Table for One
How to Grocery Shop for One
For singles, food shopping can be a challenge. This week, columnist Eric Kim shares his best supermarket secrets.
Photo by Rocky Luten. Food Stylist: Anna Billingskog. Prop Stylist: Amanda Widis.
Popular on Food52
73 Comments
lmht7379
April 23, 2023
Great article and tips. I’ve been using most of these methods for years, and as a former food service manager, wasting food is a sin in my eyes. I love Asian food and cook it often. I save a load of money by seeking out Asian food stores. Sweet to buy superior product for 50% to 75% less than mainstream brands found in all the supermarkets. Produce there is also much lower in price and they carry all the fabulous vegetables common in Asian recipes.
Janice C.
January 10, 2022
Eric, I appreciate your suggestions, but it's hard during Covid/Omicron to leave home to go shopping. Just not safe going into grocery stores where shoppers refuse to wear masks or to cover their noses. Deliveries from Costco and pick up at other stores are hit and miss. Looks like your article was written nearly two years ago, and the situation has grown worse, not better. Sad. Looking forward to trying out more of your suggestions later this year.
FrugalCat
January 23, 2021
True story- my co-worker met her boyfriend at a supermarket where she was asking the butcher to split a pack of ground beef in half. He said "I'll take the other half" and while the butcher was re-wrapping, they got to talking, exchanged numbers, etc.
Margaret
August 22, 2020
For single/duo bacon lovers, place a whole package of separated bacon strips flat, side by side, onto two rimmed baking sheets. Oscar Mayer CENTER CUT has less visible fat, works well using this method, and there’s no need to line pans with baking racks. Bake in pre-heated 350-degree oven for approximately 18 to 20 minutes, rotating pans from top to bottom and vice versa half way through cooking time. When desired doneness is reached, remove pans from oven and place bacon strips in single layers onto a paper towel-lined plate, separating each layer with a paper towel. Blot bacon lightly so as to not break the strips. Put aside bacon to be consumed immediately or soon after the day of preparation. To reserve remaining bacon for a later date, lightly roll each paper towel with bacon into a cylinder shape. Place the rolled bacon towels into a freezer bag and freeze until needed. Then just remove desired amount of pre-cooked bacon from the freezer bag, place in single layer onto a microwave-safe plate and nuke on high 30 seconds for crisp slices. This timing works well in my microwave using 2-strip portions Cooked frozen bacon can be ready in seconds for that special breakfast, summer tomato sandwiches, salads etc. It is surprising how little fat remains in the baking pans when using center cut bacon, but what does remain can be refrigerated/frozen, and used for other purposes.
NancyFromKona
August 22, 2020
Mahalo Margaret. So brilliant I printed it out for myself. This could be a bad thing to know since we rarely eat bacon because the mess of making for 1-2 hardly seems worth it. I thought I was smart when I made bundles of frozen pre-measured chopped bacon to use in my baked beans thus avoiding the limiting factor in making a beloved recipe but your idea truly takes the cake!
NancyFromKona
August 22, 2020
I see bread as problematic for many singles and hoping that during the national sourdough rise many have discovered that their homemade loaves keep exceptionally well wrapped in a linen towel. Another trick: keeping individual servings of dough in the fridge for those times you want hot, fresh bread. When it is too hot to turn on the oven may I suggest flatbread? It’s a 4 minute cook on the stove, here’s one I love: stresscake.wordpress.com/2018/06/27/fast-good-food-greek-salad-piadini-sandwiches/ And Ali Staffords no knead brioche buns and Jim Laheys pizza dough work the same way, take up very little fridge space.
Produce is challenging too. Fresh herbs is the most expensive purchase so freeze, grow your own. Add peeled garlic cloves, peeled ginger (so all ready to grate) and cooked rice to things that go directly into the freezer. Pass on mesclun unless you are going to eat it that night as too fragile. When I commented to a farmer at the market that I was so impressed that his lettuce lived so long he told me that that was because when I bought it at the grocery it was already a week old. Don’t buy old produce. Cultivate a love of sturdy veggies like cabbage, radish and winter squash. Make a deal with yourself that fragile produce needs to be consumed, cooked or frozen ASAP because waste is costly and ups your carbon foot print.
