I never realized till now…. From another source…

So, I spoke to people getting food at a food bank and here are some things I learned from those in need:
1. Everyone donates Kraft Mac and Cheese in the box. They can rarely use it because it needs milk and butter which is hard to get from regular food banks.
2. Boxed milk is a treasure, as kids need it for cereal which they also get a lot of.
3. Everyone donates pasta sauce and spaghetti noodles.
4. They cannot eat all the awesome canned veggies and soup unless you put a can opener in too or buy pop tops.
5. Oil is a luxury but needed for Rice a-Roni which they also get a lot of.
6. Spices or salt and pepper would be a real Christmas gift.
7. Tea bags and coffee make them feel like you care.
8. Sugar and flour are treats.
9. They fawn over fresh produce donated by farmers and grocery stores.
10. Seeds are cool in Spring and Summer because growing can be easy for some.
11. They rarely get fresh meat.
12. Tuna and crackers make a good lunch.
13. Hamburger Helper goes nowhere without ground beef.
14. They get lots of peanut butter and jelly but usually not sandwich bread.
15. Butter or margarine is nice too.
16. Eggs are a real commodity.
17. Cake mix and frosting makes it possible to make a child’s birthday cake.
18. Dishwashing detergent is very expensive and is always appreciated.
19. Feminine hygiene products are a luxury and women will cry over that.
20. Everyone loves Stove Top Stuffing.

In all the years I have donated food at the Holidays, I bought what I thought they wanted, but have never asked. I am glad I did. If you are helping a Family this Christmas, maybe this can help you tailor it more. It does for me!

@rjay Cash donations allow food banks to purchase perishables like milk, meat and fresh vegetables, often at wholesale prices. So I quit giving my money to grocery chains, and started giving my money directly to the local food cupboard. I even get an income tax receipt. It's a win all around.

@Artsandsocks @rjay YES THIS EXACTLY THIS!

Food banks can often get *much* better prices at stores than you can, so the cash works *even better*.

@kithrup @Artsandsocks @rjay Hugely important. I have helped to run food banks and I recommend against donating fresh produce or via the collection bins at grocery stores. Cash donations remain the best.

Rarely donated and crazy-useful goods include toiletries (soap, shampoo/conditioner, toothpaste and brushes) toilet paper and OMG disposable diapers.

Also long lasting condiments like mustard/mayo/ketchup.

@Caution @kithrup @Artsandsocks @rjay donation bins at grocery stores feel like the world's biggest scam (waiting to happen / already happened).

Putting in something just purchased with fill retail markup. Why.

They only make sense if you have a good fresh packaged items that you can no longer make use of (e.g. single serve packages of baby formula your kid ages out of)....

@krupo @kithrup @Artsandsocks @rjay And again, still makes more sense to donate to your local food bank directly, as most grocery chains simply go with whoever the largest foodbank is in terms of where they direct their donations.
@Caution I've also bought and donated grocery store gift cards (specified by the charitable organization) to enable people to buy what they want.
@krupo @Caution @kithrup @Artsandsocks @rjay I always get the urge to just start moving stock from the shelves to the donation bin directly. If it doesn't leave the store I'm not stealing it.