General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)   Report Post  
Melba's Jammin'
 
Posts: n/a
Default Back in the Old Days

Squeaks' thread about embarrassingly easy recipes elicited a response
from Ravinwulf that mentioned using boxed frozen broccoli. It got me
thinking about stuff that I used to buy that I don't now.

Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned
mushrooms -- so I bought canned. A lot of fresh vegetables now
available in markets year round were only seasonally available then --
fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it was
not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become
acquainted with it from reading Sunset magazine). I don't remember
mangoes, either. OTOH, I can pretty much guarantee I wasn't looking for
mangoes, either.

Lots of changes since those times.
--
-Barb, <www.jamlady.eboard.com> Sweet Potato Follies added 2/24/05.
"I read recipes the way I read science fiction: I get to the end and
say,'Well, that's not going to happen.'" - Comedian Rita Rudner,
performance at New York, New York, January 10, 2005.
  #2 (permalink)   Report Post  
Marcella Peek
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article >,
Melba's Jammin' > wrote:

> Squeaks' thread about embarrassingly easy recipes elicited a response
> from Ravinwulf that mentioned using boxed frozen broccoli. It got me
> thinking about stuff that I used to buy that I don't now.
>
> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned
> mushrooms -- so I bought canned. A lot of fresh vegetables now
> available in markets year round were only seasonally available then --
> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it was
> not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become
> acquainted with it from reading Sunset magazine). I don't remember
> mangoes, either. OTOH, I can pretty much guarantee I wasn't looking for
> mangoes, either.
>
> Lots of changes since those times.


I remember quite well the first time I saw broccoli. My mom was a
canned corn, peas or green beans lady. We went to dinner at friends
house and they served broccoli. None of us had any idea what it was.

When I was in junior high we ate at another friends house and that was
the first time any of use ate an artichoke. Other than seeing one on
the Little Rascals show I had no idea anyone ate them for real.

I have a wonderful coffee cake that calls for a bag of frozen rhubarb.
It used to be tradition on Christmas morning, but it's too hard to find
frozen rhubarb anymore. In season I generally have to tell the grocery
clerk what it is as most of them don't know and ask.

marcella
  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
Kate Connally
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Marcella Peek wrote:

> I have a wonderful coffee cake that calls for a bag of frozen rhubarb.
> It used to be tradition on Christmas morning, but it's too hard to find
> frozen rhubarb anymore. In season I generally have to tell the grocery
> clerk what it is as most of them don't know and ask.


Speaking of rhubarb, fresh or frozen, you could not get it
in the stores when I was young. In fact lots of people
either never heard of it or thought it was a weed and thought
you were insane if you ate it. Luckily we had it growing on
our place and in the summer we often had rhubarb "sauce" with
our meals. That's the only way we ate it back then, although
I liked to eat a stalk raw, dipping the end in sugar with
each bite.

It's only in the last maybe 20 years or so that I've seen
it in the supermarket fresh. However, I've never bought it
because I'm not going to pay the outrageous prices they charge
for a "weed"! Now that it's "trendy" they think they can
get away with charging a lot for it! Luckily I have a
friend who has it on her property and I can get a bunch
from her. Otherwise the frozen stuff is great. I think
frozen rhubarb has been around longer than fresh in the
stores.

Kate

--
Kate Connally
“If I were as old as I feel, I’d be dead already.”
Goldfish: “The wholesome snack that smiles back,
Until you bite their heads off.”
What if the hokey pokey really *is* what it's all about?

  #4 (permalink)   Report Post  
Dan Abel
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article >,
Melba's Jammin' > wrote:


> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned


Not quite 40 years ago, I worked at the biggest produce warehouse in town
for a couple of summers after high school. We got in mushrooms...once.



> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it was
> not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become



I don't remember seeing zucchini at the warehouse or in stores. People
grew it in their gardens, though. Sometimes in the summer we would drive
out in the valley and buy fresh corn. I don't remember if my parents
picked it, or waited while it was picked to order, but it was right out of
the fields. One day the farmer sold my parents these giant zucchini.
They were about the size of an arm, but thicker, the kind that I now put
right in the compost. They were really cheap. My parents asked how to
prepare them, and were given a hand-written recipe. They cut them and put
them through the grinder. They added salt and waited to draw out some
moisture. Then they added various spices and other ingredients, and then
canned the mixture. It was kind of a sweet pickle relish, and very good.
My parents made it for years, always with giant zucchini. I never knew
that there small ones that you could cook and eat until I was an adult.

--
Dan Abel
Sonoma State University
AIS

  #5 (permalink)   Report Post  
Terry Pulliam Burd
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 07:51:19 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> wrote:

>Squeaks' thread about embarrassingly easy recipes elicited a response
>from Ravinwulf that mentioned using boxed frozen broccoli. It got me
>thinking about stuff that I used to buy that I don't now.


This may not be completely on point, but I remember when my family
rotated back to the States from England in the mid-60s (I was but a
wee lass, of course) and hit a USAian supermarket for the first time
in 3 years. My mother went bonkers. There was toothpaste in a pump,
pie crust in a refrigerated can, frozen bread dough, Pepperidge Farm
refrigerated desserts and 3 kinds of canned mushrooms (sliced, whole
and pieces). Don't recall what else, but Mother was in prepared food
heaven.

Terry "Squeaks" Pulliam Burd
AAC(F)BV66.0748.CA

"If the soup had been as hot as the claret, if the claret had been as
old as the bird, and if the bird's breasts had been as full as the
waitress's, it would have been a very good dinner."

-- Duncan Hines

To reply, replace "spaminator" with "cox"


  #6 (permalink)   Report Post  
aem
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> Squeaks' thread about embarrassingly easy recipes elicited a response


> from Ravinwulf that mentioned using boxed frozen broccoli. It got

me
> thinking about stuff that I used to buy that I don't now.
>
> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned
> mushrooms -- so I bought canned. A lot of fresh vegetables now
> available in markets year round were only seasonally available then

--
> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it

was
> not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become
> acquainted with it from reading Sunset magazine). I don't remember
> mangoes, either. OTOH, I can pretty much guarantee I wasn't looking

for
> mangoes, either.
>
> Lots of changes since those times.


Yes, we have a wonderful abundance of fresh vegetables now. On the
other hand, in the 1950's not far from downtown Los Angeles we had
chickens and rabbits in the backyard. When we had eggs or fried
chicken, or chicken fricassee, or fried rabbit they were FRESH and
GOOD. -aem

  #7 (permalink)   Report Post  
cycjec
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dan Abel > wrote:
> In article >,
> Melba's Jammin' > wrote:


>> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned

> Not quite 40 years ago, I worked at the biggest produce warehouse in town
> for a couple of summers after high school. We got in mushrooms...once.


My elementary school was downwind from an ancient mushroom house. Took
us quite a while to eat any mushrooms of any kind. A long while.

>> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it was
>> not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become

> I don't remember seeing zucchini at the warehouse or in stores. People
> grew it in their gardens, though.


Can't remember the first broccoli sighting, almost certainly frozen.

  #8 (permalink)   Report Post  
jmcquown
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> Squeaks' thread about embarrassingly easy recipes elicited a response
> from Ravinwulf that mentioned using boxed frozen broccoli. It got me
> thinking about stuff that I used to buy that I don't now.
>
> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned
> mushrooms -- so I bought canned. A lot of fresh vegetables now
> available in markets year round were only seasonally available then --
> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it
> was not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had
> become acquainted with it from reading Sunset magazine). I don't
> remember mangoes, either. OTOH, I can pretty much guarantee I wasn't
> looking for mangoes, either.
>
> Lots of changes since those times.