Produce is challenging too. Fresh herbs is the most expensive purchase so freeze, grow your own. Add peeled garlic cloves, peeled ginger (so all ready to grate) and cooked rice to things that go directly into the freezer. Pass on mesclun unless you are going to eat it that night as too fragile. When I commented to a farmer at the market that I was so impressed that his lettuce lived so long he told me that that was because when I bought it at the grocery it was already a week old. Don’t buy old produce. Cultivate a love of sturdy veggies like cabbage, radish and winter squash. Make a deal with yourself that fragile produce needs to be consumed, cooked or frozen ASAP because waste is costly and ups your carbon foot print.
Shane L.
February 1, 2020
What about tomato paste, I feel like I waste too much; I'm never sure how long a tube, jar, or can will last in the refrigerator before going bad. I found some powdered tomato doing a quick search. Does anyone have experience using tomato powder in place of paste? Let me know, thanks :)
Nancy
February 1, 2020
Freeze tomato paste in ice cube trays. Keeps months. Add 1 or 2 cube to sauce when needed.
Susanna
March 1, 2020
I often freeze leftover tomato paste from a can in individual plastic bags, but I also keep tubes of it open for a long, long time. Like for several months.
Suzan B.
January 28, 2020
The freezer is the best way to eat for one (or two.) I will take a whole rotisserie chicken, shred it and make enchiladas (a big one will use all 18 corn tortillas) freeze on a baking sheet and then pop in a freezer bag. I can take out one or two, cover with sauce and cheese and have an easy dinner. Same with stuffed shells, cannelloni or even lasagna roll-ups. It sometimes just takes a little planning, but I prefer my food to restaurants, so it is worth the effort.
M
January 27, 2020
I think part of cooking for one is rethinking the idea that you have to cook for one and struggle to downsize every recipe and ingredient. Otherwise cooking for one can often be a lot more expensive and stressful.
A whole chicken for one means roast chicken one night, a sandwich, soup, and extra stock for freezing because stock uses up so many things and isn't picky about perfection. (Bones of small portions can also be collected in a freezer bag, then used to make stock when you have to get rid of old celery, carrots, and onions. Make Instant Pot pho with drumsticks, and the extra will make a crazy-tasty sandwich the next day.) A lasagna is fairly quick to make (just ask Paris Hilton!), and will be a much cheaper frozen dinner than one serving. Soup for 8 means soup plus 6-7 servings to freeze for times snowed in. A pound of ground meat means a cheeseburger, meatballs, mini-meatloaf...or a bunch of taco meat that can become sloppy joes on day 2, 3, or 4. Embrace a little repetition and make it a challenge to cook something so different that it doesn't even seem repetitive.
But if you live in a city like NYC, I think step one would be shopping at places where you're in control of the amount you buy, like butchers that will sell one pork chop and cheese mongers who will sell a few cheese slices or a tiny chunk.
A whole chicken for one means roast chicken one night, a sandwich, soup, and extra stock for freezing because stock uses up so many things and isn't picky about perfection. (Bones of small portions can also be collected in a freezer bag, then used to make stock when you have to get rid of old celery, carrots, and onions. Make Instant Pot pho with drumsticks, and the extra will make a crazy-tasty sandwich the next day.) A lasagna is fairly quick to make (just ask Paris Hilton!), and will be a much cheaper frozen dinner than one serving. Soup for 8 means soup plus 6-7 servings to freeze for times snowed in. A pound of ground meat means a cheeseburger, meatballs, mini-meatloaf...or a bunch of taco meat that can become sloppy joes on day 2, 3, or 4. Embrace a little repetition and make it a challenge to cook something so different that it doesn't even seem repetitive.
But if you live in a city like NYC, I think step one would be shopping at places where you're in control of the amount you buy, like butchers that will sell one pork chop and cheese mongers who will sell a few cheese slices or a tiny chunk.
Nancy
January 27, 2020
M - yes. Am less averse to repetition than Eric reports himself and often cook as you describe above, using one purchase of meat to generate several meals or dishes.
Problem in NYC, from what I remember, is appliances often too small to accommodate such cooking and storage.
Problem in NYC, from what I remember, is appliances often too small to accommodate such cooking and storage.
Eric K.
