
I tried viral 5,4,3,2,1 shopping method & it cut my weekly food bill in HALF – but here's why I won't be doing it again
FIVE, four, three, two, one . . . no, not that old Manfred Mann hit from the 1960s – this is the latest food shopping trend on social media.
It's a simple method: Buy five portions of veg, four fruits, three proteins, two grains and one sweet treat each week.
The budget formula has gone viral, especially as mums claim it has cut their food shop bills by half or more. It encourages you to cook from scratch, avoiding the high costs of pre-packaged meals and snacks.
For a family of four, my weekly food bill frequently hits £120 or more.
So can this hack feed a family and save serious cash?
Julie Cook tried it, for five days, and this what she found.
DAY 1: THE REALITY OF RATIONING
BREAKFAST would often be cereal or an egg — but today it was toast only.
'Bread is all I have in,' I said to my kids, Alex, 16, and Adriana, 11.
They stared at me as if I'd said I'd just seen a unicorn. 'What, no cereal?' Adriana gasped.
They eat lunch at school so when they came home I made them a cottage pie with half the minced beef, an onion, two chopped carrots, some of the potatoes to make mash and some tomato puree I had in the cupboard.
The meal went down a treat and they asked for more.
Afterwards they usually want something sweet but I explained about the 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 method and how sweet treats were rationed this week to just one pack of six mousses.
I'm an Irish mum & I feed my family of six for three days with €26 shop
Alex loves fruit so was happy but Adriana has a sweet tooth. 'Can't I have a mousse?' she said.
'When they're gone, they're gone,' I replied.
Hubby Cornel, 44, a musician, was happy with the cottage pie and fruit.
When I also explained this strategy could save us hundreds, maybe even thousands a year, he perked up even more. So far, so good.
DAY 2: COOKERY COMPLAINTS
AFTER a breakfast of, you guessed it, toast, my kids set off for school clutching bananas as extras.
Normally, I'd cook something from scratch one day and, if there were no leftovers, make something simple like frozen chicken in breadcrumbs the next — but they were off-limits this week.
Besides, I still had half a pack of mincemeat to use up, as it said to use within 24 hours once opened.
I made a bolognese with the mince and added it to the pasta shells I bought. Normally the kids love this dish.
But Adriana groaned: 'We had mince last night.'
I replied: 'Well, I want to use it up.'
I felt rather miffed. The ingratitude!
Hubby seemed OK while Alex, bless him is 16 and all food's good food to him — although he did ask if there'd be something 'different tomorrow'.
They ate resignedly and I bribed both by offering one of the sweet treats. 'When they're gone . . . ' I began.
'Yes, when they're gone, they're gone!' Adriana snapped before running off upstairs with hers.
I snuck my mousse out now and decided to eat it before anyone did a late night fridge raid.
DAY 3: FRIDGE RAIDERS
WITH my family well and truly tired of mince, I used the four-pack of salmon I had bought.
I paired them with a jacket potato each and some curly kale. I also roasted the sweet peppers in some oil.
I was pleased to be serving up healthy fish and greens and definitely eased the mum guilt of no treats in the house.
At least I was giving my kids their Omega 3s.
Despite all the veg, though, the salmon steaks were tiny and everyone asked for more.
'Er, that was it,' I winced.
The kids raided the fridge and found three sorry-looking mousses.
'Where are all the yoghurts?' Alex asked.
'They're not part of this week's 5, 4, 3, 2, 1,' I replied.
He grabbed some strawberries and sloped off upstairs.
'I'm starving,' Cornel groaned, looking in the fridge. 'Where's all the food?'
Not a good day, really.
I stared into the empty fridge weighing it up.
On one hand, I would be saving a ton doing this. On the other, was it really worth it if everyone was starving?
DAY 4: CALORIE CONUNDRUM
DINNER tonight was chicken breasts with roasted potatoes, roasted carrots and some curly kale.
I learnt my lesson last night with the meagre salmon steaks so I used all the chicken up to ensure everyone had second helpings.
The kids were getting used to our fruit pudding now and asked for strawberries. There was a tiny handful left.
'It's a bit, well, monotonous,' Cornel said, helping me load the dishwasher.
I stared into the fridge and felt the same.
Usually it would be heaving with yoghurts, puddings and chocolate biscuits.
