With inflation being what it is, groceries are a lot more expensive now, so a lot of people are finding that their budget is the biggest obstacle to gaining. Previously safe bets for putting on weight like fast food and weight gain shakes might not be great options anymore if they are relegated to being an occasional treat. The best foods for gaining now are really just whatever food you can afford. That's why we need to look at the number of calories you get per dollar. It's not complicated to figure out. Just find the nutrition facts, take the number of calories per serving, multiply that by the total number of servings to get the total calories, then divide that by the price to get calories per dollar (which I'll call CPD for short).
I looked up a bunch of different food items, I used Walmart to find all of the grocery store items and tried to stick to the house brand (called Great Value in this case) instead of name brands, since that's always going to save you a few bucks. Of course, all of these numbers only apply when you're buying in person instead of having food delivered, as delivery fees will cause it to plummet. Also, packaging and quantity matters. The bigger the volume of each item, the more money you save, and try to go for things in plastic bags when you have a choice, since it's the cheapest form of packaging.
Back in my college days, I discovered that the highest volume of food for the cheapest price in the cafeteria were packs of generic Oreo-style sandwich cookies from the vending machine, and I'd sometimes just get one of those for lunch. Checking the price today, they offer a very nice 1066 CPD.
Once, when they were on sale, I had gotten boxes of snack cakes in every flavor and would eat a box of them after dinner every night. What I had were Little Debbie big packs, which normally cost $5 when not on sale. They range from 456 to 768 CPD, with the biggest ones being Oatmeal Creme Pies, Nutty Buddy, and Star Crunch.
Ice cream sandwiches were 600 CPD, and tubs of ice cream were close at 630 CPD.
I found the cheapest heavy cream I could find, and it gives you 659 CPD, but that's not much of a surprise that it's more.
The bigger surprise was that Boost VHC only gets you 219 CPD. A lot of people swear by Boost. Mass gainer protein powder was nearly as bad. I looked at several brands, and they were all around the 250 to 290 mark.
A 7" birthday cake is 346 CPD, and sheet cakes were slightly less.
Chocolate pudding cups were 338 CPD, and a tub of Kosy Shack tapioca pudding is 171. The difference is probably due to the name brand.
Getting a dozen cream-filled donuts at Krispy Kreme gives you 211 CPD, with their glazed donuts being even less, at 152.
A plain tub of frosting from the baking section is 980 CPD. Brownie mix was a substantial 1428 CPD just on its own.
Breakfast cereal depends on the flavor, but it ranged from 566 CPD up to 850, with the big winners being the generic versions of Fruit Loops, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and Captain Crunch. Instant oatmeal was higher, at 914 CPD.
Frozen waffles are 439, but pancake mix was a huge 1600 CPD.
I looked up various things in the candy aisle, and it's a wide range from 161 to 628 CPD, with the clear winner being generic gummy bears, with Whoppers, Milk Duds and Reese's Pieces being the runner ups. Again, the gummy bears being house brand is probably why they're the highest.
Honey roasted peanuts were 1187 CPD, with creamy peanut butter being much more at 1575 CPD.
Potato chips were 742 CPD, cheese puffs were 800, generic Doritos were 636, but pork rinds were only 444 CPD.
Frozen pizza was 404 CPD.
Frozen French fries were 379 CPD, stuffed potato skins were 247, instant mashed potatoes were 266, but fresh Russett potatoes were 596 CPD.
Fresh avocados were much less at 137 CPD. Eggs are about the same at 132.
Ground beef was 272 CPD, but ground pork was 380.
Breaded mozzarella sticks were 363 CPD, onion rings were 323, and garlic bread was 581.
I looked up common meals at most of the popular fast food places, and they were all within a range of 102 to 170 CPD. For example, a McDonalds Big Mac and an order of fries comes to 103 CPD in total, while the actual high quality equivalent at my local diner is just shy at 87 CPD. At this point, fast food is getting so expensive, it doesn't make much sense anymore.
Chicken fried rice was a paltry 91 CPD
Instant ramen packs were 506 CPD
Canned chili beans were 420 CPD. Dry beans were a little more at 520, but who wants to bother with cooking dry beans for a measly 100 extra calories?