January 27, 2020
I love that, M & N. With this column I’ve only leaned into batch cooking for one a handful of times (shredded chicken, roast chicken, soup), but you’re right; it is a big part of learning how to cook for just yourself. For me it’s only cooking things you know for certain you‘ll want to eat spoonful after spoonful without ever tiring of it.
Funny you say mini meatloaf because that’s next week’s column. :)
Funny you say mini meatloaf because that’s next week’s column. :)
Nancy
January 28, 2020
Another editorial idea. If you later do an article following M's ideas for multiple uses of one chicken, frame it in methods (e.g. roast, saute, soup, sandwich, pasta sauce) so people see they can easily apply the ideas to lamb, beef, big block of tofu, etc.
M
January 28, 2020
Honestly, I'm always trying to rid myself of the idea that dinner always has to be something you don't get tired of. We've become conditioned to have all-access passes to food. The more I watch old Depression Era Clara videos, or things like Back in Time for Dinner, the more I'm reminded how much plenty we expect for dinner. Hell, even early Good Eats episodes, not so long ago, were severely restricted by access to things that are ubiquitous today. A little unwanted repetition might be a good thing.
ashley's B.
February 17, 2020
Related thoughts: Although I'd love to have variety and variation _every_ night, cooking for one makes that expensive and time consuming.
Currently I'm in a groove doing variation by _week:_ I pick a general cuisine / spice profile for a week. That means I can prep or batch cook stuff once (e.g. Vietnamese. or Italian), then eat easily and relatively quickly the rest of the week.
Currently I'm in a groove doing variation by _week:_ I pick a general cuisine / spice profile for a week. That means I can prep or batch cook stuff once (e.g. Vietnamese. or Italian), then eat easily and relatively quickly the rest of the week.
Foodie41
January 26, 2020
Another valuable to me has been dating EVERYTHING as I open and put in the Refrigerator. Knowing when I opened it for the first time so no "2nd Guessing" anymore. I have a deep freezer so anything that goes in there is also dated. I haven't figured out a way for dry goods as yet. I have been thinking of putting a small Whiteboard inside of a cabinet door and keeping a list there. I plan to also use the whiteboard for when I get low on canned/dry goods.
Nancy
January 26, 2020
How to date dry goods.
First, often less urgent as some (e.g., pasta, beans) last for years.
If you store in paper or cardboard, write on package.
If you transfer to a canister or other container, write on part of the package wrapper you save in the container. (It's useful to save something with manufacturer's and product name, maybe the nutrition info.)
First, often less urgent as some (e.g., pasta, beans) last for years.
If you store in paper or cardboard, write on package.
If you transfer to a canister or other container, write on part of the package wrapper you save in the container. (It's useful to save something with manufacturer's and product name, maybe the nutrition info.)
Gammy
January 28, 2020
I keep a lot of dry goods in clear, air tight, acrylic containers and for items that have cooking directions (think pasta, noodles, grains) I cut the instructions along with the name (if not obvious) and slip down into the container facing outward. Easy enough to add the date purchased, too.
Eric K.
January 28, 2020
Aw Gammy, I love that tip of cutting out the instructions. Even the same type of pasta shape from different brands can vary vastly in cook time.
Shane L.
February 1, 2020
My Grams used to cut the instructions from the packaging and tape it to the container ;)
Steven W.
January 5, 2021
They can take up room, but mason jars hold lots of stuff. I cut off the nutrition facts (or best by date) on dry goods and pop it right in the jar. (For cereal, pasta rice type things.) Or get painter's tape and label the jars. you can even find used jars---check for nicks and just buy new lids and bands.
Leslie B.
January 5, 2021
I do this as well... cut out the label and anything else I need to know, place in front of glass jar —- also write the date on the cut out info. Very simple. Also, I have a large variety of glass jars in different sizes and move to smaller ones as I use up an item.
Carlos C.
January 26, 2020
Really great tips. I always tell people to buy bouillon cubes (or their alternatives) rather than packing a freezer full of bags and bags of broth. The boxer broth is just weird to me. It always has a lot of things I don’t want (sugar, tomatoes, tons of veggies that don’t fit with what I’m cooking). But if you really want to go the homemade route, make a demi glace. It’s easier than you think and you can dilute it with water to make sauce.
