But don’t ask Ari Armstrong how to do it.
So you don’t have to read the whole thing, here are the only fact(like) things in this article:
I spent Feb. 4 through Feb. 10 eating a highly nutritious, low-carb diet for $33.07, or $4.72 per day, less than food stamps provide. For a month in 2007 my wife and I ate a higher-carb — but still nutritious — diet for $2.57 per day each.
and
My two most expensive purchases were a whole turkey at $7.77 and olive oil at $4.48. My produce included red leaf lettuce, onions, tomatoes, grapefruit and bananas. I actually prefer more carbs in my diet, so normally I’ll continue to eat modest amounts of grains, sugary fruits and occasionally even cane sugar.
Counting the only two purchase figures we are given: 7.77 and 4.48 Ari and his wife spent 12.25. 7.77 of that on a turkey that was either ludicrously small (as turkey tends to price out at about 3 bucks a pound off season) or they simply lied. I think that 4.48 for olive oil could be correct. Seriously, 8 bucks for turkey. The Cheapest turkey I saw at the thrifty bulk foods and serve yourself or else store today was 17 dollars. I guess when you live in an actual city and don’t shop at your dad’s store, the prices can be different.
That is all that is there in the Article about living on food stamps. The rest is a screed about how the Welfare state is theft. Now you don’t have to read the rest.
You may be able to live well on food stamps
Published by NiteMayr on February 23, 2009But don’t ask Ari Armstrong how to do it.
So you don’t have to read the whole thing, here are the only fact(like) things in this article:
and
Counting the only two purchase figures we are given: 7.77 and 4.48 Ari and his wife spent 12.25. 7.77 of that on a turkey that was either ludicrously small (as turkey tends to price out at about 3 bucks a pound off season) or they simply lied. I think that 4.48 for olive oil could be correct. Seriously, 8 bucks for turkey. The Cheapest turkey I saw at the thrifty bulk foods and serve yourself or else store today was 17 dollars. I guess when you live in an actual city and don’t shop at your dad’s store, the prices can be different.
That is all that is there in the Article about living on food stamps. The rest is a screed about how the Welfare state is theft. Now you don’t have to read the rest.