Food on the Table

Here is a new service I am going to be testing out over the next few weeks that looks like it can make your life a lot easier called Food on the Table.

You sign up for a free account (the link below has a coupon code for a lifetime premium membership for free this month), choose a store from your local area, choose what your family likes to eat, and it helps build a meal plan that includes sales from the weekly circular.

There is also an iPhone and Android app for the service allowing you to take your grocery list with you.  If you do not have a smart phone you can print your list from your account and take it with you.

This really looks like a promising service if it continues to grow and be supported.  I look forward to trying it out and seeing what sorts of recipes it puts out for my family.  We can be a group of picky eaters sometimes.

Click the link below to read more about it and get your code for free membership.  Comment below if you have good or bad things to say.  As I said I have yet to try it but wanted to get it out there before the coupon code expired.

Food on the Table Builds Meal Plans and Grocery Lists To Go on Android, iPhone, and Online.

Savings Snowball

snowballIf you have researched paying off debt in any form more than likely you have come across the “Debt Snowball” method of paying off debt.  Many people have talked about it but most notably of those is Dave Ramsey.

Ramsey suggests in order to pay of debts quicker and get a psychological advantage in your process you start with your smallest debt and work up to the highest balance debt until you are debt free.  I was thinking a few weeks ago, why not try this with my savings accounts?  And so I have and thusfar has worked like a charm.

I have several savings accounts which gets money automatically transferred into them on a set interval.  These accounts are my budgeted items – you could call them my electronic envelopes.  They are named for what they are to be used for such as car maintenance, clothing, birthdays, Christmas, etc.  I know how much I want in each of these to consider them “fully funded”.

I make a list of these accounts and how much each one needs in it in order to be maxed out at from the smallest one to the largest one.  Now, the money that is budgeted for is put into these accounts with the most going into the smallest one each pay day.  Once that one is fully funded I move to the next one on the list and put the budgeted amount into that account plus what was budgeted for the first account.  We continue this until all of the accounts are fully funded and then everything that was budgeted for them starts going into my emergency fund.

I find this to be a natural progression if you use the “Baby Steps” as part of your personal finance plan.  It easy to keep up with, you already understand the snowball, and it gives you another set of financial goals whose whole purpose is to keep you from getting back into the debt trap again.

Photo courtesy of Ryan Grimm.