Canned soup was all fairly low, with the highest being potato soup at 300 CPD, and clam chowder at 280.
Butter is 800 CPD, but lard was a whopping 1995 CPD.
I looked up a bunch of different food items, I used Walmart to find all of the grocery store items and tried to stick to the house brand (called Great Value in this case) instead of name brands, since that's always going to save you a few bucks. Of course, all of these numbers only apply when you're buying in person instead of having food delivered, as delivery fees will cause it to plummet. Also, packaging and quantity matters. The bigger the volume of each item, the more money you save, and try to go for things in plastic bags when you have a choice, since it's the cheapest form of packaging.
Back in my college days, I discovered that the highest volume of food for the cheapest price in the cafeteria were packs of generic Oreo-style sandwich cookies from the vending machine, and I'd sometimes just get one of those for lunch. Checking the price today, they offer a very nice 1066 CPD.
Once, when they were on sale, I had gotten boxes of snack cakes in every flavor and would eat a box of them after dinner every night. What I had were Little Debbie big packs, which normally cost $5 when not on sale. They range from 456 to 768 CPD, with the biggest ones being Oatmeal Creme Pies, Nutty Buddy, and Star Crunch.
Ice cream sandwiches were 600 CPD, and tubs of ice cream were close at 630 CPD.
I found the cheapest heavy cream I could find, and it gives you 659 CPD, but that's not much of a surprise that it's more.
The bigger surprise was that Boost VHC only gets you 219 CPD. A lot of people swear by Boost. Mass gainer protein powder was nearly as bad. I looked at several brands, and they were all around the 250 to 290 mark.
A 7" birthday cake is 346 CPD, and sheet cakes were slightly less.
Chocolate pudding cups were 338 CPD, and a tub of Kosy Shack tapioca pudding is 171. The difference is probably due to the name brand.
Getting a dozen cream-filled donuts at Krispy Kreme gives you 211 CPD, with their glazed donuts being even less, at 152.
A plain tub of frosting from the baking section is 980 CPD. Brownie mix was a substantial 1428 CPD just on its own.
Breakfast cereal depends on the flavor, but it ranged from 566 CPD up to 850, with the big winners being the generic versions of Fruit Loops, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, and Captain Crunch. Instant oatmeal was higher, at 914 CPD.
Frozen waffles are 439, but pancake mix was a huge 1600 CPD.
I looked up various things in the candy aisle, and it's a wide range from 161 to 628 CPD, with the clear winner being generic gummy bears, with Whoppers, Milk Duds and Reese's Pieces being the runner ups. Again, the gummy bears being house brand is probably why they're the highest.
Honey roasted peanuts were 1187 CPD, with creamy peanut butter being much more at 1575 CPD.
Potato chips were 742 CPD, cheese puffs were 800, generic Doritos were 636, but pork rinds were only 444 CPD.
Frozen pizza was 404 CPD.
Frozen French fries were 379 CPD, stuffed potato skins were 247, instant mashed potatoes were 266, but fresh Russett potatoes were 596 CPD.
Fresh avocados were much less at 137 CPD. Eggs are about the same at 132.
Ground beef was 272 CPD, but ground pork was 380.
Breaded mozzarella sticks were 363 CPD, onion rings were 323, and garlic bread was 581.
I looked up common meals at most of the popular fast food places, and they were all within a range of 102 to 170 CPD. For example, a McDonalds Big Mac and an order of fries comes to 103 CPD in total, while the actual high quality equivalent at my local diner is just shy at 87 CPD. At this point, fast food is getting so expensive, it doesn't make much sense anymore.
Chicken fried rice was a paltry 91 CPD
Instant ramen packs were 506 CPD
Canned chili beans were 420 CPD. Dry beans were a little more at 520, but who wants to bother with cooking dry beans for a measly 100 extra calories?
Canned soup was all fairly low, with the highest being potato soup at 300 CPD, and clam chowder at 280.
Butter is 800 CPD, but lard was a whopping 1995 CPD.
2 weeks