Bulletin #4313 Thrifty Food Plan Survivor Challenge
Food for ME: Citizen Action for Community Food Recovery
By Kathy Savoie, MS, RD, University of Maine Cooperative Extension Associate Professor, University of Maine Cooperative Extension.
For information about UMaine Extension programs and resources, visit extension.umaine.edu.
Find more of our publications and books at extension.umaine.edu/publications/.
The Thrifty Food Plan Survivor Challenge (TFPSC) is a simulation exercise that immerses learners in a “real-life” situation to plan a week’s worth of meals in accordance with dietary standards and economical confines for the Thrifty Food Plan.
Introduction
According to the USDA Economic Research Service’s “Household Food Security in the United States in 2015,” Maine is the 9th most food insecure state in the country, the most food insecure state in New England, and has the third highest rate of very low food security in the United States. Given these realities, a need exists to prepare people to work with food insecure audiences. One strategy includes exposing people to simulations. Simulations are a type of interactive educational exercise that promotes experiential learning as learners live through a “real-life” situation. Simulations are an effective learning method that impacts retention of knowledge and attitude change.
Thrifty Food Plan Survivor Challenge Overview
Research has shown that many people don’t understand the issues faced by those who are food insecure because they had never experienced poverty. Completing the Thrifty Food Plan Survivor Challenge (TFPSC) can sensitize people for work with food insecure populations by exposing them to the reality of living on a limited food budget.
The TFPSC is a simulation exercise that immerses learners in a “real-life” situation to plan, shop and prepare a week’s worth of meals and snacks according to the Thrifty Food Plan Market Basket Standards while remaining below the Cost of Food at Home economical confines for the Thrifty Food Plan. The TFPSC couples economic confines with the added challenge of meeting dietary standards. For example, a learner completing the assignment in January 2018 would need to create a weekly plan including meals and snacks for less than $37.80 that also meets the Low-Cost Food Plan market basket quantities of food purchased for a week found in USDA’s Low-Cost, Moderate-Cost and Liberal Cost Food Plans, 2007. The Low-Cost Food Plan outlines the volume of food needed within twenty-nine food sub-groups to meet the Dietary Guidelines for Americans by gender and age.
While completing the challenge, learners are encouraged to adopt ‘real-life’ situations of food insecure populations. The reality of meeting food needs with limited transportation to sources of food, limited access to food supplies and limited resources to store and prepare food present different obstacles for learners to overcome while also learning more about food access instead of traditional means for purchasing foods (food pantries, soup kitchens, etc.).
Thrifty Food Plan Survivor Challenge
1. Read the following report: Thrifty Food Plan, 2021.
2. Complete the assignment outlined below to determine if you can “survive” the challenge of planning a week’s worth of meals at or below the Thrifty Food Plan cost. You can take one of two approaches to complete this assignment: 1. Price foods then prepare a menu or 2. Plan a menu then price foods.
3. Go to the store and price out the quantities of food for your sex/age.
4. Fill out Table 1 using the Thrifty Food Plan standards for your age and sex (page ES-7, ES-8 and pages 23-24 of The Thrifty Food Plan, 2006). Example:
Group | Food | Standard | Amt. bought | Unit price | Price |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Other veg. | Corn Celery Onion | 2.01lb | 1.00 .50 .51 | .30 .50 .33 | .30 .25 .17 |
Breakfast cereals, cooked and ready to eat | Grape Nuts | .18lb | .18 | 2.40 | .43 |
5. Add the prices for the cost per week.
6. Compare your cost to the Cost of Food at Home sheet. For an individual in a 1 person family, add 20% to the cost for an individual on the chart. (i.e., multiply by 1.2).
7. Design a breakfast, lunch, dinner and snack with the food you have “bought.” Do not report the entire recipe, but do list all the ingredients. Report only quantities to feed 1 person.
Example: Eggplant Parmesan — ¼ eggplant, 2 T breadcrumbs, ¼ cup ricotta cheese, ¼ cup tomato sauce, 3 T oil, 1 egg, 1/8 cup milk.
Note: All the ingredients need to be “bought” the same week. AND this day’s meals and snack need to be well-balanced according to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
Exception: You can assume that the following staples are in you home pantry: herbs and spices, salt, pepper, baking powder and baking soda.
