grocery choices in a price-inflated world

For the first time, this week, I made active changes in what I was buying at the store as a concession to inflation. I had been conserving and trimming luxuries for a while, but yesterday marked the first time I downgraded in the selections I was making. It’s not that we haven’t been making changes for a while; the biggest shift we have made in our household since I (voluntarily) stopped teaching has been in the way we eat. We no longer eat out, for primarily budget reasons, and I cook almost everything we eat at home, primarily for health reasons. For the first year of our plan, my partner still frequently bought lunch or coffee at work and we would eat out with friends. We joined a CSA in order to receive organic produce on a weekly basis, nearly all year round. As our savings dwindled and inflation started climbing we’ve trimmed luxuries, like cookies and soda and juice (not that we purchased these frequently, but we now purchase them only in times of desperate need). When we learned my partner’s cholesterol levels were dangerously imbalanced, we cut out the purchased lunches and I began cooking nearly everything we put into our mouthes in an effort to change the cholesterol profile through diet (which we did).

Through all of this, though, I have remained committed to certain principles of food purchasing and consumption. I don’t buy industrial meat, and with the higher cost of free range and pastured or organic meat we hardly ever eat it. From the local organic market, we buy basics — oils, flour, légumes in bulk, peanut butter, milk, butter — and fair trade items when they’re available — coffee, sugar, and spices. Several of the companies we support are cooperative businesses, namely Organic Valley, King Arthur and Frontier. While I’d likely be choosing their products anyway, it’s important to me that our household dollars are going to support ethical labor practices and helping to keep workers and farmers in control of their own livelihoods (yes, all my bank accounts are with credit unions, too).

With the close attention I’ve been paying to cost, I’ve noticed that the local market is consistently less expensive than Whole Foods for the items I buy regularly; not that Whole Foods is inexpensive, it’s just usually the only option for processed organic food. For our household cleaning supplies, we use almost exclusively Seventh Generation products: in addition to being free of fragrances and dyes, they are vegetable-oil based and use a large amount of post-consumer recycled paper and plastic. I could draw you a map of which stores carry them at the lowest prices: toilet paper at the Giant (by about $3 per package, surprisingly); dishwasher detergent at Whole Foods (only because they are the only store to carry the larger size since Target stopped stocking the products); Whole Foods again for paper napkins (because the organic market stopped carrying the brown option in larger packages); dish soap, trash bags, paper towels, laundry detergent and bathroom cleaners, all at the local organic market. I won’t bore you with the list of what we use for shampoos and soaps: suffice it to say that they all cost the least at the local organic market, too. When I buy produce beyond what comes with our farm subscription, I get it from the weekly farmers’ markets (fruit, mostly) or the organic market (onions, mostly).

The non-organic things that I buy at either the Giant or the new competitor are all related to my partner’s new cholesterol-busting diet: Cheerios (it really does help lower cholesterol, we’ve found), pretzels (the no-fat alternative to corn chips), bread (Roman Meal Double Fiber has the best fiber-to-sugar ratio of sliced wheat bread), and egg substitute. This week, for the first time, I chose the store brand egg substitute over Egg Beaters: it was a dollar less expensive per container. It’s not like the Egg Beaters chickens are any less crowded and warped than the store brand, right? Industrial egg products are industrial egg products. I also bought, for the first time in years, regular garlic at the Giant rather than organic garlic at the market. It’s garlic, right? Also, it was less than half as much.

Neither of these are major substitutions, but the fact of the choice I was making gave me pause. While I admire people who stretch their family budgets by buying in bulk or clipping coupons from the Sunday circular or stocking up on food close to its expiration date, that isn’t me. I keep — and use! — store coupons for the things we buy regularly, but I’m not going to switch to mac and cheese dinners (or ramen noodles) just because they’re 10 for a buck this week (they’re not, as far as I know, by the way: no need to rush to the store). I would prefer to winnow down to an ‘all lentils and brown rice all the time’ diet rather than buy the processed crap that’s the cheapest.