I guess it's because I was raised "military" - the commissaries seemed to
stock things regular grocery stores didn't. I gather this was due to the
multi-cultural experiences of most military personnel, who were used to food
items found overseas. My earliest memory of fresh broccoli, hmmm, I must
have been 5 (that would have been 40 years ago). Zucchini I don't
specifically recall but I don't remember never *not* eating it.
Artichokes - ate my first one at age 9 and remember sharing another with
friends out by the curb and instructing how to scrape the 'meat' off the
leaves with your teeth.

Jill


  #9 (permalink)   Report Post  
Gabby
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Dog3" > wrote in message
1...


> Pineapple is strange.
> When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with anything
> else. I like it in cakes though.
>

I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was taking
to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up here, as
quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy and delicious.
But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one anytime soon.

Gabby


  #10 (permalink)   Report Post  
Wayne Boatwright
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu 24 Mar 2005 07:20:39a, Dog3 wrote in rec.food.cooking:

> "Gabby" > wrote in
> :
>
>>
>> "Dog3" > wrote in message
>> 1...
>>
>>
>>> Pineapple is strange.
>>> When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with
>>> anything else. I like it in cakes though.
>>>

>> I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was
>> taking to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up
>> here, as quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy
>> and delicious. But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one
>> anytime soon.
>>
>> Gabby
>>
>>

>
> I love pineapple but seldom buy them fresh. Too expensive here.
> Pineapple is great though. I buy it in those jars which is less
> expensive. That's how I buy mango. I don't have many choices with the
> mango. We just don't get 'em fresh here. Good stuff though. I'm looking
> on Google for decent mango recipes. I hope to find some.
>
> Michael
>


Scroll down the page on this site until you find the first mango recipe.
There are a bunch of mango recipes here and many sound really good.

http://www.markjcooking.com/recipeslist1.php/196

--
Wayne Boatwright
____________________________________________

Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.
Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974


  #11 (permalink)   Report Post  
Curly Sue
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 07:51:19 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> wrote:

>Lots of changes since those times.


Years ago when you made 'scarole, as for soup, you had to wash it
forever to get the dirt and sand out. Now you can buy it in the
grocery store and it has been cleaned up a lot. My mother almost died
from happiness when she discovered that.

When I moved to the midwest in the '70s and brought in escarole soup
for lunch one day, it was looked at like soup from another planet.
Then, Bon Appetit published an RSVP recipe for "Italian Wedding Soup"
and it has a name and foodie credibility :>

Even common vegetables are conveniently packaged- baby carrots, for
example.

Sue(tm)
Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself!
  #12 (permalink)   Report Post  
Nancy Young
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Curly Sue" > wrote

> When I moved to the midwest in the '70s and brought in escarole soup
> for lunch one day, it was looked at like soup from another planet.
> Then, Bon Appetit published an RSVP recipe for "Italian Wedding Soup"
> and it has a name and foodie credibility :>


Heh, I remember the first time I saw escarole soup being made. Looked
pretty perplexing to me, I was only maybe 20. Then I had my ex mil's
Italian Wedding Soup and I was hooked. I even requested she make it
for my wedding rehearsal dinner. My bridesmaids were quite skeptical
about it. Then, years later, they would have it on the menu occasionally
at the cafeteria at work. So, once when I looked at the weekly menu,
I said, oh! Italian Wedding Soup. Seems whoever was with me had
thought all along that it was some cafeteria made up name.

> Even common vegetables are conveniently packaged- baby carrots, for
> example.


