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May 2008

27 May 2008

Secondhand Sighs: Sales of Yesteryear

Wine thermometer

Man, I pine for those days when I had but my hot-off-the-press, highly worthless college diploma and just a few boxes of books and dishes to my name!  Whee!  I was 21, with a pickup truck that I could fill up with my worldly possessions and jet about the world, looking for cheap rents and even cheaper thrills.

I recall with fondness my first post-college apartment situation.   My friend Heather and I both had crappy jobs - she managed an unstable group home of raucous, mentally challenged young men, while I passed deathless, substance-free hours in a cube farm for a Large Boring Financial Company - and our weekends were given to long drawn-out breakfasts full of cigarettes and newspapers and trawling for the unusual, whether we found it in bars, restaurants, in the sack with various No Good Men, or, our most reliable outlet, thrift stores.

While we had received some mercy donations from family and friends - a couch, a bed, a chipped formica table in that awful faux bois that seems to be coming back - much time was spent haunting the Salvation Army, hunting for various random items that, we, New Women in the World, did not currently own.

Cookie sheets.  Book shelves.  Objets d' art.  Ceramic fruit bowls.  Ice cream spades.

I remember most especially one of those warm June days where we garage saled aimlessly and stumbled upon one of those sales you think so fondly of later, in frosty, backlit tones and pricing that tends to decrease with each recall.

It was held in the alley, using the garage and the backyard of an older home in Minneapolis.  There was the usual household stuff, with not a whiff of children's junk or plastic.  The couple running it were older and greyer than Heather and I, but certainly not pitiable or depressing.  In fact, I remember thinking they were dashing and snappy, for people their age.  This probably had much to do with my own youth as well as the merchandise they sold.

It appeared this couple was divesting themselves of all their entertainment ware.  Underneath a pergola trailed with a flowering vine (okay, it might have been a carport, but my nostalgia makes everything seem like Tennesse Williams) I recall many types of corks and wine and bottle openers.  Several glass pickle and relish dishes, an array of specialty silverware like shrimp forks and sugar cube tongs, and all sorts of liquor and wine glassware.  Wine goblets, brandy snifters, champagne flutes.  Glasses for margaritas, martinis, high balls, aperitifs and shots.  Ashtrays, pipes, serving trays, crystal decanters.  These people had LIVED. Or at least accumulated like folks who had lived. 

Though I was just graduating from cans of Busch Light Draft, I decided to buy a copper band that looked like cuff bracelet for gauging directly the temperature of wine.  They apparently are still sold, but I haven't been able to find the particular one that I had, which was copper and had grape vines twining along the number scale. 

This never-used item accompanied me on several moves until I decided that it seemed highly unlikely that a) this item would continue to work or b) its reading would give me information I was educated enough to do anything about. 

Still, I remember this wine cuff, now long gone, in someone else's drawer, perhaps languishing on a thrift store shelf, reminding me, in a hazy soft focus, of how garage sales can be so romantic and full of promise. 

Get Yer Sale On: Rummage Sales in the Minneapolis/St. Paul Area

Rummage sale 013

The Minneapolis Star Tribune has a pdf link to many community and church rummage sales here.

I'm thinking of going to many of them this year, as it's hard to justify wasting time and gas navigating around to random sales. 

(Short Rambling AsideAny sale that's in my neighborhood, on local cross streets or accessible by bicycle?  Fair game, baby!  I'm just saying that plotting a course with the classified section is not my future, yanno?)

So any locals, if you go?  Keep your hands off any of the following:

Stainless steel pressure cookers (from modern era)

Blue / Green retro couches (not overstuffed icky kind)

Coconut or lava Hawaiiana tchotkes

French bread pans

Oaxacan tin work

23 May 2008

Local y Deliciosa: El Burrito Mercado

I am all about local food.  I love food and I love having power over big companies that are trying to get my food dollar.

That's why I was thrilled that my local Cub Foods has started carrying Authentic Chips and Salsa from the premiere Latino grocery store and restaurant, El Burrito Mercado. 

