How Rising Food Prices Changed My Grocery Routine (2025 Mom Life Story)

Every year, I tell myself, “Next year, magiging mas organized na ako sa gastos.”
But 2025 came with a surprise — food prices suddenly felt like they were climbing every month.

The first time I noticed it was during a quick midweek grocery run. I reached for our usual milk, and the price tag shocked me. Then I looked at eggs. Then the chicken. And then I knew… this wasn’t just me. Everything really went up.

That grocery trip changed the way I shop forever.

1. I Started My “Smart Grocery Routine”

Before, I’d do one big grocery haul, buy whatever looked good, and hope everything fit in the budget. Now I do it differently:

✔️ I check prices online before leaving

SM, Robinsons, Puregold, and even Waltermart have updated prices online.
This helps me choose where to shop depending on what’s cheaper that week.

✔️ I only buy 1–2 “treat items”

Before: chips + ice cream + chocolate + kung ano pa makita.
Now: ONE treat for me, ONE for the kids.
Surprisingly?
The treats feel more special.

✔️ Veggies first, snacks last

I fill my cart with real food first, then see what’s left for snacks.
Huge difference in our weekly budget.

2. The “Meal Plan Without Pressure” Trick

I don’t do strict meal plans — kasi hindi ako robot, at hindi rin robot ang cravings ng pamilya ko.
What I do is simple:

✔️ Choose 3 major proteins for the week

Example last week:

  • chicken
  • ground pork
  • tokwa

Then I create rotating meals around them:

Chicken → tinola → adobo → chicken steak
Ground pork → torta → misua → sautéed veggies
Tokwa → sisig → tokwa-guisado → crispy tokwa

It makes budgeting easy, and I don’t feel chained to a “meal plan.

3. I Track Which Stores Are the Cheapest for Specific Items

Every mom eventually develops a “mental map” of where things are cheapest.
Mine looks like this:

  • Meat → Supermarket near our house (fresh and slightly cheaper)
  • Veggies → Wet market (big savings!)
  • Snacks + milk → Big supermarkets (more promos)
  • Condiments → Warehouse-type stores

This change alone cut ₱400–₱700 per grocery week.

4. The “₱100 Ulam Challenge” Became a Lifesaver

Not everyday can be shala ulam day.
On some weeks, I challenge myself:

“How many masarap ulam can I make for under ₱100?”

Here are my top winners:

  • Ginisang sayote with egg
  • Ginisang pechay + sardines
  • Tokwa’t talong
  • Chicken adobo flakes (leftover hack!)
  • Ginataang kalabasa

It’s fun, practical, and makes me feel like I unlocked a new “mom level.”

5. I Started Choosing “Stable Pantry Items”

These are ingredients that don’t go bad easily AND can transform into many dishes:

  • Potatoes
  • Onions
  • Garlic
  • Canned sardines
  • Misua
  • Evaporated milk
  • Soy sauce, vinegar

Whenever prices jump again, these staples save me.

6. Most Importantly… I Stopped Feeling Guilty About Budgeting

There was a time I felt bad for saying,
“Anak, next time na lang yan, ha?”

But now?
I see budgeting as an act of love.

I save so I can give more — not immediately, but sustainably.
More experiences, more memories, and fewer money-stress moments.

Food prices rising isn’t something we can control, but how we adapt… that part is ours.

My grocery routine now is simpler, smarter, and kinder to my wallet — without sacrificing the joy of feeding my family well. And honestly, that’s the kind of growth I’m proud of as a mom.

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HELLO

My name is Peachy and I’m a foodie mommy living in the Philippines.I am a mom to two daughters named PURPLE SKYE and PERIWINKLE MOONE and wife to a loving husband I fondly call peanutbutter ♥
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