Your Cheapskates Club Newsletter 49:21
In This Newsletter
1. Cath's Corner
2. From the Tip Store - Finger Food Christmas Lunch/Dinner; Treasured Tablecloth a Reminder; Cute Christmas Placemats for 33 Cents
3. Tip of the Week - Lamb Meat Inexpensively, or Modern Ways with Offal!
4. Share Your Tips
5. On the Menu - Sweet Lamb Curry
6. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - Don't Stress About Christmas Dinner
7. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
8. The Cheapskates Club Show
9. The Weekly MOO Challenge - MOO Chocolate Syrup
10. 2021 Saving Revolution - Lesson 50 Financial Tasks for December
11. Ask A Question - Have a question? Ask it here
12. Join the Cheapskates Club
13. Frequently Asked Questions
14. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
A little of this, a bit of that. That's been our week. Some sunshine, some rain (just enough to keep the garden going). A little peace, a little drama. A little baking, a little shopping. Some present wrapping. A couple of trips to the post office. Some busy days, some not so busy, giving us time to regroup. Some work, some fun.
Yes, a little of this and a bit of that, for a well-rounded, pretty normal week. Such a good thing!
How has your week been? I hope it's been a little of this, a bit of that, and a pretty normal week too.
Happy Cheapskating,
Cath
PS: Registration has opened for the 2022 Saving Revolution!
Find out more here!
2. From The Tip Store
Finger Food Christmas Lunch/Dinner
I know what its like to be able to have a lovely Christmas dinner with the family while on a tight budget. What we do now is not have a proper sit down lunch/dinner instead we all pitch in with some item of food. We now have pick food since many have a proper breakfast, ours is usually ham, eggs, tomato & onion gravy served on toast. eg. someone will make a Cob Loaf Dip, this cob loaf can be bought for 90c at Woolies when near closing time, Cheerios, homemade pinwheel sandwiches, fruit, etc. No one worries about doing this as we all have problems with money through Christmas. We all have a great time, kids and all as no one feels as they should eat what is in front of them, so they are all relaxed and happy. We do this type of thing even during the year for BBQ's, Birthdays, etc. Hope you all have a great and happy Christmas and stress free.
Contributed by Kerry
Treasured Tablecloth a Reminder
Our family has a white tablecloth that my grandmother made from a single bed sheet. It has red and green ribbon sewn into a interweaving check design. Every year everyone that shares Christmas dinner with us signs the tablecloth in permanent marker and the year is added to that square. This is then put away and stored until the following year and it is signed again. This tablecloth has become a very much treasured memento to our family as an instant reminder of the love that has been shared with our loved ones and friends as the years go by.
Contributed by Keith
Cute Christmas Placemats for 33 Cents
Last Christmas I wanted my dining table to be extra special and festive. I have always loved the Christmas placemats you see in the shops and magazines but can't justify the price of them when we will only use them one day in the year. My placemats are looking a bit old and scratched, which is fine for your everyday use, but not special occasions.
So, I had this bright idea Christmas morning as I was thinking of how to decorate the table. Why not wrap them in Christmas wrapping paper? I got going and had all six placemats wrapped in a matter of minutes and they looked fantastic, even my daughter said, "WOW MUM! You've really gone all out this year. You will have to do this again next year, it's so Christmassy, I love it."
I even looked up quickly on the net on how to make Christmas shaped serviettes. I then realised I didn't have any serviettes in my house, so I got a piece of paper towel from the kitchen and folded it five times in the middle to make a bow shape and got gold ribbon and placed it around the middle to hold it in place. It went beautifully with the Christmas placemats.
The dining table looked magical now and I did it in no time at all. I estimate I have saved at least $30 plus on the placemats and serviettes and it only cost me 33 cents for the wrapping paper (I got 3 x rolls for 99 cents and only used one roll) and I already had the kitchen paper towel and the gold ribbon.
Contributed by Kate
Add a Tip
3. This Week's Winning Tip
This week's winning tip is from Vanessa Reynolds. Vanessa has won a one year Platinum Cheapskates Club membership for submitting her winning tip.
It's not for everyone, but offal was once a common inclusion in the weekly meal rotation, and not just for the poor!
Lamb Meat Inexpensively, or Modern Ways with Offal!
