This could be a flounder, but several people here have mentioned living healthier not just cheaper so here goes. Perhaps we should have a thread called 'living better'?
We only eat organic and try to eat fresh. Our weekly shop is at Whole foods, which many people tease me for and nick name 'whole-pay-check' Well shopping around I've found that many items such as milk, butter, veggies and meat are frequently cheaper and in the case of fresh produce better quality in organic varieties at Whole Foods than they are at other stores such as Meijer, Kroger etc. Costco is best for bulk if you can store it, but it can be a false economy as some fresh things come in such large quantities it's almost impossible to use them in time. I will not cross the threshold of Wal-Mart or SAMs club.
I don't claim to have a frugal lifestyle, but there are frugal things I do that allow me to have the lifestyle we want. The good thing about this is it's also greener.
We have a veggie garden and grow our own in the summer. Note. Our whole yard has been chemical free for at least 18 years, I wouldn't grow my own in the normal suburban toxic patch.
Our Mortgage is 13% of our take home Salary
No Cable
Basic Netflix
No Soda/pop, there's absolutely nothing redeeming about it not matter what the price, now if I could just kick the coffee habit.
Make your own bread. My mother did this for years when I was young, we come and go on it. May not be cheaper then sliced crap, but it's cheaper than real bread.
Beef, we get 1/2 a cow through a co-op once a year and freeze it. Organically raised and pre slaughtered/processed. Big savings over store bought Organic.
Car pool twice a week to work and kids in a very complicated car pool for school that needs a CRAY computer to keep track of!
Shut off lawn sprinkler, massively wasteful, use a hose and movable sprinkle head. Also get up early in the morning so it doesn't get burnt off. For this year I plan on building rain barrels to catch roof run off for watering the garden so I don't even have to use the hose.
Swapped to energy efficient light bulbs, insulated house better.
Keep house cooler in winter and warmer in summer and shut off the garage heater completely.
Debating solar panels for the future, but were not at the cost/benefit point or free cash to do it yet.
I want to get the walls of the house insulated as well once I have some spare $$'s. Several friends have had this done and report a massive improvement in heat retention and reduced bills. The house is a 50's brick ranch so energy conservation was not considered at the time it was built.
Now here's one that may get me ex-communicated from the board. Multiple cars cost multiple license fees and insurance bills. One all rounder is cheaper!!!! (duck's, run's changes address and goes for plastic surgery)
The whole home energy consumption thing is huge. The way utility costs have gone up over the last decade the savings were making are only helping us stay constant in terms of cost. No matter what, any energy savings are a good thing.
There's a really cool book I've got from the UK titled 'It's not easy being green' by Dick Strawbridge available through Amazon.com here. It's a great guide as to what is possible with effort. There's a really cool section about a passively heated green house that allowed them to grow lettuce even through the winter. That's a future consideration as well.