Re: Food excess in Britain
- From: MM <kylix_is@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 08 Jul 2008 20:26:16 +0100
On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 16:14:07 +0100, "Norman Wells" <norman@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
MM wrote:
On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 12:21:55 +0100, "Norman Wells" <norman@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
MM wrote:
On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 11:34:22 +0100, "Norman Wells"
<norman@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The thing about a freezer that you clearly don't understand is that
you can keep food in there for quite a long time and bring it out
when you want. It's how it works, you see. You can have as much
variety as you like.
And so can I by going to the local shop and buying just the food I
need.
Yes, probably 7 times a week. You must really love food shopping and
lugging it all home.
Why do you insist on making shopping sound like an Arctic expedition?
I buy two sausages, a pork chop, some fish in the market, a few
prawns, eggs from the egg man, and carefully plan my week to provide
variety and good nutritional balance. I can buy potatoes at £1 for 5
lbs from any farm around here, and the town market sells cauliflowers,
carrots etc.
And I don't need to run a freezer. I actually have only the very
small icebox in the top of the fridge where I do store a 454g bag of
frozen peas. Why frozen peas, especially? Because they taste better
than canned and I can't buy fresh peas all year round.
You
can even eat things like rasperries out of season.
I think it's stupid eating fruit and veg that's out of season, since
it means it's been grown abroad and flown here.
Don't be silly. You buy the raspberries in Tesco when they're in season,
freeze them, then eat them when they're out of season. They're not foreign,
and they're not flown anywhere.
I can assure you that Tesco and other supermarkets fly in a great many
vegetables and fruit. Just read the packaging for country of origin.
My goodness, there is
plenty enough variety without contributing to global warming! Recently
the major supermarkets have been selling, would you believe,
blackberries! I ask you, these are available by the ton in Britain's
hedgerows from about August until late September and for free! Yet
some shoppers are too stupid to wait for the proper season and go out
and pick them.
They're not the same. Cultivated blackberries are much larger and juicier
with much smaller pips than the wooden varieties you find in the hedgerows.
Ah, I see. Culitvated blackberries now, is it! Don't you realise just
how silly your aguments are becoming?
Last year I picked enough in half an hour to make eight
jars of jam, which, nota bene, doesn't need your beloved freezer!
So what?
So what? So WHAT? Isn't it obvious that I am far more environmentally
aware that you and that you must spend an absolute fortune on your
out-of-season cultivated blackberries?
You can buy when things
are cheap, and eat when they're expensive. If you're that way
inclined, you could even laugh yourself silly at Tesco's expense
when you do that, thinking of how much the item would be if you
bought it today. Wonderful!
By all means avoid Tesco if you're feeble minded and really can't
resist the siren call of a bin-liner BOGOF when you've gone there to
buy two loose potatoes for your evening feast, but please don't
criticise them when they give us the opportunity to eat what we like
when we like. It's because they do that that we spend one pound in
every seven on food there.
You are going to see big changes in food shopping over the coming
months. M&S food halls have just fallen off a cliff and the other main
supermarkets will surely bear the brunt as consumers choose the
cheapest source, e.g. Aldi etc.
I bet you Tesco will survive. And improve their profits.
And this is a good thing, how exactly?
MM
.
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