With making everything quicker to cook these days, offal meats are rarely given in recipes and food ideas. I have been using my slow cooker to cook offal ahead of time, to cook quick and easy meals later. You can buy lean lamb meat for about $5 a kilo to use for moussaka, and casseroles – as lamb hearts! Just like most meat, the heart is a muscle. It is a bit denser than leg muscle, but it tastes the same. I buy lamb hearts at 10 for $8 at the regular market butcher (not as pet food). I put them in my slow cooker with some water, and cook on low overnight. The raw weight is about 2kg! I used to prepare them a bit, but no more – straight into the pot. When cooked, the fat and tubes fall off easily. I freeze some whole for later. The liquid is well-flavoured stock too. Eating offal, sometimes called nose-to-tail eating, saves money and is also respectful of the animals, which are raised for us to eat.
Congratulations Vanessa, I hope you enjoy your Cheapskates Club membership.
The Cheapskate's Club website is thousands of pages of money saving hints, tips and ideas. There are over 12,000 tips to save you money, time and energy; 1,600 budget and family friendly recipes, hundreds of printable tip sheets and ebooks.
Let's get together and make the Cheapskates Club Australia's largest online hint, tip and idea library. Share your favourite money saving, time saving or energy saving hint and be in the running to win a one-year membership to The Cheapskate Club.
4. Share Your Tips
Share your favourite hint or tip that saves money, time and energy and be in the running to win a one-year subscription to The Cheapskate Journal.
Remember, you have to be in it to win it!
Share Your Tip
5. On The Menu
Sweet Lamb Curry
This is a family recipe that uses leftover roast lamb, but if you don't have leftover roast lamb, leftover lamb chops (BBQ chops are great for this) are a good substitute.
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 brown onion, finely chopped
2 to 3 tablespoons mild curry powder
500g cooked lamb, diced
1/2 cup fruit chutney
1 Granny Smith apple, peeled, cored, finely chopped
1/2 cup sultanas
1/2 cup chicken stock or water
Plain yoghurt, to serve
Method:
Heat oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium heat. Add onion. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes or until tender. Increase heat to high. Add curry powder and lamb. Cook, stirring with a wooden spoon, for 5 to 6 minutes or until browned. Stir in chutney, apple, sultanas and stock or water. Bring to the boil. Reduce heat to medium-low. Cook for 15 to 20 minutes or until mixture thickens. Serve over steamed rice with a dollop of yoghurt on top.
Next week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Lamb
Monday: Sausages & salad
Tuesday: Spag Bol
Wednesday: Sweet Lamb Curry, rice
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Quiche & salad
Saturday: Tacos
There are over 1,800 budget and family friendly recipes in the Cheapskates Club Recipe File, all contributed by your fellow Cheapskates, so you know they're good.
Add A Recipe
Recipe File Index
6. The $300 A Month Food Challenge
Don't Stress About Christmas Dinner
It's just one meal, on one day of the year!
And yes, we would like it to be a bit special and a little more extravagant and luxurious, but if those things are going to plunge you into debt you need to rethink your menu!
Don't get me wrong, I love Christmas and I love Christmas Day and having the whole family together, and I love Christmas dinner. I just don't think Christmas has to be hideously expensive and that includes Christmas Dinner.
If Christmas dinner is already stressing you out, remember it's just one meal, on one day of the year. And plan accordingly.
Yes, you want it to be nice.
You want it to be special.
But this one meal, on this one day of the year, shouldn't put you into a nervous collapse. And it shouldn't break your grocery budget either.
Think about where you're going to be eating that meal. Will you be at home? Will you be at another home? Will you be travelling or camping or going for a picnic at the beach?
Then think about who'll be eating that meal. Just your immediate family? Extended family and friends? Older folk or lots of children and babies?
Next, what would you like to have for Christmas dinner? Turkey and roast veggies may be traditional, but you can make your own tradition and have something else. We always have a roast for Christmas dinner, but we don't like turkey, so it's chicken, potatoes, sweet potato, onion, cauliflower in cheese sauce, beans and peas. And gravy (you've gotta have lots of gravy). For dessert we have Christmas pudding, custard, ice-cream and pavlova.