I went to bed worrying whether I was giving my kids enough calories.
Boys are supposed to have 2,800 a day at my son's age and my daughter is supposed to have between 1,400 and 2,000.
I was concerned at this point if they'd had enough.
Thank goodness they also get a healthy lunch at school.
'Structure helps for a more balanced diet'
MARTIN NEWMAN, the Consumer Champion, says . . .
"The 5-4-3-2-1 shopping method gives shoppers a simple framework to ensure their trolley reflects a more balanced diet – especially useful in an age of ultra-processed convenience.
Going into the shop with this structure makes you more intentional. It shifts you from reacting to supermarket deals or packaging to thinking proactively about your meals.
For parents, this is an easy-to-remember guide that helps ensure kids get nutritional variety without overthinking meal plans.
By focusing on food groups, not brand names, shoppers may save money and reduce waste – especially if they plan meals around what they buy. People with specific nutritional needs – athletes, people with diabetes, allergies, or those on plant-based diets – may need more tailored approaches.
Also, rigidly sticking to a numeric formula might not suit everyone's lifestyle, especially those cooking for larger households or with varied preferences."
See martinnewman.co.uk
DAY 5: SOUP SAVES THE DAY
ALL the protein was now gone. I looked in the fridge and felt panic engulf me.
My teen son works out at the gym and if there's no protein on his plate it's a disaster. But it had all gone.
I decided to make a soup out of the bag of carrots, one onion and some potatoes, and blended it.
Then I made a simple pasta sauce with some of the onion and some tinned tomatoes I had in my cupboard (thankfully.)
'Is there any cheese?' the kids asked.
I grimaced. 'I only had three proteins — fish, chicken and meat,' I explained.
'This is NOT normal,' Adriana sighed.
Afterwards I gave them both the final leftover chocolate mousses, with guilt.
At the weekend, the cupboard and fridge were bare so I did my normal huge weekly shop, with yoghurts, crisps, biccies and all that.
Oh, and sugary cereals. It came to £110.
MY VERDICT
THE 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, method of shopping sounds great on paper – and it is, in some ways. It made me meal-plan rather than going off the cuff like I usually do, and made me use up every single thing I had bought.
But it also left very little room for spontaneity, extra portions or even just fun little treats. I am convinced my kids were hungry by the evening – hubby certainly was, I may have heard his stomach rumbling – and I just felt stressed by the whole thing.
I am all for cooking from scratch – but only when you have the knowledge you have enough back-up food, if the kids want extra helpings or just something else that evening.
I can see why people rave about the method – it certainly did save me money – about £63 over the five days, which would work out at £4,599 over a year. But I won't be doing it again.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
an hour ago
- Times
How to pull off summer's no make-up look
No make-up make-up is the ultimate beauty oxymoron. Don't expect it to involve fewer products or any less money, but it will most definitely leave you looking your best without seeming overly made-up. In other words, it is perfect for long summer days and lazy holidays. Here's what really works. Stila All About The Blur StickNow this is a little stick of magic that goes on clear, mattifies and gives a soft-focus finish but without pigment. Use on shiny T-zones on warmer days and watch pores, unwanted shine and sweat disappear. £28.50; Merit The Uniform Tinted Mineral Sunscreen SPF50This tinted sunscreen has taken the beauty cognoscenti by storm this summer. Why? Because it truly works on all skin shades and gives a flattering finish, especially on sensitive and oilier skin. It's not a primary SPF but ideal for an added layer of sun protection. It looks great on the go, comes in 15 shades and is a multifunction summertime saver. £34; Erborian CC CrèmeSeeing is believing with this little beauty from the wildly popular Korean brand. It goes on looking like a moisturiser yet turns to a lightly pigmented, Instagram-esque 'Paris filter' for your face. Just recently it has been reduced in price. It comes in four shades but more are promised later this year. I tested this on This Morning and every male presenter wanted to take one home. Your skin on its best day in a tube. £38; • Caroline Hirons: Britain's most powerful beauty expert House of Hur Moist Ampoule BlusherThis is the serum soft-tint liquid blusher that took TikTok by storm as the much more reasonably priced alternative to Armani. It comes in three shades and is gorgeous: super-flattering and sheer, it blends Korean hydrating skincare with a hint of a tint. £15; Jane Iredale Just Kissed