Over the past two years I’ve already learned that I’m willing to do a lot more cooking, and the attendant lot more dish washing, than I previously realized. I’ve always liked to cook, but never before have I had to make such a stark choice to commit to more labor in the kitchen to gain the freedom from laboring for someone else, as well as the resources to spend on the products I value. Garlic at $6 per pound, I learned this week, is apparently not one of them. I’m not ready to say that I’d get a job in order to keep buying fair trade organic sugar, but I’m also not sure that I wouldn’t.

grocery choices in a price-inflated world

garden log : mating dragonflies


Dragonflies mating on our porch post.

I went outside this afternoon to enjoy the unseasonably warm day, and after my mole eyes adjusted to the sun, I noticed a pair of dragonflies mating on our porch. These dragonflies have been around the yard for a while now, and I also see them in the town park. Which is great, because it means our stream is both clean and wet enough to support dragonflies (the overgrowth along the edges is apparently also ideal for them to do their hanging thing when they’re young).

Despite having purchased a dragonfly identification book, I have not been able to figure out what kind they are. For example: is that a clubtail? This is the first time I’ve ever tried to identify a dragonfly beyond those really obvious white-winged blobby ones that I see at the pond, and I’m a bit overwhelmed by the choices. So, please feel free to identify them for me! I’m in Maryland, they’re mating in October, and the water habitat nearby is a creek bed that is mostly fed by storm water. Go to town!


Still mating.


More mating.


And still more mating.

garden log : mating dragonflies

squash baked with apples and walnuts


The whole kit and kaboodle, pre-baking.

I think I’ve mentioned that I’m dealing with a bit of a squash situation? Right. Last week’s efforts involved an upgrade of squash-baked-with-garlic that was inspired by a recipe at Simply Recipes (a site I use as a starting point for both new ingredients and classics that I just never tried to make before). I was planning to make the recipe as written, with adjustments to the butter and sugar, but because we live Down South, cranberries aren’t available in the grocery stores yet, even though it’s been autumn for three weeks. (Maybe this is unfair and you don’t have fresh or frozen cranberries available Up North yet, either?)

My version: toss together peeled and chunked squash (I used courge longue de Nice), peeled and chopped apples (I used Stayman, because I wanted them to keep their shape), minced garlic (I used about 4 or 5 or 6 cloves), whole walnuts, olive oil, and salt and pepper (I could have used more salt), and then bake at 375F for about an hour (until the squash gets soft). It was, I have to say, pretty good.

squash baked with apples and walnuts

presidential debate two, live!

Obama’s shot over the stern: fire those execs!

John’s plan: I would completely cripple the government’s ability to do anything by not collecting any taxes!

No, actually, I don’t think there are a lot of Americans qualified to be the Secretary of the Treasury. Really, I don’t. And that’s okay, let’s just be honest about specialized skill sets and all.

John: please tell me you aren’t reminding us that you suspended your campaign like that was a good thing.

There can be only one (letter).

This is really not all that interesting without crowd reactions.

Does John really believe this ‘I’ve been a reformer’ nonsense or is he just a totally craven power-hungry loon? Also, how does ‘taking on the leaders of your party’ become a metric for being a good lawmaker? If the leaders of your party are not insane and promote a set of ideas and proposals that are good for the general public, why do you need to take them on? Yeesh.

My friends! I was wrong, I thought they’d focus-grouped that phrase out of his lexicon.

Since when have the Republicans’ good friends the Saudis been ‘terrorist organizations’? Bizarre.

And I get to use my graph again:

Ye olde Visual Aid.

Dude, WTF? ‘Eliminate agencies,’ that’s your sacrificing? We’ll just have to git along without that thar Department of Education, that’s what! Or maybe Health and Human Services? How about the FDA? I notice that The War Of A Hundred Years is not on that elimination list.

That’s right, Person With Health Insurance, I’m not going to tell you that you have to wait: you’re going to have to start paying taxes on that benefit now!

Mr. Obama: I refer you to my Visual Aid. But, you know, thanks for pointing out that it’s conceivable we could conserve energy in our own homes. Also, I do like your service corps idea, probably because it was my idea years ago (not that you took it, I’m just saying that a civil service of infrastructure laborers has long been a pet fantasy of mine, except that mine includes mandatory not voluntary service).