The chips are crunchy and thick, with just a hint of salt.  The ingredients involve the following:

Stone ground corn, white corn, corn oil, salt, trace of calcium hydroxide.

Wow.  A corn chip that's mostly corn.  Flabbergasting how something that simple is also highly delicious.

The mild salsa isn't that tomato-y mush that most Midwesterners seem to slobber for; it's a spicy blend of peppers and tomatillos - and yes, tomatoes - that has real punch.  Perfect for chips or dousing your hashbrowns and eggs.

Hooray for Cub Foods!  They are my favorite local food provider, with great emphasis on Minnesota Grown products.

For more information on what's good in Minnesota, check out the Minnesota Grown page from the Minnesota Department of Agriculture.

To find out about what's good locally where you live, go to Local Harvest.

The Church Rummage Sale Blues

Rummage sale 018 Figure 1:  Sign for another church rummage sale, not the one I discuss in this post.  No need to be snotty, I suppose.

Last year, I was singing the praises of the church rummage sale.  Sadly, this year's cherry-popper sale has me a bit bereft. 

It started when my neighbor John tipped me off to a rummage sale his church was holding. 

Sweet, I thought.  My daughter would be at preschool and the church was just a few blocks north of her school.  I envisioned spending my morning blissfully pawing through tons of under-priced merchandise, sans begging child, lavishly pausing to finger old baking tins or rifle through piles of folded linens.  The church was also selling plants, and though I hit the Friends School of Minnesota's Annual Plant Sale already, who can resist a cheap bedding plant?

So I'm all charged up about this sale.  Holding off on other purchases just in case there's a cheaper deal to be had.

I had such a great experience a few weeks back at a local rummage sale held by the boosters of a high school marching band so I was inflating this other church sale in my head.

(That sale had yielded coconut and seashell windchimes, Oaxacan tinwork Christmas decorations and a lovely set of rubbermaid teaspoons, among other things. Tingles!)

As I walked from the parking lot (great looking annuals!  but not at prices that mattered! and I hate annuals anyway!) into the church, I was greeted by a slough of elderly white guys, welcoming me and pointing out the way to the sale room.

I was also assaulted by the cloying, barf-tastic smell of Manwich.  A tagboard sign highlighted in shaking, Sharpie pen strokes, "Sloppie Joe and chips, 1.00."

Agh.  It was the kind of odor that makes pregnant women gasp and hork into their purses. 

The sale was held in the cafeteria, making it convenient for shoppers to buy their things and then sit down at one of the chipped formica banquet tables and tuck into a plate of fresh-from-the-slow-cooker Manwich, a clutch of greasy Old Dutch potato chips and a cup of industrial decaf.   Around the tables and the kitchen serving area, more clusters of old people, some in wheelchairs or pushing walkers with tennis ball pads, milling about fussing with serving trays and the tackle box full of money.

My neighbor was nowhere to be seen and though he's retired, compared to the crew manning this sale, he was fucking Jack LaLanne.

The sale was okay.  Lots of clothes, which are generally a waste of time for me to flip through (how many gold-button women's blazers does a body need?) and lots of dirty, scuffed up plastic kids' toys and a whole array of baby items (bottles, wipe warmers, pacifers - yuk). 

There were lots of plastic blinds and Christmas ornaments (blecch) and scurvy-looking bed sheets and one of those Ye Olde pressure cookers that used to kill people way back when.  Stuff that belongs in the trash, really.   

Rummage sale 003

I bought a cheesecake tin, a cake whip, a food mill and a linen dishtowel  for $1.70.  All things I needed and liked, but still.  The cashier was a friendly woman with an oxgen tank plugged into her nose, whom I was glad had a big button calculator at her disposal.

This spring in Minnesota has been highly disappointing already, in terms of weather.  Can't we get some good cheap stuff to offset the dreariness?

I'm trying to keep chipper, though the aroma of Manwich still clings to my noseholes.

LUSH

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