Go vegetarian to save money!

doll_parts85

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http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SavingandDebt/SaveMoney/GoVegetarianToSaveMoney.aspx?vv=450

Staples such as rice, corn and beans can make trips to a grocery store less expensive. But the biggest savings may come in health-care costs years later.

What visitor to Whole Foods (aka "Whole Paycheck") hasn't stared in slack-jawed wonder at bluefoot mushrooms imported from Europe ($39.99 per pound), off-season organic grapefruit from Texas ($2.49 per softball-size fruit), organic almond butter ($14.99 a pound) or pine nuts ($13.99 a pound)?

In a world of $1 double cheeseburgers, it's no wonder that many people suspect that a vegetarian diet is more expensive than one that includes meat.

But that's generally not true. And though it's difficult to tally the savings of illnesses or diseases avoided with a plant-based diet, the financial worth of good health is unquestionable.

Vegetarianism could extend your life by several years, as well as lower your risk of heart disease, cancer and dementia. It's better for the planet, reducing water usage and global-warming gases. And it certainly improves the health of the cow or pig you would have devoured.

The cost depends largely on what course of vegetarianism you choose to follow:

Many people keep a diet that's known as mostly vegetarian -- a typical American diet minus the red meat. Vegetarians drop poultry and seafood.
A lacto-vegetarian eats dairy products.
An ovo-vegetarian eats eggs.
A pescetarian eats fish.
A vegan eats no animal products at all.
A fruitarian eats only fruit.

Basics are easy on the wallet
Most of the staples of a vegetarian diet are cheap. In fact, most of the world's people eat a mostly vegetarian diet made up of inexpensive commodities such as beans, rice and corn.

If you drop red meat, poultry and fish from your diet, you'll find plant proteins cheaper than the equivalent amount of animal protein. The cheapest cuts of beef, such as ground round, average $3 per pound in U.S. cities (lean and extra lean); boneless chicken breasts cost $3.40 a pound; and canned tuna is about $2 per pound.

Talk back: Are your grocery costs climbing?
Contrast that with dried beans and lentils at less than $1 a pound and rice well below $1 per pound. (Although Whole Foods offers expensive wild rice at $6.99 a pound, it also has basic brown rice for 69 cents per pound. And though pine nuts are exorbitant, you can get sunflower seeds, with nearly the same amount of protein, at a fraction of the price.)

Even tofu, the chicken of the vegetarian world, is usually well under $2 a pound.

But when you try to dress up plants as meat, costs skyrocket. Soy hot dogs, for example, cost $5 a pound; turkey hot dogs are less than half that.

Fresh, canned, frozen or organic
Produce is little trickier to compare, largely because vegetarians consume a much greater volume. (Most Americans now eat only three servings a day, on average, compared with the seven to nine servings recommended for optimum health.)

The prices of fruits and vegetables vary widely with the season and source. Locally grown fruits and vegetables are sometimes cheaper than those imported from far away and can be much cheaper in summer when there's an abundance. Of course, canned and frozen varieties are available year-round.

If you take the plunge into organics, the price may double or triple compared with nonorganic produce. Why does organic produce cost so much more? The answer is that organic fruits and veggies are usually not grown on an industrial scale, so efficiencies aren't as great. There are also significant costs involved in switching farmland from nonorganic to organic status. And there's a lot more manual labor involved, such as weeding by hand.

A payoff in better health
In the long run, no matter how much you spend on a vegetarian or semivegetarian diet, you'll likely see a payoff in better health, lower risk of chronic disease and reduced health-care costs compared with someone who eats a typical American diet.

"Years of poor nutrition habits can lead to chronic disease," said Ryan Andrews, a dietitian and exercise physiologist with the Johns Hopkins Weight Management Center in Baltimore. "These chronic diseases can have tremendous costs leading into old age. A bypass surgery or angioplasty procedure can cost nearly $60,000."

Health insurance carriers have begun urging lifestyle changes to reduce the risk of chronic disease -- and, not incidentally, soaring health-care costs. Those are estimated to be climbing 6% a year, an "unsustainable level," said Scott Forslund, the communications director for Premera Blue Cross, which serves Washington state and Alaska.

Heart disease is the major target of this effort, so Premera is starting a program to educate the people it insures about the importance of controlling blood pressure, cholesterol, body mass index and blood sugar. Research shows that a more plant-based diet improves all of these key health indicators.

"The connection between a vegetarian diet and reducing the costs of these high-impact health conditions is clear as a bell," Forslund said.

But there are no discounts for practicing vegetarianism under the current system.

Talk back: Are your grocery costs climbing?
If your healthful habits prevent a chronic disease, your insurance company or employer saves money. What about you? Well, savings may come your way in the form of pocketing the co-insurance fees you would have paid for doctor visits or medication. If you have a health savings account or individual catastrophic plan, you'll definitely save by staying healthier.
 
