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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
Business
Kieran Isgin

Woman who spends £4 on weekly food shop says she 'doesn't shop like normal people'

A thrifty shopper has managed to cut her weekly shop by £50 with the use of a neat little food-sharing app.

Helen Morrison, 55, from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, began cutting down her food costs and waster after she changed her job in November 2021 so she could have a better work-life balance after being a wedding planner. She made use of the free OLIO app and switched to community grocery stores.

Helen, who lives with her husband Darren, 56, also became a whizz in the kitchen, creating tasty-looking feasts with the free food she got from OLIO. Alongside cutting her food waste, Helen now only spends as little as £4 a week filling up her cupboard essentials.

Read more: Doctors' outrage as 'only non-fast food shop' at hospital is 'asked to leave'

“I don’t shop like normal people,” explained Helen. “Normal people go to the supermarket in the day and buy their shopping.

“Instead, I sit on the app from about half past eight at night waiting for the food. I would say that 75 per cent of our food is from OLIO.” Helen left her job as a wedding planner to find a better work-life balance, but, the switch also forced her to take a long hard look at changing how she spends money.

“At 55 I decided it was time to take an easier job in life,” said Helen. “I worked as a wedding planner. It was a fabulous job but it was seven days a week and there was no life balance at all.

Helen stocks her fridge with free food from OLIO (Collect/PA Real Life)

“I had to re-evaluate my life, however that meant less money coming into the household. So, I started researching tips on how to save money and somebody mentioned OLIO.

“By January I was so impressed I decided to become a food waste hero myself. I now have regular collectors and I love doing it.”

She continued: "I collect on my way home from work. I make a plan of everything we have and how I’m going to use it.

“Vegetables are prepped and bagged and frozen. I make my own soups and freeze portions using one a day for our lunches at work. I make my own sauces for pasta as tomatoes are often not requested on OLIO. I simply add in some of my frozen herbs to give them flavour.

"Any herbs collected are blitzed in the food mixer and frozen in ice cube trays with a bit of oil for future use. I’ve become very experimental over the summer months. I’ve put cocktail sausages in a pasta dish, it was weird but delicious.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been as adventurous as I am now. I’ve started putting creme fraiche in pasta and I would never have bought that before.”

Helen collects surplus food from supermarkets every day as a food waste hero (Collect/PA Real Life)

Helen also explains how the change has made her explore other self-reliance techniques. “I love making butter,” explained Helen.

“You put the cream in a food mixer and you literally just put it on for five to 10 minutes. It’ll go like whipped cream first, then it looks a bit cheesy and then eventually all of the milk comes out of the cream and you’re left with butter.

“You can add garlic or parsley – or even make chilli butter. The price of butter at the moment is ridiculous and this way it tastes even better in the morning!”

Helen also joined community grocery stores. “The main bulk of my food comes from OLIO,” explained Helen.

“But I also use a couple of other facilities. One of them is called The Bread and Butter Thing. You get three bags of shopping for £7.50. You don’t know what it will be, but you know you’ll get a selection of fruit, veg and cupboard staples.

“I also use the community grocery store, which is £4 for five fruit and veg items and you can get seven shelf items. It’s amazing – a bag of pasta works out as little as 20p.”

After slashing her weekly shop by £50, Helen explained that she only needs to stop at her community grocer store every couple of weeks for essentials.

Helen's homemade garlic butter (Collect/PA Real Life)

“If I purchase from the Bread and Butter Thing I spend £7.50 but that lasts for around two weeks,” said Helen.

“Some weeks I don’t need anything, so I probably spend that every few weeks. We’ve saved £50 a week on the food shop easily.

“One of the biggest things for me and my husband is our work lunches, we used to spend five pounds a day each and now we spend nothing. It’s definitely not a normal lifestyle but it’s saved us a lot of money, especially now the cost-of-living crisis is having an effect on so many of us.”

However, alongside her shop costing less, Helen is determined to help stop food waste.

“The amount of food waste that’s out there really upsets me,” said Helen. "It’s crazy to me that people won’t use certain food items just because of the best before date. We really need to rethink our attitude to food.

We shouldn’t turn our nose up at reduced items. We have to start thinking differently because there is nothing wrong with this food that we are throwing away.”

She continued: "I feel good that I’m sharing the food and giving it away, and I have regular collectors. I know all of their stories, and it makes me quite sad, but it makes me happy to be able to share all of the food.

“Just last Friday I had 12 people at my door to collect food.” She added: “Batch cooking is a great way to save money.

Helen started cutting her food spending down in November 2021 (Collect/PA Real Life)

“You just have to be adventurous. I think we all need more of a basic knowledge of how we can keep our food a bit longer – such as freezing. We always have so much surplus bread when I do a collection. People don’t seem to realise that you can freeze it.

“It’s a staple, and some families can go through a loaf of bread a day. So, if that’s two pounds a day, over the week, that’s 14 pounds that you’ve saved. It’s just crazy money.

“We’ve saved so much and I’ve managed to have a better work-life balance because of it!”

These are Helen’s tips on savings:

  • Use apps like OLIO; sharing apps are great for saving money and tasty treats from going to landfill.
  • Don’t turn your nose; think differently about best before, just because a food item is reduced doesn’t mean it’s not as good, buy wonky veg and look at reduced items.
  • Batch cook; prep is everything, freeze your food in portions but also don’t forget that butter, cheese, milk and bread can all be frozen.
  • Get creative; Try different foods and don’t be afraid to put things together that normally don’t go together.

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