by ally30_1998 » Tue Mar 13, 2018 1:39 pm
I feel your pain. We don't have an au pair but we do have a twenty something fitness fanatic son and when they exercise a lot they do like to eat - a lot!
We have introduced him to like things like cous cous (super fast to make up) and tinned chickpeas which are cheap (chickpeas are also a fantastic source of protein.) He is allergic to eggs so that doesn't really come in to it, but we buy in lots of cheese (always go for that week's bogoff deal) and lots of bread.
We also buy bananas, satsumas, butter and own brand pesto, and occasionally Tuna.
We started on this before he left for uni. When he came back he had a £15 per week allowance for all the lunch and breakfast stuff (milk wasn't included) and that was generally fine, as he would usually be able to get a multipack of tuna as well.
For breakfast its porridge - again; cheap and filling. For lunch he either makes a cheese and tomato sandwich or has cous cous, with cheese or chickpeas and pesto. For snacks he eats toast and fruit.
Since he started work he has discovered the benefits of coffee in a flask and taking his own bottle of water.
If you want to reduce costs, ditch the meat and processed snacks. Its the biggest spend in my experience.
I always cook something decent and fresh for the evening meal with the proviso that Friday and Saturday evening they sort themselves out (they are invariably out all weekend at that age, so McDonalds takes over!)
We now have another 20 member of the family something living here who isn't a gym goer so doesn't eat as much but she still only has the evening meal with us and lunch is soup and toast, with fruit and toast as snacks.
We had to do this as before he left for uni he had been living on a fairly 'champagne' diet with things like packs of ready cooked chicken, blueberries and so on - all lovely but very expensive. Not that we begrudge the cost, but we wont always be here and i don't think its going to be as easy for this generation going forward as it was for our generation, in regard to well paid work, decent homes and so on.
We also have another young family member who stays a few days each week for work, who insists on getting his own food - which seems to comprise of fizzy drinks, chocolate and baked goods!
Anyway - lot of detail there, but i think its quite an issue for those of us with adult children who have returned to the nest after uni and show no sign of going anywhere else very soon!
I feel your pain. We don't have an au pair but we do have a twenty something fitness fanatic son and when they exercise a lot they do like to eat - a lot!
We have introduced him to like things like cous cous (super fast to make up) and tinned chickpeas which are cheap (chickpeas are also a fantastic source of protein.) He is allergic to eggs so that doesn't really come in to it, but we buy in lots of cheese (always go for that week's bogoff deal) and lots of bread.
We also buy bananas, satsumas, butter and own brand pesto, and occasionally Tuna.
We started on this before he left for uni. When he came back he had a £15 per week allowance for all the lunch and breakfast stuff (milk wasn't included) and that was generally fine, as he would usually be able to get a multipack of tuna as well.
For breakfast its porridge - again; cheap and filling. For lunch he either makes a cheese and tomato sandwich or has cous cous, with cheese or chickpeas and pesto. For snacks he eats toast and fruit.
Since he started work he has discovered the benefits of coffee in a flask and taking his own bottle of water.
If you want to reduce costs, ditch the meat and processed snacks. Its the biggest spend in my experience.
I always cook something decent and fresh for the evening meal with the proviso that Friday and Saturday evening they sort themselves out (they are invariably out all weekend at that age, so McDonalds takes over!)
We now have another 20 member of the family something living here who isn't a gym goer so doesn't eat as much but she still only has the evening meal with us and lunch is soup and toast, with fruit and toast as snacks.
We had to do this as before he left for uni he had been living on a fairly 'champagne' diet with things like packs of ready cooked chicken, blueberries and so on - all lovely but very expensive. Not that we begrudge the cost, but we wont always be here and i don't think its going to be as easy for this generation going forward as it was for our generation, in regard to well paid work, decent homes and so on.
We also have another young family member who stays a few days each week for work, who insists on getting his own food - which seems to comprise of fizzy drinks, chocolate and baked goods!
Anyway - lot of detail there, but i think its quite an issue for those of us with adult children who have returned to the nest after uni and show no sign of going anywhere else very soon!