Here's another quick tip:
Focus on your serving sizes. If we stick to having the right serving amounts of our meal portions it makes not over-eating easy while still satisfying our appetites and staying within budget.
Ex: Say for dinner you were having a baked potato, stuffed with lentil chili and a mixed green salad on the side finishing it all off with a nice cup of herbal tea.
- you may end up eating a couple of stuffed baked potatoes $.20
- filled with lentil chili $.50
- topped with some shredded soy cheese or a cream sauce made from nuts or seeds $.10 - $.60
- mixed green or herb salad $.50
- home made dressing $.50
- herbal tea $.30
- now you still have a bunch of either leftovers or uncooked ingredients and your meal was between $2.60 and $3.50.
That's not a bad break and it puts everything into perspective. The primary thing you want to start with is the nutrient density, then you can fill in the caloric blanks with less expensive [still great quality] food items. It can stretch a good meal and make it great one. It's also a good way to stay within your $150 a month budget.
[side note: $150 is workable in a pinch, but here's a quick suggestion, if this is possible for you...
first start cutting and discounting the other less essential areas of your spending before you cut your nutrition budget. I speak from personal experience here. Whenever we had to make a choice between quality food & nourishment and the non-essentials [clothing, entertainment, etc.], we made our first priority our health and well being while cutting costs in others. You only have 1 body, 1 life and your health. If all of your efforts are centered outward and not focused inward, you may have a great house, beautiful car and all the bells and whistles life could offer, but without your health... what's it all worth?
There are many people spending all they have to regain their health. It may not have been valued enough before it was gone. If you can avoid this scenario, please turn your focus on investing in your health and determine to spend what's necessary to build it. Shave the other areas, not your good foods!]