Do they call them that? I don't think they are really baby carrots, just
ground down regular carrots. At any rate, I don't have a problem buying
that packaged stuff for the most part.

nancy (making cream of broccoli today, I know I shouldn't)


  #13 (permalink)   Report Post  
Goomba38
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dog3 wrote:


> I love pineapple but seldom buy them fresh. Too expensive here. Pineapple
> is great though. I buy it in those jars which is less expensive. That's how
> I buy mango. I don't have many choices with the mango. We just don't get
> 'em fresh here. Good stuff though. I'm looking on Google for decent mango
> recipes. I hope to find some.
>
> Michael
>

Pineapples can be had for between $3.50 to $4.99
each here. I like to buy them and grill large
pieces while we're doing pork on the grill.
Mangos can sometimes be had 2/$1.00 or $1.50 and I
really enjoy making a mango salsa out of them
to serve with grilled chicken.
Goomba

  #14 (permalink)   Report Post  
Joseph Littleshoes
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Gabby wrote:

> "Dog3" > wrote in message
> 1...
>
> > Pineapple is strange.
> > When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with

> anything
> > else. I like it in cakes though.
> >

> I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was
> taking
> to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up here, as
> quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy and
> delicious.
> But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one anytime soon.
>
> Gabby


Eeep! recently here in Northern California (S.F. bay area) pineapple
went down from 3 dollar per to .79 cents for a whole Hawaiian pineapple.

---
Joseph Littleshoes

  #15 (permalink)   Report Post  
Katra
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article >,
Joseph Littleshoes > wrote:

> Gabby wrote:
>
> > "Dog3" > wrote in message
> > 1...
> >
> > > Pineapple is strange.
> > > When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with

> > anything
> > > else. I like it in cakes though.
> > >

> > I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was
> > taking
> > to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up here, as
> > quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy and
> > delicious.
> > But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one anytime soon.
> >
> > Gabby

>
> Eeep! recently here in Northern California (S.F. bay area) pineapple
> went down from 3 dollar per to .79 cents for a whole Hawaiian pineapple.
>
> ---
> Joseph Littleshoes
>


It's commonly $3.99 per lb. here, and I thought that was expensive! ;-)
I generally get them when they come down to $2.99 per lb.

Wow.
--
K.


  #16 (permalink)   Report Post  
Mr. Grumpy Pants
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Marcella Peek wrote:

>
> When I was in junior high we ate at another friends house and that

was
> the first time any of use ate an artichoke. Other than seeing one on


> the Little Rascals show I had no idea anyone ate them for real.
>


Might have choked Artie but it ain't gonna choke Stymie.

GP

  #17 (permalink)   Report Post  
Marcella Peek
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Dog3" wrote:


>> I have a wonderful coffee cake that calls for a bag of frozen
>>rhubarb. It used to be tradition on Christmas morning, but it's too
>>hard to find frozen rhubarb anymore. In season I generally have to
>>tell the grocery clerk what it is as most of them don't know and ask
>>
>>marcella

>
>Gawd, I love rhubarb. Can you elaborate?


Here you go

Strawberry-Rhubarb Coffeecake

1 lb bag frozen rhubarb (3 cups sliced)
1 16oz pkg frozen, sweetened strawberries
2 T lemon juice
1 C sugar
1/3 C cornstarch

3 C flour
1 C sugar
1 t baking powder
1 t baking soda
1/2 t salt
1 C (2 sticks) butter
2 eggs
1 1/2 C buttermilk
1 t vanilla

In a heavy saucepan combine: rhubarb, strawberries and lemon juice.
Cook over medium heat. In a bowl stir together cornstarch and sugar.
Gradually stir cornstarch mixture into hot fruit. Heat to boiling and
cook until thickened. Set aside.

Preheat oven to 350 and grease a 9 x 13 inch pan.

In a large bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda
and salt. Using a pastry cutter or two knives cut in the butter until
it resembles coarse crumbs.

Mix together eggs, buttermilk and vanilla. Stir liquid mixture into
flour mixture until just blended. Pour half the batter into the greased
pan. Top with fruit. Drop remaining batter by spoonfuls over the fruit
filling.

Bake for 40-45 minutes or until it is golden brown and bubbly. Cool the
cake for 10 minutes. Serve warm.