Lip and Cheek StainThis lip balm goes on sheer but reacts to the pH of your lips to create a flattering, slightly intensified version of your lip colour. What's more, it acts as a lipcare balm at the same time to stave off the threat of dry, parched lips. £35, in four shades; Chanel Les Beiges Water-Fresh TintChanel has trouble keeping this in stock the minute the sun shines because it is such a cult product. It adds a hint of a tint, a hit of hydration and a healthy glow. Add concealer for more coverage, but this is the type of base you can wear on the beach and not look as if you're wearing a scrap of make-up (just great skin). £55, in eight shades; 19/99 Lash Tint MascaraNow this is clever: a mascara that is so subtle it can be worn in your brows too. It looks more like a lash tint as it adds colour but no volume or length, for a really natural and pretty look. It's tubing too, so no telltale smudges on hot and sweaty days. Better yet, it will rinse away with just warm water when you want. This is a brilliant Canadian brand that specialises in multipurpose products that are affordable too. £14, in three shades; • Read more beauty product reviews and advice from our experts Wonderskin FYP Translucent PowderI don't care how natural you look, you never want to be sweaty or shiny, and this totally translucent powder will work over even the most subtle base and on any skin tone. I discovered this when chatting to the make-up legend Val Garland, who keeps it in her SOS kit on set both for her own face when filming Glow Up and for models on cover shoots. £18; Glossier Shadow Stick Sometimes you need just a touch of shadow to define the eye in the lash line and in the crease of both eyes. This comes in five shades with music-themed names: try Riff for contouring – it's the ideal neutral shade that creates shadow and definition, blends easily, stays in place and doesn't really look like eyeshadow. £22; Find @nadinebaggott on Instagram and YouTube where she answers all your beauty questions


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Time for change: watches that are worn anywhere but the wrist
While most watches today are worn on the wrist, originally they came in the shape of fobs — attached to a waistcoat or uniform by a chain or ribbon — or were hung on pins. Later they were put on wrist straps for convenience, a style that was common after the First World War. Now makers are relegating the telling of time to a secondary function. 'We're seeing watches evolve into expressions of personal style as consumers seek more distinctive accessories,' explains Ben Staniforth, of the pre-owned luxury timepiece retailer Watchfinder & Co. 'Worn on lapels as pendants or integrated into couture, they reflect a trend where fashion meets functionality.' This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue Arsham Droplet watch, £76,000, If evidence is needed that this is entering mainstream culture, the actress Jenna Ortega rocking up at A$AP Rocky's Met Gala afterparty last month with an antique men's pocket watch by Heuer (known today as Tag Heuer) from c 1914 dangling from her tuxedo bodysuit should be proof enough. And the high echelons of watchmaking have cottoned on to this trend for self-expression too. Hermès debuted its Maillon Libre brooch watch in April. This gem of a timepiece can be pinned to a lapel or sleeve, or worn around the neck with a leather cord — and is a frontrunner for design ingenuity. Despite its established place in the serious fashion sphere, Chanel also knows how to have fun with its designs. The new Kiss Me necklace appropriately takes the form of the brand's cult lipstick. If that wasn't charmant enough, it slides open to reveal a hidden watch dial. Kiss Me necklace in yellow gold, golden beryls, rhodolites, onyx and diamonds, POA, Sixtie sautoir watch in rose gold, white opals and diamonds, POA, Also restringing its pearls is Piaget, which has taken inspiration from its archival necklace watches from the Sixties: the Sixtie sautoir has a lozenge watch dial as its focal point in a masterful melding of high jewellery and horology. And Hublot's long-standing collaboration with leading artists resulted in the release of a timepiece that sent ripples through the watch world last year. Designed by the visual artist Daniel Arsham, the Droplet is tethered to a chain and cased in sapphire glass, offering a clear view of the moving mechanical parts within. This cute kidney bean of a timepiece is as far removed from your grandad's gold pocket watch as you can get. Van Cleef & Arpels is a dab hand with watches that combine complex engineering with stellar gem setting. At first glance, its padlock-shaped Cadenas might look like a heavy-duty bracelet, but take a closer look and you'll find an angled watch dial set among a dazzling mix of gold, diamonds and sapphires. Panthère hinged bangle watch in yellow gold, lacquer, onyx and diamonds, POA, Sundial watch in steel, £128, Cartier is another high jeweller and watchmaker that excels at combining precious materials with covert details. Its new Panthère has Duchess of Windsor glamour in spades with its big-cat hinged bangle: cast in solid gold and set with precious stones, it also fits in a watch dial, revealed by turning your wrist a few degrees. But the most novel creation is by the young, dynamic German brand Nomos Glashütte. Its sundial watch, which can be worn as a ring or around your neck, has a machined hole that lets a beam of sunlight fall on the engraved numbers to tell the hours. It's useless at night, but it will certainly be a talking point during working hours.