Nigerians are not smiling at the moment, and it’s for good reason. Fuel scarcity, sudden subsidy removal, exchange rate palava and inflated foodstuff prices — we’re going through a lot.

But again, things aren’t that bad. You can still go to the foodstuff market with ₦1k. We can’t promise you’ll get the things you need, but you surely won’t return home empty-handed.

Locust beans

Source: FarmhouzNG

Did you know this is a great alternative to seasoning powder? Ask your granny. She’ll share the secret.

Limestone

Let’s Take Your Last ₦1k to a Nigerian Foodstuff Market

Source: Afrilege

Don’t you need to soften your ewedu leaves? It’s cheap, and remember the point is to not go home empty-handed.

Kpomo

Source: 9jafoodie

Forget turkey and beef, word on the street is kpomo is king. Your pot of soup might smell funky, but it’ll be loaded with “proteinous” pieces.

Salt

Let’s Take Your Last ₦1k to a Nigerian Foodstuff Market

Source: allrecipes

Salt is life, so it makes perfect sense that it’s cheap. 

Potato

Source: Mile12mart

Sweet potato is ridiculously cheap.

Curry and thyme

Let’s Take Your Last ₦1k to a Nigerian Foodstuff Market

Source: Jumia Nigeria

Bring the neighbours to the yard with your cooking. The food might be bleh, but the aroma will do what you need it to do.

Vegetable

Let’s Take Your Last ₦1k to a Nigerian Foodstuff Market

Source: Guardian 

Ewedu, ugwu, waterleaf. Maybe this is the motivation you need to start your home garden.

Garri

Source: HTC Plus

Garri stays the most loyal grain in Nigeria — a paint bucket is still about ₦1k. We should give this king his flowers.

Spatula (AKA omorogun)

Source: Mychopchop

At this point, ₦1k is showing off because how dare you afford a kitchen utensil.

Polybag

Let’s Take Your Last ₦1k to a Nigerian Foodstuff Market

Source: Nairaland

Because how else will you carry your groceries home?

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