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29 January 2008

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Wendy

An enjoyable read - Thanks for the post.

Esther

Thanks ! I'm going to the supermarket tomorrow(once every 2 weeks)...sighing and being angry and desperate in front of all those overcrowded shelves...I'll try for sure to buy "simple" things...but not so easy !
I also live in a area covered with snow(Quebec province,Canada) and gardening is far away in time and I won't move to California !

Esther

Thanks ! I'm going to the supermarket tomorrow(once every 2 weeks)...sighing and being angry and desperate in front of all those overcrowded shelves...I'll try for sure to buy "simple" things...but not so easy !
I also live in a area covered with snow(Quebec province,Canada) and gardening is far away in time and I won't move to California !

Carrie

It's really difficult in colder climates to feel good about "whole foods" in the winter time. I've avoided bagged salads since reading Pollan's book, but I used to live off them.

I've tried many winter vegetables (potatoes, squash and such) and enjoy citrus more in the winter.
It gets me down.

But I think there's a way to not buy into the bullshit marketing in any event. Support your local bakery, instead of buying Wonder bread, for example.

Welcome to my blog and thanks for your comments!

michelle

Yeah, what IS up with plain yogurt being the most expensive?! I get so pissed off about that, especially since I eat a lot of it. It might be time for me to dust off my neglected yogurt maker.

Carrie

To further annoy the yogurt-lover is the fact that yogurt-makers can't seem to find recyclable yogurt packaging!

It makes me crazy! I can only use so many yogurt containers for tupperware before my cupboards overflow.

I'm also contemplating purchasing a yogurt maker. Fuck 'em!

Michael

Just so you know, as of today your blog is the fourth result on Google if one searches for "Cargill sucks" -- and, if quotation marks are used, first! Congratulations :)

And nice entry...

Carrie

I would have never known that, so thanks for the tip!

I'm pleased to know that you are searching out the phrase "Cargill Sucks" - gives me hope - and would love to know why...


Katie

I'm surprised that, as someone so intimate with thrift stores, your time shopping at Cub and Rainbow sounds even harder than mine.

But maybe that's because I have co-ops within a mile or three if there's anything I can't find on a Cub/Rainbow trip.

Still, I hope I can offer a helpful suggestion--burnt out as you are on thrift stores, go into the grocery store in the same sort of nonchalant way many people who have the money to shop somewhere besides a thrift store "go thrift storing."

Only, yeah, impulse shopping based on what you see is a bad idea in a Rainbow...so...hmmmm...

Well, take a grocery list, but let yourself stray from it along ethical lines.

But not along, "Yum! That looks delicious!" lines.

Doing this, I perused the fish section and discovered that my Rainbow often has frozen walleye in a bag. And I have yet to hear of unsustainable walleye fishing. (Apparently, the reason it's so expensive per pound is that you can't net for it--you have to send people out with fishing lines.) So I bought it, happy to save money over buying it frozen at a co-op or buying it fresh at the fish counter at Rainbow!


Let's see...chocolate. I buy my chocolate, when I do get it (though I'm trying to cut back) from Rainbow, because for some random reason, they're carrying almost-as-cheap-as-Hershey's dark & milk baking chocolate from this Ghanan small company. Though the processing of the cocoa beans doesn't happen in Ghana, apparently the business is set up to let the Ghanan farmers still reap benefits from the sales of the processed product. (I've heard Ghanans make fun of the chocolate industry for not having any production in Ghana, meaning all they get to make $ off of is the raw ingredient.) What else...

...
Oh! Italian-style fancy cheeses, as needed for recipes.

Bel Gioso: not carried by co-ops. Carried by Rainbow & Cub. The ingredient list is pure, I don't think they're a huge huge huge company, and they're cheap as heck compared to any co-op brand of ricotta-in-a-tub.

(But there are certain cheeses for which I still go to the cheapest co-ops I can find--namely, cream cheese. Organic Valley was a rip-off at $4 per 1/2lb, when I thought I could get Roundy's on sale for 90 cents. The Wisconsin-made stuff that's cut from bulk and wrapped in saran wrap at some of the co-ops, well, when not at an overpriced co-op, sells for more like $1.99 per 1/2 lb, which is a decent compromise for me. Especially since I started looking at Roundy's prices again and saw that they've shot up to more like $1.60 on sale!)

Oh, and produce. Rainbow carries Minnesota apples longer than any co-op or farmer's market, and after co-op potatoes from MN/WI had turned green, I saw Rainbow bringing in Russets from WI.

Anyway, I've found these sales by taking a shopping list but being willing to abandon items on it or pick up extras, as I said, with a sort of, "That's neat--lemme buy that, too, and make a note of it" thrift storing mentality. But again, guided by ethics--no straying from the shopping list for flavor, or you get sucked into their subconscious display marketing.

Kristin

I just read Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver. I've long been interested in the idea of eating locally but I live in a cold climate like you so I couldn't figure out how the heck to figure it out. Kingsolver explains how her family preserves food during the summer harvest and uses that during winter. Her website www.animalvegetablemiracle.com gives links that show you how to link up with local farmers. Based on her ideas I'm going to learn to can this summer and I've got a grassfed lamb in the freezer.

Carrie

I keep meaning to join the co-op. I really do! It would help me with the fact that I'm highly suspicious of everything my regular grocery stores offer.

I loved Animal Vegetable Miracle. A wonderful, absorbing book which inspired me to try to make my own goat milk cheese and let me know that I'm not alone in my gardening/canning/thrifty endeavors.

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