Think about these things, because they are the things that will decide your Christmas dinner for you and your budget.
The $300 a Month Food Challenge Forum
The Post that Started it All
7. Cheapskates Buzz
From The Article Archive
3 Steps to an Impressive Christmas Dinner Even on a Cheapskates Budget
10 Fun and Frugal Christmas Decorating Ideas
A Christmas Ready Fridge
This Week's Hot Forum Topics
Adding to my stockpile - Canned Meatballs
Need a little inspiration to grow food?
Christmas 2021
8. The Cheapskates Club Show
Join us live on YouTube every Tuesday and see how we are living debt free, cashed up and laughing - and find out how you can too!
Show Schedule
Tuesday: Around the Kitchen Table - join Cath and Hannah for a cuppa and a chat around the kitchen table as they talk about living the Cheapskates way.
Latest Shows
1. Cath's Corner
2. From the Tip Store - Finger Food Christmas Lunch/Dinner; Treasured Tablecloth a Reminder; Cute Christmas Placemats for 33 Cents
3. Tip of the Week - Lamb Meat Inexpensively, or Modern Ways with Offal!
4. Share Your Tips
5. On the Menu - Sweet Lamb Curry
6. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - Don't Stress About Christmas Dinner
7. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
8. The Cheapskates Club Show
9. The Weekly MOO Challenge - MOO Chocolate Syrup
10. 2021 Saving Revolution - Lesson 50 Financial Tasks for December
11. Ask A Question - Have a question? Ask it here
12. Join the Cheapskates Club
13. Frequently Asked Questions
14. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
A little of this, a bit of that. That's been our week. Some sunshine, some rain (just enough to keep the garden going). A little peace, a little drama. A little baking, a little shopping. Some present wrapping. A couple of trips to the post office. Some busy days, some not so busy, giving us time to regroup. Some work, some fun.
Yes, a little of this and a bit of that, for a well-rounded, pretty normal week. Such a good thing!
How has your week been? I hope it's been a little of this, a bit of that, and a pretty normal week too.
Happy Cheapskating,
Cath
PS: Registration has opened for the 2022 Saving Revolution!
Find out more here!
2. From The Tip Store
Finger Food Christmas Lunch/Dinner
I know what its like to be able to have a lovely Christmas dinner with the family while on a tight budget. What we do now is not have a proper sit down lunch/dinner instead we all pitch in with some item of food. We now have pick food since many have a proper breakfast, ours is usually ham, eggs, tomato & onion gravy served on toast. eg. someone will make a Cob Loaf Dip, this cob loaf can be bought for 90c at Woolies when near closing time, Cheerios, homemade pinwheel sandwiches, fruit, etc. No one worries about doing this as we all have problems with money through Christmas. We all have a great time, kids and all as no one feels as they should eat what is in front of them, so they are all relaxed and happy. We do this type of thing even during the year for BBQ's, Birthdays, etc. Hope you all have a great and happy Christmas and stress free.
Contributed by Kerry
Treasured Tablecloth a Reminder
Our family has a white tablecloth that my grandmother made from a single bed sheet. It has red and green ribbon sewn into a interweaving check design. Every year everyone that shares Christmas dinner with us signs the tablecloth in permanent marker and the year is added to that square. This is then put away and stored until the following year and it is signed again. This tablecloth has become a very much treasured memento to our family as an instant reminder of the love that has been shared with our loved ones and friends as the years go by.
Contributed by Keith
Cute Christmas Placemats for 33 Cents
Last Christmas I wanted my dining table to be extra special and festive. I have always loved the Christmas placemats you see in the shops and magazines but can't justify the price of them when we will only use them one day in the year. My placemats are looking a bit old and scratched, which is fine for your everyday use, but not special occasions.
So, I had this bright idea Christmas morning as I was thinking of how to decorate the table. Why not wrap them in Christmas wrapping paper? I got going and had all six placemats wrapped in a matter of minutes and they looked fantastic, even my daughter said, "WOW MUM! You've really gone all out this year. You will have to do this again next year, it's so Christmassy, I love it."
I even looked up quickly on the net on how to make Christmas shaped serviettes. I then realised I didn't have any serviettes in my house, so I got a piece of paper towel from the kitchen and folded it five times in the middle to make a bow shape and got gold ribbon and placed it around the middle to hold it in place. It went beautifully with the Christmas placemats.