I think this is more of a cross between a coffeecake and a cobbler. It
works for breakfast or dessert. Either way it's very good. I have
substituted ollalieberries for the strawberry-rhubarb mixture and that
is good too. Just be sure to adjust the sugar to the fruit you use.

marcella
  #18 (permalink)   Report Post  
Wayne Boatwright
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu 24 Mar 2005 09:13:38a, Dog3 wrote in rec.food.cooking:

> Wayne Boatwright > wrote in
> :
>
>> On Thu 24 Mar 2005 07:20:39a, Dog3 wrote in rec.food.cooking:
>>
>>> "Gabby" > wrote in
>>> :
>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Dog3" > wrote in message
>>>> 1...
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Pineapple is strange.
>>>>> When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with
>>>>> anything else. I like it in cakes though.
>>>>>
>>>> I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was
>>>> taking to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up
>>>> here, as quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy
>>>> and delicious. But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another
>>>> one anytime soon.
>>>>
>>>> Gabby
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> I love pineapple but seldom buy them fresh. Too expensive here.
>>> Pineapple is great though. I buy it in those jars which is less
>>> expensive. That's how I buy mango. I don't have many choices with the
>>> mango. We just don't get 'em fresh here. Good stuff though. I'm
>>> looking on Google for decent mango recipes. I hope to find some.
>>>
>>> Michael
>>>

>>
>> Scroll down the page on this site until you find the first mango
>> recipe. There are a bunch of mango recipes here and many sound really
>> good.
>>
>> http://www.markjcooking.com/recipeslist1.php/196
>>

>
> Gawd, the site is wonderful.
>
> Michael
>


Glad you like it. I've made several things from there, all good.

--
Wayne Boatwright
____________________________________________

Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day.
Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974
  #20 (permalink)   Report Post  
AlleyGator
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dog3 > wrote:

>Where do you find this stuff so inexpesive? I can not find pineapple
>anyplace that is inexpensive. Maybe it's where I shop. Dierbergs and
>Straubs prices on produce are prohivtive. Schnucks is okay but the quality
>is poor. Shop 'n Save produce is pretty bad and Aldi's is lousy for the
>most part.I can't wait till the Farmer's Markets to open. I'm dying for
>fresh tomatoes and other stuff.
>
>Michael <- all scruffy with full beard

OT but I see you're up early too. I've been up since 2 am - and
thinking of trying to tackle the 6-day beard myself. It's been 6
days, and I still feel like I just got hit by a truck. So much for a
flu shot. Produce is a pretty big gamble around us also. They tend
to "pretty" it up and you don't notice what crap it is till you use
it. Or throw it away, sometimes.


  #22 (permalink)   Report Post  
biig
 
Posts: n/a
Default

But didn't George Bush Sr. say he didn't like broccoli when he was a
kid and since he was an adult he didn't have to eat it. There must have
been some around back then or he has told an "untruth".....

cycjec wrote:
>
> Dan Abel > wrote:
> > In article >,
> > Melba's Jammin' > wrote:

>
> >> Forty years ago, fresh mushrooms were way more expensive than canned

> > Not quite 40 years ago, I worked at the biggest produce warehouse in town
> > for a couple of summers after high school. We got in mushrooms...once.

>
> My elementary school was downwind from an ancient mushroom house. Took
> us quite a while to eat any mushrooms of any kind. A long while.
>
> >> fresh broccoli came to mind. And I had to search for zucchini - it was
> >> not a commonly known vegetable in my neck of the woods (I had become

> > I don't remember seeing zucchini at the warehouse or in stores. People
> > grew it in their gardens, though.

>
> Can't remember the first broccoli sighting, almost certainly frozen.

  #23 (permalink)   Report Post  
The Cook
 
Posts: n/a
Default

biig > wrote:

> But didn't George Bush Sr. say he didn't like broccoli when he was a
>kid and since he was an adult he didn't have to eat it. There must have
>been some around back then or he has told an "untruth".....



What was available to the rich was not necessarily available at the
small town A & P. And they got chances to go to foreign countries to
see the sights and eat the food and not at the military's expense and
desire.



--
Susan N.

"Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral, 48 percent indignation, and 50 percent envy."
Vittorio De Sica, Italian movie director (1901-1974)
  #24 (permalink)   Report Post  
Joseph Littleshoes
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dog3 wrote:

> Joseph Littleshoes > wrote in
> :
>
> > Gabby wrote:
> >
> >> "Dog3" > wrote in message
> >> 1...
> >>
> >> > Pineapple is strange.
> >> > When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with
> >> anything
> >> > else. I like it in cakes though.
> >> >
> >> I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I

> was
> >> taking
> >> to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up here,

> as
> >> quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy and
> >> delicious.
> >> But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one anytime

> soon.
> >>
> >> Gabby

> >
> > Eeep! recently here in Northern California (S.F. bay area)

> pineapple
> > went down from 3 dollar per to .79 cents for a whole Hawaiian

> pineapple.
> >
> > ---
> > Joseph Littleshoes
> >
> >

>
> You are not kidding are you. I would love to get my hands on a couple.


Not at all, i shop in the Oakland "Chinatown" and get amazingly good
prices. If you make it to the area, and are not already familar with
it, avoid the shops immediatly adjacent to Broadway and go a couple of
blocks into "Chinatown" for a better price on the same produce. 8th
street, a block east of Broadway is very good. I get frozen whole
tilapia (fish) for $1.00 per pound there.
---
JL

> Gawd, throwing them on the grill would be wonderful. I've got jarred
> mango
> and I can see throwing them together. It's 5am here and I'm getting
> hungry.
> I've taken the hounds out and fed all 3 brats. I'm hungry and may
> scramble
> some eggs. I'm not up to do hash browns or gravy. I may do sausage.
>
> Michael
>
> --
> Opinions founded on prejudice are always sustained with the greatest
> violence.
> -- Hebrew proverb


  #25 (permalink)   Report Post  
Joseph Littleshoes
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dog3 wrote:

> Joseph Littleshoes > wrote in
> :
>
> > Dog3 wrote:
> >
> >> Joseph Littleshoes > wrote in
> >> :
> >>
> >> >
> >> >> "Dog3" > wrote in message
> >>
> >> You are not kidding are you. I would love to get my hands on a

> couple.
> >
> > Not at all, i shop in the Oakland "Chinatown" and get amazingly good

>
> > prices. If you make it to the area, and are not already familar

> with
> > it, avoid the shops immediatly adjacent to Broadway and go a couple

> of
> > blocks into "Chinatown" for a better price on the same produce. 8th

>
> > street, a block east of Broadway is very good. I get frozen whole
> > tilapia (fish) for $1.00 per pound there.
> > ---
> > JL
> >>

> >

>
> I can not get anywhere right yet. I did make some pretty Easter
> eggs. I
> go into the hospital on Monday. I can not wait to get it over with. I
> am so
> sick of this shit.


I hope i am not being too forward when i say you have my sympathies, i
am just beginning to regain about 60% of the previous mobility i had 2
years ago before my spinal injury. Which i am about as over as im going
to get & which is to say not or never completely.

I used to shop at a posh market before my injury made me have to shop
at a local market. And even though i can now go shop at the posh place,
i don't. The "peoples" street market is so much better and so less
expensive that the convenience of the "posh" place to my place of work
is rendered obsolete. Except if i want a bottle of wine or a peculiar
cheese.

Get well soon.
---
Joseph Littleshoes

p.s. do you live any where near the S.F. bay area?