Herbert Hoover? That’s all you got? Oh no, you also have small business scare tactics. (My friends! Point 2!) Oh and: I am not in favor of tax cuts for the wealthy, I am in favor of permanently extending the tax cuts for the wealthy that I have already voted for in the past. Wha?

I am enjoying this little ‘words mean things’ and ‘parts go into a whole’ breakdown by Obama on the tax plan debate.

Wow, am I the only one who finds his ‘look, my friends’ and ‘it’s not hard to fix social security’ schtick annoying and condescending? Also, whoa with the ‘great Ronald Reagan!’ nonsense. (My friends!)

You must be desperate indeed to be name dropping the Lieb into this mess. Let’s go nuclear! Also, you know, safety — something like that *hand wave* Um, that was kind of crazy looking, John, rein it in!

Dude, nothing is sponsored by ‘Bush and Cheney,’ they’re the Executive Branch. Also, please to be referring back to the Visual Aid above with regard to offshore drilling!

I love the ‘generally pretty supportive of Republicans’ about the US Chamber of Commerce: that may be the understatement of this Q&A session.

Note: efficient. Not effective. Not comprehensive. Not fair. That is the telling point. Also, there are lots of things we don’t go across state lines for in many places. Raw milk. Wine. Et cetera. And, I think we all know by now that the 5k is not for you, it’s for the health insurance companies.

No cheap shots at the Joe, John! It’s hardly in your best interest to start either a physical ability or a vanity mud-slinging fest.

Another relatively obscure legal question sees the light in these debates, that of the lax incorporation laws that lead to all the banks being headquartered in Delaware. Also, way to drop the deregulation hammer on the old dude, Barack!

‘The greatest force for good in the world’? Arrogant much? (My friend.)

The whole bit about the US spending billions per month in Iraq while ‘the Iraqis’ have 79 billion in reserve must be playing well with the audience insta-dials, because he keeps using it.

Steady hand is what you’re looking for, and it’s hard to argue a policy that’s based on assessing the ability to ‘beneficially affect the situation’ right after you’ve talked about not giving up on a war without end unless you can WIN.

First Reagan is your hero, then Teddy Roosevelt? Who’s next, Rambo?

Ok, there is just too much one thing right after another here with the foreign policy stuff, I am falling off my chair with the laughing which makes typing hard. ‘The same strategy except different but basically the same which was successful which was getting the people on our side.’ Um, the Iraqi people are on the side of the occupation now? When were we greeted as liberators that I somehow missed?

‘I know how to get him!’ Well, for the love of the baby Jesus, John, tell someone else so that he can be gotten!

‘Hey, veteran friend, I got a good one for ya: let’s start another war! Ha ha ha ha ha!’ I swear, this man sounds certifiable when he talks about this stuff. When did that happen? I don’t remember him sounding this weird in the past.

I admit that I was live-chatting with an old college buddy just now, but it seemed like McCain did not make a single lick of sense in that whole rambling bit there about Russia and no new cold wars and moral support and victory and honor. What did I miss? (That Putin name drop was for you, btw, Ms. Wolf-Shooter!)

Obviously, after Iraq, the US will wait for no nation when it comes to military aggression.’ Oh good lord are we back on the negotiating-without-precondition crap again? No one likes that approach, John, pay attention when your staff brief you on the insta-dial readings. Oh, ugh, again with the second Holocaust schtick. A war does not become a Holocaust just because the people in the country at war are Jews (or any other ethnicity). Unless we are arguing that invasions and wars equal genocides, in which case we’re perpetrating an enormous one in Iraq. Crazy illogic logic, you make my brain hurt. Feh.

Nice shout out to the wife there.

Nice dodge and redirect of the question by both candidates, and nice attempt to horn in on the single-mom sympathy train there, John. (But good job getting the ‘steady hand on the tiller’ corrected there.)

And there you have it, folks, live on Tuesday night. Good night, and good luck.

presidential debate two, live!

vice presidential debate, live!

Nicetameetcha! Here we go.