The dining table looked magical now and I did it in no time at all. I estimate I have saved at least $30 plus on the placemats and serviettes and it only cost me 33 cents for the wrapping paper (I got 3 x rolls for 99 cents and only used one roll) and I already had the kitchen paper towel and the gold ribbon.
Contributed by Kate
Add a Tip
3. This Week's Winning Tip
This week's winning tip is from Vanessa Reynolds. Vanessa has won a one year Platinum Cheapskates Club membership for submitting her winning tip.
It's not for everyone, but offal was once a common inclusion in the weekly meal rotation, and not just for the poor!
Lamb Meat Inexpensively, or Modern Ways with Offal!
With making everything quicker to cook these days, offal meats are rarely given in recipes and food ideas. I have been using my slow cooker to cook offal ahead of time, to cook quick and easy meals later. You can buy lean lamb meat for about $5 a kilo to use for moussaka, and casseroles – as lamb hearts! Just like most meat, the heart is a muscle. It is a bit denser than leg muscle, but it tastes the same. I buy lamb hearts at 10 for $8 at the regular market butcher (not as pet food). I put them in my slow cooker with some water, and cook on low overnight. The raw weight is about 2kg! I used to prepare them a bit, but no more – straight into the pot. When cooked, the fat and tubes fall off easily. I freeze some whole for later. The liquid is well-flavoured stock too. Eating offal, sometimes called nose-to-tail eating, saves money and is also respectful of the animals, which are raised for us to eat.
Congratulations Vanessa, I hope you enjoy your Cheapskates Club membership.
The Cheapskate's Club website is thousands of pages of money saving hints, tips and ideas. There are over 12,000 tips to save you money, time and energy; 1,600 budget and family friendly recipes, hundreds of printable tip sheets and ebooks.
Let's get together and make the Cheapskates Club Australia's largest online hint, tip and idea library. Share your favourite money saving, time saving or energy saving hint and be in the running to win a one-year membership to The Cheapskate Club.
4. Share Your Tips
Share your favourite hint or tip that saves money, time and energy and be in the running to win a one-year subscription to The Cheapskate Journal.
Remember, you have to be in it to win it!
Share Your Tip
5. On The Menu
Sweet Lamb Curry
This is a family recipe that uses leftover roast lamb, but if you don't have leftover roast lamb, leftover lamb chops (BBQ chops are great for this) are a good substitute.
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 brown onion, finely chopped
2 to 3 tablespoons mild curry powder
500g cooked lamb, diced
1/2 cup fruit chutney
1 Granny Smith apple, peeled, cored, finely chopped
1/2 cup sultanas
1/2 cup chicken stock or water
Plain yoghurt, to serve
Method:
Heat oil in a large heavy-based saucepan over medium heat. Add onion. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes or until tender. Increase heat to high. Add curry powder and lamb. Cook, stirring with a wooden spoon, for 5 to 6 minutes or until browned. Stir in chutney, apple, sultanas and stock or water. Bring to the boil. Reduce heat to medium-low. Cook for 15 to 20 minutes or until mixture thickens. Serve over steamed rice with a dollop of yoghurt on top.
Next week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Lamb
Monday: Sausages & salad
Tuesday: Spag Bol
Wednesday: Sweet Lamb Curry, rice
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Quiche & salad
Saturday: Tacos
There are over 1,800 budget and family friendly recipes in the Cheapskates Club Recipe File, all contributed by your fellow Cheapskates, so you know they're good.
Add A Recipe
Recipe File Index
6. The $300 A Month Food Challenge
Don't Stress About Christmas Dinner
It's just one meal, on one day of the year!
And yes, we would like it to be a bit special and a little more extravagant and luxurious, but if those things are going to plunge you into debt you need to rethink your menu!
Don't get me wrong, I love Christmas and I love Christmas Day and having the whole family together, and I love Christmas dinner. I just don't think Christmas has to be hideously expensive and that includes Christmas Dinner.
If Christmas dinner is already stressing you out, remember it's just one meal, on one day of the year. And plan accordingly.
Yes, you want it to be nice.
You want it to be special.