As for milk, even in a large household, I can never go through fresh milk before it goes bad. That’s why I keep evaporated in my pantry. It’s excellent in cooking. Seriously. Try it with pasta.
As for milk, even in a large household, I can never go through fresh milk before it goes bad. That’s why I keep evaporated in my pantry. It’s excellent in cooking. Seriously. Try it with pasta.
Nancy
January 26, 2020
Eric and posters - great article, great tips! One other suggestion on produce. We all have favorite vegetables and fruits, and would like to have many around to choose from for salads, soups, sides. But hard to do when living alone. So I buy fruit/veg in rotation, so I get a variety of tastes, texture & nutrients over the season. But always have minimum white, one each white, green, red/purple. Another tip - cabbage. It's great for salads, vitamin C, etc. I usually get through one, maybe two a winter. Can use in Cole slaw, soup, and pasta (famous sauteed onion cabbage bowtie pasta dish).
Eric K.
January 27, 2020
I adore cabbage, too; stir-fried (but still crunchy) with a little meat, sesame oil, kimchi. Divine. Also, I always forget how many portions a single head is! So filling.
Thanks for sharing, Nancy.
Thanks for sharing, Nancy.
sf-dre
January 28, 2020
I've found smaller heads of cabbage at my farmers market and if not available, there's always mixed cabbage or broccoli slaw from Trader Joe's. I'm not much for meal planning, more about what's on sale or what looks good at the farmers market.
ashley's B.
February 17, 2020
Ask the produce folks at the grocery store if they'd be willing to cut a head of cabbage in half and sell you 1 half. (And of course also ask at farmer's markets.)
There is usually 1/2 head sitting available at my favorite local small market, and often there are halves of other large veggies available. (squashes, etc.) I'm much more likely to buy 1/2 head cabbage because the remains won't be staring accusingly at me in my fridge.
Never hurts to ask! Worst that can happen is they say "nope."
There is usually 1/2 head sitting available at my favorite local small market, and often there are halves of other large veggies available. (squashes, etc.) I'm much more likely to buy 1/2 head cabbage because the remains won't be staring accusingly at me in my fridge.
Never hurts to ask! Worst that can happen is they say "nope."
Sarah M.
January 25, 2020
As a college student living in a small dorm with a roommate, I enjoy perusing Table for One and getting inspiration for meals when I don't want to eat pasta and jarred tomato sauce or at the Panera on campus for the third time in a week. Thanks for the tips on grocery shopping for one- a lot of it I had seen/heard before but it's always nice to see them compiled in one place that I can go back to.
Eric K.
January 27, 2020
That makes me so glad, Sarah. Thanks for perusing, and let me know if there's anything in particular you're ever looking for!
Gammy
January 25, 2020
Great article Eric!! I love good bread, and won't buy the stuff from a grocery store shelf, but have found that the 2 of us can't go through a loaf before it gets stale. Now I have the bread sliced when I purchase, transfer to a freezer bag at home and freeze. I can always separate off a couple slices with a blunt butter knife, they will come to room temp. very quickly and we can have good fresh bread any time.
Eric K.
January 25, 2020
There's a bakery near where I live; they make the best pullman loaf, which I always ask to be sliced so I can throw it in the freezer immediately. Best toast ever.
Thanks for reading, Gammy.
Thanks for reading, Gammy.
Gammy
January 25, 2020
Some awesome local artisan bakeries in this country! I just bought a loaf today at our Saturday farmer's market. Seeds, whole grain, nuts and made with a locally created sourdough starter. Can't wait to try!
ellicia
January 25, 2020
Very informative article with lots of practical tips. I was so excited to learn about Better Than Bouillon until I read the ingredients. I hesitate to use this product because it has so many hidden sources of MSG - the hydrolyzed soy protein, the dried whey, flavorings, and the food additives disodium inosinate and guanylate which need MSG to be effective. Maybe someday I will find a bouillon free of dodgy ingredients.
Eric K.
January 25, 2020
So glad you found it helpful, ellicia! And I hear you on the MSG; there's an interesting conversation regarding that below this article: https://food52.com/blog/24150-better-than-bouillon
I feel like for me the main thing is, here and in life, everything in moderation.
I feel like for me the main thing is, here and in life, everything in moderation.
