
Feeding a family these days feels like a budgeting challenge every single week. With food prices going up and kids who suddenly decide they don’t like gulay, I used to feel so stressed during meal planning. But after a lot of trial and error (and market math!), I’ve found a system that works: I can feed my family of 4 for ₱500 a day — without skipping meat and without sacrificing nutrition or flavor.
Yes, it’s possible. Let me share how I do it, plus a few sample meals we love!
Step 1: Buy Meat in Bulk (and Freeze It Right)
Buying meat daily can be pricey. So I shop for meat once or twice a week at the wet market or supermarket when there’s a promo. I buy chicken, pork, and ground beef in larger portions, then portion them into ziplocks for freezing. A ₱200 pack of chicken can stretch across two meals if I use it wisely — like in a stir-fry or with lots of veggies.
Step 2: Stretch Dishes with Gulay and Pantry Staples
No, I’m not saying you should fill the whole plate with kangkong (although I do love a good adobong kangkong!). What I mean is: mix and match. Add sayote, carrots, pechay, or tofu to meat dishes. It makes the meal healthier, more filling, and more budget-friendly. Even ¼ kilo of ground pork goes far when mixed with upo or ginisang repolyo.
Pro tip: Keep staples like rice, eggs, sardines, monggo, and miswa in your pantry AND and tokwa in your fridge. They save you on “petsa de peligro” days.
Step 3: Plan Meals Ahead — and Repurpose Leftovers
I plan our meals weekly based on what’s on sale and what’s in season. And yes, leftovers are life. That extra adobo from dinner? Shred it and make adobo flakes for breakfast or this Creamy Adobo Pasta. Fried tilapia? Turn it into fish lumpia the next day.
Step 4: Rice Is Life, But With a Twist
Rice is still our staple, but I sometimes mix in brown rice or add malunggay for extra nutrients. One rice cooker pot usually feeds all of us per meal. You don’t need to cut rice, just pair it with ulam that’s saucy and hearty.
🍽 Sample ₱500/Day Menu
Breakfast
- Garlic fried rice + scrambled eggs + sliced tomatoes
- Hot coffee or Milo for the kids
→ ₱100
Lunch
- Chicken tinola with sayote and malunggay
- Steamed rice
→ ₱180
Merienda
- Turon or banana cue
→ ₱50
Dinner
- Ginisang upo with ground pork
- Fried tofu on the side
- Rice
→ ₱170
Total: ₱500 or a little bit more
This is given that you have some pantry staples at home that you can use for some of the recipes.
Feeding your family well on a budget isn’t about depriving — it’s about planning, creativity, and knowing where to shop. I don’t skip meat, I just use it wisely. I still serve meals my family enjoys. And I don’t stress about every peso because I’ve found a rhythm that works for us.
If you’re a fellow mom trying to make ends meet without compromising health or taste, I see you. And yes, it can be done — one smart meal at a time. 💕