But this one meal, on this one day of the year, shouldn't put you into a nervous collapse. And it shouldn't break your grocery budget either.
Think about where you're going to be eating that meal. Will you be at home? Will you be at another home? Will you be travelling or camping or going for a picnic at the beach?
Then think about who'll be eating that meal. Just your immediate family? Extended family and friends? Older folk or lots of children and babies?
Next, what would you like to have for Christmas dinner? Turkey and roast veggies may be traditional, but you can make your own tradition and have something else. We always have a roast for Christmas dinner, but we don't like turkey, so it's chicken, potatoes, sweet potato, onion, cauliflower in cheese sauce, beans and peas. And gravy (you've gotta have lots of gravy). For dessert we have Christmas pudding, custard, ice-cream and pavlova.
Think about these things, because they are the things that will decide your Christmas dinner for you and your budget.
The $300 a Month Food Challenge Forum
The Post that Started it All
7. Cheapskates Buzz
From The Article Archive
3 Steps to an Impressive Christmas Dinner Even on a Cheapskates Budget
10 Fun and Frugal Christmas Decorating Ideas
A Christmas Ready Fridge
This Week's Hot Forum Topics
Adding to my stockpile - Canned Meatballs
Need a little inspiration to grow food?
Christmas 2021
8. The Cheapskates Club Show
Join us live on YouTube every Tuesday and see how we are living debt free, cashed up and laughing - and find out how you can too!
Show Schedule
Tuesday: Around the Kitchen Table - join Cath and Hannah for a cuppa and a chat around the kitchen table as they talk about living the Cheapskates way.
Latest Shows
9. The Weekly MOO Challenge
MOO Chocolate Syrup
If you love chocolate milk or delicious, frothy mochachinos, you'll love this chocolate syrup. It blends into hot or cold milk without lumping and is the perfect syrup for MOO moccachinos - don't spend $11 on a bottle of mocha syrup from the coffee shop.
And it can be bottled up and given as a gift too - perfect for this time of year, when we all need gifts that won't cost a fortune or take hours to make or that use weird and expensive ingredients.
MOO Chocolate Syrup
Ingredients:
3 cups water
3 cups sugar
125g unsweetened chocolate (cooking chocolate - or see my note below)
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp vanilla
Method:
Combine the water and sugar in a medium saucepan. Stir over a medium heat until the sugar has dissolved and the mixture starts to bubble. It is important to make sure all the sugar has dissolved or you'll end up with a grainy, dull syrup. Remove from the heat and stir in the chocolate, salt and vanilla. The mixture will look lumpy and the chocolate will seem to hang in clumps. Don't panic! Get a stick blender or a strong whisk and blend until it is smooth and will coat the back of a spoon. Pour into hot, sterilised jars or bottles and seal. Makes 1 litre plus a little extra. Keep in the fridge and use within two weeks after opening.
I use milk chocolate to make this syrup, the original recipe I had used dark chocolate. It works either way. Of course the milk chocolate makes a lighter coloured syrup and therefore lighter milkshakes, but it tastes just as good.
Get in on the fun and discussions here.
10. 2021 Saving Revolution
Lesson 50: Financial Tasks for December
The year is drawing to a close, and so is your Saving Revolution (if you'd like to do it again, registration for the 2022 Saving Revolution is open https://www.cheapskatesclub.net/2022-saving-revolution.html).
Even though things are busy, especially after lockdown, keep your eye on the end goal. Don't give up now, you're so close to the end.
The challenge for Lesson 50 is timely: open your heart more than you open your purse. Think about it, and concentrate on doing rather than spending this week.
Your lesson will be in your inbox around 11am tomorrow morning.11. Ask A Question
We have lots of resources to help you as you live the Cheapskates way but if you didn't find the answer to your question in our extensive archives please just drop me a note with your question.
I read and answer all questions, either in an email to you, in my weekly newsletter, the monthly Journal or by creating blog posts and other resources to help you (and other Cheapskaters).
Ask Your Question
12. Join The Cheapskates Club
For just $25 a year, you can join the Cheapskates Club and get exclusive access to the Cheapskate Journal, the monthly e-journal that shows you how to cut the costs of everyday living and still have fun.
Joining the Cheapskates Club gives you 24/7 access to the Members Centre with 1000's of money saving tips and articles.