Stop voting with your party! Support a platform that goes against your principles and the people that you represent!

Did she just say ‘Joe Six-Pack’? And the ubiquitous ‘band together,’ gah, she sounds like one of my students. [Not that there’s anything wrong with them, they’re just, you know, in college. Not governors.]

‘Why yes, I would like to change the subject…’ *nose wrinkle*

‘No, actually, I would not like to stick to the subject!’ Drop the hammer, Joe!

‘Where we come from, where Todd and I have been, patriotic is wanting to form your own country: Alaska!

I like the ‘take that, you!’ glare Joe handed over right there.

‘I had to tell those energy companies, go ahead! Sell our natural resources to Japan!’

Dude: you do understand the concepts of ‘running mate’ and a ‘party platform’ don’t you? Just because you promised nothing doesn’t mean that you’re not a Republican on the hook for McCain’s wack ideas.

Oh yay! I get to use my graph again!

Again with the Visual Aid.

‘We in Alaska feel pain more than anyone! All you East Coasters whose shorelines are rising, do you have, um, polar bears?’

‘OK, pay attention, now the cheer goes like this…’

Ironic that the Governor of the state most economically and environmentally impacted by the Exxon disaster is talking about the safety and environmental friendliness of offshore drilling. Yes, I know it was a tanker crash, but oil in the water from an accident is the link.

‘Nooooo, not if it means keeping church and state separate, no, I can’t say I’m for that, nope.’ So, traditional view of marriage. Golly. Hmm. Huh.

Zero-sum. That’s what the Republicans offer. Same old thinking, same old line drawing, same old whipping it out and measuring it as some kind of test of leadership.

Whoa, so Al Queda and Petraeus and Iraq and terrorism…ugh, oh nevermind.

The Castro Brothers! Cuba rocks the name drop tonight! (Sorry, Chavez, you’re just not scary enough for tonight’s debate.)

Again with the Spain slam! Nice one, Joe.

Joe: it’s boring when you talk all smart and knowledgeable like that.

We here in the USA are inherently more trustworthy with our nuclear weapons, being the only nation in history ever to use them not just in war but on civilian populations. It’s obvious, right?

Senator Lugar name drop FTW! I really need to email him a copy of the email he sent me in response to starting the war in Iraq, wherein he very seriously and thoughtfully and considerately impressed upon me that it was critical to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in order to keep the whole region safe. I’m sorry these goons in your party made an ass of you and lots of other well-meaning and sincere people, Mr. Lugar, I really am. I hope you’re as angry as I am about all this mess.

Whoa with the condescension there, lady! ‘It’s so obvious that I don’t have a flipping clue about anything except what they fed me while I was locked in my compound all month!’

Yowzah, we all broke for more alcohol at the same time. There’s only so much aw-shucksing — and omigawd ‘a team of mavericks!’ — that one can take sober.

So, I fear for the Library of Congress if we get a little more Main-Street-Wasilla up in here.

‘I’m sure that Main Street America understands that bridges, roads, schools, hospitals, farms and trains are free and cares more about their paycheck than silly things like infrastructure!’

Dude: the AFT would beg to differ about where and when schoolteachers should get their reward.

‘Silly goose! They told me at the compound last week that we have a thing called a constitution that defines the role of the vice-president and it involves the Senate!’ Aaand the audience revolts in laughter!

Nice one, Joe! Go Cheney yourself and your trashing of our country, Dick!

‘Don’t you tell me about hardship, chippie, I defined hardship when you were in grade school!’

He is no maverick! Go, Joe!

Joe’s closing line: I am a good man, I respect people, and I can learn when I’m called out.

Palin’s closing line: my actions speak for themselves and I support wack policies.

Oops that wasn’t the actual closing. Here they are, then.

Palin: Those mean journalists make me look dumb but even here without the filter I can accomplish it all by my big-girl self, and I’m so glad I got to reprise my AIP convention speech!

Joe: Republicans have f-ed us to hell and we are going to get that dealt with!

And now, back to Enchanted: who will she pick, Prince or McDreamy?

vice presidential debate, live!