Nancy
January 26, 2020
E (auto incorrect mangles the full name) - have a look at River Cottage recipe for homemade bouillon mix (in food52 recipe section). Only manufactured ingredient is sun-dried tomatoes.
ellicia
January 26, 2020
Thank you so much for the tip, especially the suggestion to halve the recipe. Otherwise I would have to peddle it in the neighborhood. : )
mikecz
January 27, 2020
I'm really not at all sure about the MSG adverse thing. Look at Japan, which has one of the highest average age populations and longest life expectancy populations on the planet. Yet they commonly put high MSG ingredients in their food, even sometimes straight MSG (labelled as such on the container). How do you reconcile that?
Shane L.
February 1, 2020
I'm not concerned with MSG so much as the other ingredients. I just ordered a product called Yondu (Yondu.us). INGREDIENTS: Organic Soybean Essence (Organic Soybean, Water, Salt), Vegetable Extract (Onion, White Radish, Leek, Cabbage, Carrot, Shiitake, Ginger, Garlic), Yeast Extract.
I'm sure there's plenty of naturally occurring MSG in there, but I consider that a good thing.
I'm sure there's plenty of naturally occurring MSG in there, but I consider that a good thing.
Jodes
January 25, 2020
My favourite tips: buy versatile veges. Baby spinach is great because you can use it in salads, sauté with mushrooms and garlic as a side, or throw it in smoothies and juices.
Also, if I have leftover vegetables, I’ll make a soup with whatever is available and then freeze it in portions for easy lunches.
Bananas freeze well for smoothies, you just have to peel them first. Same with pineapple and mango chunks.
Also, if I have leftover vegetables, I’ll make a soup with whatever is available and then freeze it in portions for easy lunches.
Bananas freeze well for smoothies, you just have to peel them first. Same with pineapple and mango chunks.
cichlisuite
January 24, 2020
Two tips: 1) warm chocolate chip cookies: make batch of cookie dough, portion them with a cookie scoop, freeze balls and place in ziplock bag. take 2-3 out, sprinkle with maldon salt and bake off in toaster oven for when you need a warm treat for one. 2) shiozake: buy side of salmon from costco, portion them, sprinkle with sake and salt, place in fridge overnight between paper towels for 24 hours. wrap individual portions tightly in plastic wrap and return to freezer. defrost individual portion to broil off in toaster over. i eat with leftover rice, boiling water and ochazuke mix. For fancier weekend breakfast for one, i also make miso soup, rollup a tamagoyaki, bust out the zojirushi 3-cup rice cooker and serve japanese pickles in cute plates hauled back from kappabashi.
Smaug
January 24, 2020
I suppose it would be a lot harder for someone living in a NY apartment, but if you have plenty of storage space shopping for one isn't much of a problem. I'm stuck with Safeway much of the time (it can be tough for a non driver in the burbs), and you have to shop sales there if you don't want to be robbed blind. I also have a Trader Joe's nearby, which is far more dependable. There seems to be more and more tendency to prepackage produce, which is on it's way to becoming a problem but not too much so far. By the way, as far as berries, you're really better off buying them frozen. Not only are they cheaper that way, due to the fragility of ripe berries those that are picked for retail are usually far from ripe; those picked for freezing can be considerably riper.
Eric K.
January 24, 2020
Was waiting for your comment on this subject!
Agreed, frozen berries are often better. But it's always good to check the prices. At my store (in the dead of winter...) fresh raspberries were $2.99 and frozen were $5-6. I do think cherries are where frozen fruit reach their zenith, though.
Agreed, frozen berries are often better. But it's always good to check the prices. At my store (in the dead of winter...) fresh raspberries were $2.99 and frozen were $5-6. I do think cherries are where frozen fruit reach their zenith, though.
Smaug
January 24, 2020
Frozen berries (and other fruits) are one of those things you really need a Trader Joe's for. I'm currently working on a mango pie (half a dozen versions in the last couple of months)- the frozen chunks at Safeway were $5 for 12 oz.; at TJ's I believe it was under $3 for 24 oz. Please talk someone (other than those ridiculously overpriced Wyman's mixed bags) into freezing sour cherries- in our vast and wealthy nation, it should be possible to make a decent cherry pie.