Hahahaha.

You wanna know how to save health-care costs?

Lose some fucking weight, exercise, and don't fucking make yourself puke.


I'm sure that concept is hard for you to grasp though.
 
doll that post is crap because you know full well that it costs more to use meat substitutes than it does cheap meat.
in fact, it probably costs three or four times as much per meal.
yes i know you aren't talking about that exactly but you do eat meat substitutes.
 
Hell Kat said:
doll that post is crap because you know full well that it costs more to use meat substitutes than it does cheap meat.
in fact, it probably costs three or four times as much per meal.
yes i know you aren't talking about that exactly but you do eat meat substitutes.
I don't eat very many meat substites. I buy two boxes of veggie burgers a month. A box of vegetarian chili. And a box of vegetarian tacos...doesnt even cost $12 a month on fake meat. Mostly I eat fruits and veggies.
 
Wait a minute from past failed diets of eliminating meat, okay, Vegan, the products are not only hard to find but cost more.

10 Slices of Vegan cheese is 5 bucks. :mad:
 
doll_parts85 said:
http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SavingandDebt/SaveMoney/GoVegetarianToSaveMoney.aspx?vv=450

Staples such as rice, corn and beans can make trips to a grocery store less expensive. But the biggest savings may come in health-care costs years later.

What visitor to Whole Foods (aka "Whole Paycheck") hasn't stared in slack-jawed wonder at bluefoot mushrooms imported from Europe ($39.99 per pound), off-season organic grapefruit from Texas ($2.49 per softball-size fruit), organic almond butter ($14.99 a pound) or pine nuts ($13.99 a pound)?

In a world of $1 double cheeseburgers, it's no wonder that many people suspect that a vegetarian diet is more expensive than one that includes meat.

But that's generally not true. And though it's difficult to tally the savings of illnesses or diseases avoided with a plant-based diet, the financial worth of good health is unquestionable.

Vegetarianism could extend your life by several years, as well as lower your risk of heart disease, cancer and dementia. It's better for the planet, reducing water usage and global-warming gases. And it certainly improves the health of the cow or pig you would have devoured.
QUOTE]
shut up!
focus on yourself for now!
 
Sagittarian said:
Wait a minute from past failed diets of eliminating meat, okay, Vegan, the products are not only hard to find but cost more.

10 Slices of Vegan cheese is 5 bucks. :mad:

vegan cheese is GROSS!
 
doll_parts85 said:
I don't eat very many meat substites. I buy two boxes of veggie burgers a month. A box of vegetarian chili. And a box of vegetarian tacos...doesnt even cost $12 a month on fake meat. Mostly I eat fruits and veggies.
but i know fact it does cost more to maintain a vegetarian diet, just because you have to cut corners doesn't mean it's the norm now, does it?
 
Hell Kat said:
but i know fact it does cost more to maintain a vegetarian diet, just because you have to cut corners doesn't mean it's the norm now, does it?

I only spend like $150 a month on food.
 
doll_parts85 said:
I only spend like $150 a month on food.
but you don't have the money, like i said earlier.
if you had more money you would be able to spend more on food.
 
I proudly eat cow, pig, fish, chickens, and turkey. Hell, I've even been known to eat deer, rabbit, squirrel and pheasent.

And I'll gladly throw a live lobster in a steamer while warming up some real cow made butter.

Oh and I'm 6' tall and wiegh 170 lbs.
 
Hell Kat said:
to be honest DP, i've never had it.


You probably have and didn't know it. If you eat chinese food, those little chunks of non-descript looking things in the food are tofu.
 
PannieMonster said:
You probably have and didn't know it. If you eat chinese food, those little chunks of non-descript looking things in the food are tofu.
i eat chinese and trust me i know what goes into plain noodles LOL.
i've never eaten it and it really isn't on my list yet either.
 
Hell Kat said:
i eat chinese and trust me i know what goes into plain noodles LOL.
i've never eaten it and it really isn't on my list yet either.

msg? i think that causes cancer.
 
Hell Kat said:
i eat chinese and trust me i know what goes into plain noodles LOL.
i've never eaten it and it really isn't on my list yet either.


Smart girl! Soybean curd isn't the best thing for you. In fact I never eat anything made from soybeans unless it's fermented. ;)

Truthfully, tofu (and most products made from soy) aren't really as healthy as people seem to think.
 
Hell Kat said:
and what does this have to do with the price of tofu?

Cause DP is always going on about diet this and diet that. Eating healthy includes the proper protiens. I eat what I want for the price I want but I balance it all out with plenty of exercise.
 
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