Click here to join the Cheapskates Club today!
13. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name at the top of the page to go straight to your profile page where you can update your details, change your password and find your subscription details.
Not a Cheapskates Club member? Then please use the Changing Details form found here to update your email address.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
Memberships are active for one year from the date of joining. You can also find your membership expiry date on your profile page.
When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name to go straight to your profile page where you can will find your join date and your expiry date.
What will you do with my email address?
We never rent, trade or sell our email list to anyone for any reason whatsoever. You'll never get an unsolicited email from a stranger as a result of joining this list.
How did I get on this list?
The only way you can get onto our newsletter mailing list is to subscribe yourself. You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member.
14. Contact Cheapskates
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
PO Box 5077 Studfield Vic 3152
Contact Cheapskates
MOO Chocolate Syrup
If you love chocolate milk or delicious, frothy mochachinos, you'll love this chocolate syrup. It blends into hot or cold milk without lumping and is the perfect syrup for MOO moccachinos - don't spend $11 on a bottle of mocha syrup from the coffee shop.
And it can be bottled up and given as a gift too - perfect for this time of year, when we all need gifts that won't cost a fortune or take hours to make or that use weird and expensive ingredients.
MOO Chocolate Syrup
Ingredients:
3 cups water
3 cups sugar
125g unsweetened chocolate (cooking chocolate - or see my note below)
1 tsp salt
1 tbsp vanilla
Method:
Combine the water and sugar in a medium saucepan. Stir over a medium heat until the sugar has dissolved and the mixture starts to bubble. It is important to make sure all the sugar has dissolved or you'll end up with a grainy, dull syrup. Remove from the heat and stir in the chocolate, salt and vanilla. The mixture will look lumpy and the chocolate will seem to hang in clumps. Don't panic! Get a stick blender or a strong whisk and blend until it is smooth and will coat the back of a spoon. Pour into hot, sterilised jars or bottles and seal. Makes 1 litre plus a little extra. Keep in the fridge and use within two weeks after opening.
I use milk chocolate to make this syrup, the original recipe I had used dark chocolate. It works either way. Of course the milk chocolate makes a lighter coloured syrup and therefore lighter milkshakes, but it tastes just as good.
Get in on the fun and discussions here.
10. 2021 Saving Revolution
Lesson 50: Financial Tasks for December
The year is drawing to a close, and so is your Saving Revolution (if you'd like to do it again, registration for the 2022 Saving Revolution is open https://www.cheapskatesclub.net/2022-saving-revolution.html).
Even though things are busy, especially after lockdown, keep your eye on the end goal. Don't give up now, you're so close to the end.
The challenge for Lesson 50 is timely: open your heart more than you open your purse. Think about it, and concentrate on doing rather than spending this week.
Your lesson will be in your inbox around 11am tomorrow morning.11. Ask A Question
We have lots of resources to help you as you live the Cheapskates way but if you didn't find the answer to your question in our extensive archives please just drop me a note with your question.
I read and answer all questions, either in an email to you, in my weekly newsletter, the monthly Journal or by creating blog posts and other resources to help you (and other Cheapskaters).
Ask Your Question
12. Join The Cheapskates Club
For just $25 a year, you can join the Cheapskates Club and get exclusive access to the Cheapskate Journal, the monthly e-journal that shows you how to cut the costs of everyday living and still have fun.
Joining the Cheapskates Club gives you 24/7 access to the Members Centre with 1000's of money saving tips and articles.
Click here to join the Cheapskates Club today!
13. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name at the top of the page to go straight to your profile page where you can update your details, change your password and find your subscription details.
Not a Cheapskates Club member? Then please use the Changing Details form found here to update your email address.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
Memberships are active for one year from the date of joining. You can also find your membership expiry date on your profile page.
When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name to go straight to your profile page where you can will find your join date and your expiry date.
What will you do with my email address?
We never rent, trade or sell our email list to anyone for any reason whatsoever. You'll never get an unsolicited email from a stranger as a result of joining this list.
How did I get on this list?
The only way you can get onto our newsletter mailing list is to subscribe yourself. You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member.
14. Contact Cheapskates
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
PO Box 5077 Studfield Vic 3152
Contact Cheapskates