebate I get by using my Kroger Mastercard (a card I pay off in full every two weeks: no balance carried forward here).

Our eating out costs were all related to conferences: no coffee dates, no "let's just grab a bite to eat." Eating out costs came to an eye-watering $155.29, with $79.48 of that being assigned to Indianapolis (our annual trip to Percussion Universe) and the rest to our two days at my conference in Pittsburgh.

Yeah, November was expensive.

I'm not sure what December will bring. One of our November purchases was raw peanuts for Warren's holiday peanut brittle (about $17.00 worth), so that is out of the way. On the other hand, I will be making biscotti as always; while I certainly have enough butter for the cookies, I have yet to purchase the almonds. I'm not sure what the holiday meals will bring (who is going where for what); Dad is still in skilled nursing. So our costs may come in (she writes optimistically) around $170.00.

Or $150.00.

Or $250.00.

Stay tuned.

2 comments:

Out My window said...

I was just surprised at how high the prices were for everything Thanksgiving. No real bargains here. I think when you live in an area where there are more paople you have a better chance for that. But staying below $200.00 for the two of you and entertainment cooking is good my friend.

Ellen said...

Sending love thru all the ups and downs. I can smell your biscotti as I write. Merry New Year, April and Warren.