Smaug
January 25, 2020
Can't even get them canned here, but TJ does have them dried. An interesting product, but you can't make a traditional pie from them. Should be a good tree for home gardeners, though- unlike other cherries, they don't require 2 trees for pollination; also, sour cherries are said to be very helpful for fighting arthritis.
Elizabeth
January 25, 2020
I’ve had good luck with Northwest Wild Foods; they ship frozen sour cherries 🍒
Smaug
January 25, 2020
Elizabeth Thanks for that- I hadn't heard of them, but they sound like a good organization. I see that their sour cherries are available through Amazon, with free shipping (I wonder how they're shipped), but it's $75 for 4.5 lbs., a bit rich for my blood.
Smaug
January 25, 2020
ps Amazon also lists some from Dole that are somewhat cheaper- comments say they are double boxed with dry ice, and at least for one customer did indeed arrive frozen. Unfortunately, as a shopper for one, 10 lbs. of sour cherries is somewhat beyond my scope, and they're still not by any means cheap.
Eric K.
January 25, 2020
Smaug, I wonder if this is a reminder for us to relish in the fleetingness of seasonal foods. My "sour cherry" is Thanksgiving stuffing, which makes no sense because I could make it whenever the hell I want! But would it taste as special to me if I did?
(...yes.)
(...yes.)
Smaug
January 25, 2020
I'm all for fleetingness of seasonal foods- seasons tend not to flee so fast in California anyway- but I can't get sour cherries even in season. I understand they're mostly grown in (I think it was) Michigan- maybe my sister in Wisconsin could send some, but shipping produce to California is pretty problematic. Or maybe I could go to one of the serious produce places in Berkeley and hope for the best, but I really don't get around much anymore. Perhaps I just classify cherry pie among the lost glories of the past and move on.
Elizabeth
January 25, 2020
I've had luck in the Bay Area at Persian grocery stores -- they often carry sour cherries in season, but they are expensive because they are so delicate to ship -- good luck!
Shane L.
February 1, 2020
I'm lucky enough to have ample storage space, and there are always big bags of frozen berries from Costco in my chest freezer - I use them every day in smoothies and oatmeal. They are only $8-9, for a 4 pound bag too!
Foodie41
January 24, 2020
I recently got a Food Saver machine, otherwise I would use ziplock style bags.
BACON was going to waste so I tried this & use it all the time now.
Open new 1 lb pkg of Bacon.
Peel off each slice & roll them up & stand on parchment lined baking sheet. Place in freezer a few hours or overnight.
The next day put all Bacon Rosettes into zip bag or Foodsaver resealable bags & suck out ALL of the air.
Date & mark bag with contents. Put back into freezer
When you need a slice or 2 remove desired amount from bag, rinse with some cool water until pliable. Place on your skillet that's on a low setting. Cook to desired crispness & enjoy!
BACON was going to waste so I tried this & use it all the time now.
Open new 1 lb pkg of Bacon.
Peel off each slice & roll them up & stand on parchment lined baking sheet. Place in freezer a few hours or overnight.
The next day put all Bacon Rosettes into zip bag or Foodsaver resealable bags & suck out ALL of the air.
Date & mark bag with contents. Put back into freezer
When you need a slice or 2 remove desired amount from bag, rinse with some cool water until pliable. Place on your skillet that's on a low setting. Cook to desired crispness & enjoy!
Shane L.
February 1, 2020
I store almost everything using a vacuum machine. I've cut out plastic as much as possible though, and so, I got the attachments that allow me to apply the vacuum to glass canning jars. I use them for dry goods: pasta, beans, and grains. I also puree lemons, dates, herbs, etc., freeze them in ice cube trays, pop them out and into a jar for storage. I use the jars also, for freezing soups, curries, sauces and such.
gigi.hotchkiss
January 24, 2020
Thanks for a great article, Eric! I was doing some of these things already, so it was nice to get some validation. :) Love love love Better Than Bouillon - I use it all the time! They even have a mushroom stock, which is fabulous. You've inspired me to work on #2 - buying more pantry-bound carbohydrates, esp legumes!
Eric K.
January 24, 2020
Yes, people seem to adore the mushroom bouillon. Thanks for stopping by. :)
Join The Conversation