8. Record all cost for your actual food intake for 1 full week. Do not record all supermarket purchases such as shampoo, etc., but only food costs. Include all food and drink eaten away from home. If you share food with others in your household, record all household costs, then divide by the number of people in your household, and add on your personal away-from home costs. Do not include your list of food costs, but use it to answer a question listed in #9.
9. Answer the following questions:
- Was your actual cost lower than or equal to the Thrifty Food Plan Cost? If not, what could you have done to lower your cost? In which Food Plan would you categorize your usual diet?
- What was the hardest part of completing this challenge? Why?
- What did you learn by completing this challenge?
- How easy/difficult would it be to design a week’s meals according to the Thrifty Food Plan? Why?
- How did the experience of completing this assignment challenge and/or reinforce readings, theories, or concepts from your own life experiences?
- Comment on how this experience revealed personal strengths and weaknesses, attitudes or biases, and assumptions or expectations of others.
- What assumptions did you make about the resources you have to facilitate completing this project (transportation, food access, household environment resources)? How would this experience have been different if you didn’t have these resources?
- Identify up to three community resources that assist with free food access to augment the cost of purchasing food. What impact could these resources have on your Thrifty Food Plan?
- Comment on how you would feel if you had to always buy foods according to the Thrifty Food Plan
Table 1
(Download a Word or PDF file).
Food Category | Food | Standard | Quantity Bought x Unit price = price |
---|---|---|---|
Whole grain breads, rice, pasta, and pastries (including whole grain flour) | |||
Whole grain cereals (including hot cereal mixes) | |||
Popcorn and other whole grain snacks | |||
Non-whole grain breads, cereals, rice, pasta, pies, pastries, snacks and flours | |||
All potato products | |||
Dark-green vegetables | |||
Orange Vegetables | |||
Canned and dry beans, lentils, and peas (legumes) | |||
Other vegetables | |||
Whole Fruits | |||
Fruit Juices | |||
Whole milk, yogurt, and cream | |||
Lower fat and skim milk, and lowfat yogurt | |||
All Cheese (including cheese soup and sauce) | |||
Milk drinks and milk desserts | |||
Beef, pork, veal, lamb and game | |||
Chicken, turkey and game birds | |||
Fish and fish products | |||
Bacon, sausages, and luncheon meats (including spreads) Nuts, nut butters and seeds | |||
Eggs and egg mixtures | |||
Table fats, oils, and salad dressings | |||
Gravies, sauces, condiments, and spices | |||
Coffee and Tea | |||
Soft drinks, sodas, fruit drinks, and ades (including rice beverages) | |||
Sugar, sweets and candies | |||
Soups (ready-to-serve and condensed) | |||
Soups (dry) | |||
Frozen or refrigerated entrees (including pizza, fish sticks, frozen meals) |
THRIFTY FOOD PLAN
Cost of Food at Home:
(Appropriate age/sex group)
1 person family (does not apply to X 1.2
more than 1 person families)
TOTAL COST OF FOOD AT HOME $ _____________
Menu for Thrifty Food Plan Challenge
Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner | Snack | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monday
| ||||
Tuesday
| ||||
Wednesday
| ||||
Thursday
| ||||
Friday
| ||||
Saturday
| ||||
Sunday
|
Information in this publication is provided purely for educational purposes. No responsibility is assumed for any problems associated with the use of products or services mentioned. No endorsement of products or companies is intended, nor is criticism of unnamed products or companies implied.
© 2018, 2023
Call 800.287.0274 (in Maine), or 207.581.3188, for information on publications and program offerings from University of Maine Cooperative Extension, or visit extension.umaine.edu.
In complying with the letter and spirit of applicable laws and pursuing its own goals of diversity, the University of Maine System does not discriminate on the grounds of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, transgender status, gender, gender identity or expression, ethnicity, national origin, citizenship status, familial status, ancestry, age, disability physical or mental, genetic information, or veterans or military status in employment, education, and all other programs and activities. The University provides reasonable accommodations to qualified individuals with disabilities upon request. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding non-discrimination policies: Director of Institutional Equity and Title IX Services, 5713 Chadbourne Hall, Room 412, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5713, 207.581.1226, TTY 711 (Maine Relay System).