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Reversible jewellery: designs that dazzle front and back
'The back should look as good as the front.' That's the first lesson instilled in goldsmiths at the world's most prestigious jewellery houses. It's a natural extension then to create pieces that are entirely reversible — a welcome feat at a time when gold prices are eye-wateringly high. This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue Rush Hour necklace in yellow and white gold and diamond, POA, Jessica McCormack's new Rush Hour collection features a sculptural wavy torque with a diamond nestled in one of its curves. The piece can be worn with the yellow-gold side facing out or flipped to reveal the white gold, so you can match it to your outfit. Chanel's Sport collection brings the same versatility to rings that pivot from a statement round-cut diamond to a more discreet enamel design on the back. Dior too embraces the concept with the latest additions to its Rose des Vents line: bracelets and necklaces whose spinning charms reveal a diamond-centred compass rose or a gently domed gemstone in hues including delicate pink opal, vivid malachite and sky-blue turquoise. Rose des Vents earring, necklace and ring in yellow gold, pink gold, white gold, platinum, diamonds, malachite, lapis lazuli, tiger's eye, pink opal, turquoise, mother-of-pearl, onyx and red ceramic lacquer, all POA, Reversibility also takes centre stage at Pomellato in the new Pom Pom Dot collection, inspired by a vintage piece. 'The discovery of a button motif in a necklace from 1974 in our archives was the starting point,' says Pomellato's creative director, Vincenzo Castaldo. 'However, we added playfulness by creating a double-sided button. Pom Pom Dot allows the wearer to flip the button to the plain gold or gem-set side,' he adds. Pom Pom Dot comprises earrings, rings and bracelets with button-shaped pendants in malachite, turquoise, mother-of-pearl and diamonds. With a satisfying click, each piece swivels to reveal a different face in rose gold. Gouette Question Mark necklace in white gold, green tourmaline, rock crystal and diamonds, POA, In India, the belief that the back of a jewel should be as beautiful as the front is rooted in a philosophy that considers beauty and craftsmanship as pathways to spiritual completeness. This applies particularly to bridal jewellery, where the hidden decoration on the reverse is seen as a metaphor for the bride's inner beauty. Honouring this tradition, Sabyasachi's opulent necklaces — no matter how lavishly set with diamonds on the front — are enamelled on the back with motifs of lotuses, peacocks and parrots. The technique, known as meenakari, was introduced during the Mogul era and originally helped protect the metal from corrosion. Cartier Le Voyage Recommencé High Jewellery necklace in white gold, diamonds, rock crystal and coloured lacquer, POA, Cartier's historic ties to India, which have inspired some of the maison's most innovative creations — including its flamboyant Tutti Frutti style — also informed a recent high jewellery necklace with two strikingly different sides. The front embodies art deco minimalism, with a cascade of rock-crystal drops interspersed with diamonds that shimmer in luminous white. But turn the piece over and it reveals a hidden explosion of colour as saturated magenta and deep blue enamel form an abstract pattern that's totally concealed when viewed from the front. Boucheron has also added a surprise to the back of its iconic Point d'Interrogation, or Question Mark, necklace. First unveiled at the 1889 Exposition Universelle in Paris, this sinuous, clasp-free jewel, designed to be swung around the neck with a single hand, earned Frédéric Boucheron the prestigious Grand Prix. More recently the house reimagined the design with three distinctive variations, one with rubellites, another with green tourmalines and a third with deep blue tanzanites. On the reverse, each sparkles with diamonds on rock crystal. Never has the concept of 'buy one, get one free' resulted in something so stylish. Main picture: Pom Pom Dot ring in rose gold, malachite, diamonds and mother-of-pearl, £3,950,