  #26 (permalink)   Report Post  
Kate Connally
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Dog3 wrote:
>
> Katra > wrote in news:KatraMungBean-
> :
>
> > In article >,
> > Joseph Littleshoes > wrote:
> >
> >> Gabby wrote:
> >>
> >> > "Dog3" > wrote in message
> >> > 1...
> >> >
> >> > > Pineapple is strange.
> >> > > When I peel it it is bitter. I love pineapple. Plain not with
> >> > anything
> >> > > else. I like it in cakes though.
> >> > >
> >> > I bought a fresh pineapple last Friday, to add to a fruit tray I was
> >> > taking
> >> > to our cast party. It's always a gamble buying pineapple up here, as
> >> > quality is not always great, but it turned out to be juicy and
> >> > delicious.
> >> > But at $7/per I don't think I'll be having another one anytime soon.
> >> >
> >> > Gabby
> >>
> >> Eeep! recently here in Northern California (S.F. bay area) pineapple
> >> went down from 3 dollar per to .79 cents for a whole Hawaiian pineapple.
> >>
> >> ---
> >> Joseph Littleshoes
> >>

> >
> > It's commonly $3.99 per lb. here, and I thought that was expensive! ;-)
> > I generally get them when they come down to $2.99 per lb.
> >
> > Wow.

>
> The cost is huge here at least where I shop. I just do not buy them.


Here in Pgh. the Dole Gold pineapples are all you see these
days. They're generally much better than the plain old
yellow ones. They are $4.99 a piece just about everywhere,
but they are often on sale for $3.99 so I only buy them on
sale.

Kate

--
Kate Connally
“If I were as old as I feel, I’d be dead already.”
Goldfish: “The wholesome snack that smiles back,
Until you bite their heads off.”
What if the hokey pokey really *is* what it's all about?

  #27 (permalink)   Report Post  
Nancy Young
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Kate Connally" > wrote

> Here in Pgh. the Dole Gold pineapples are all you see these
> days. They're generally much better than the plain old
> yellow ones. They are $4.99 a piece just about everywhere,
> but they are often on sale for $3.99 so I only buy them on
> sale.


I literally cannot abide them. Bring back the old.

nancy


  #28 (permalink)   Report Post  
Orlando Fiol
 
Posts: n/a
Default

uhoh@ajfl wrote:
>I've got jarred mangoes and mixed fruit in the fridge now.


Are they packed in sugar syrup or something? I can't imagine how they
look or where they come from. are they sliced or whole? if whole, I'd
imagine they'd be peeled and pitted.

Curious,
Orlando
  #29 (permalink)   Report Post  
Charlotte L. Blackmer
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article >,
Stan Horwitz > wrote:
>In article >,
> (Curly Sue) wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 07:51:19 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>> > wrote:
>>
>> >Lots of changes since those times.

>>
>> Years ago when you made 'scarole, as for soup, you had to wash it
>> forever to get the dirt and sand out. Now you can buy it in the
>> grocery store and it has been cleaned up a lot. My mother almost died
>> from happiness when she discovered that.
>>
>> When I moved to the midwest in the '70s and brought in escarole soup
>> for lunch one day, it was looked at like soup from another planet.
>> Then, Bon Appetit published an RSVP recipe for "Italian Wedding Soup"
>> and it has a name and foodie credibility :>
>>
>> Even common vegetables are conveniently packaged- baby carrots, for
>> example.

>
>What's more, the grocery stores seem to carry a wider range of fresh
>produce than they did years ago. One supermarket near me have a whole
>wall filled with different kinds of bagged salad greens. Just today, I
>went grocery shopping at a supermarket in Delaware and I noticed this
>store had a lot of fresh mushrooms that I had never seen before.


Some of the produce-buying advice I got from my mom was "when you see
raspberries or asparagus, JUST BUY THEM, don't fret about the price" which
was true then, as rasps/asparagus had a short spring season.

Now they're available year round. (I generally won't buy them outside
season though ... too expensive and I just think it's wrong.)

But the selection was more limited and far more seasonal, even in the
California farmland.

Charlotte
--
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
My last three days Nick Cramer Diabetic 36 02-07-2008 03:08 PM
"There are days, and there are days . . . Nick Cramer Diabetic 0 13-06-2008 09:04 AM
It's been 8 days Bobo Bonobo® General Cooking 2 12-09-2007 04:13 AM
The Old Days The Herd General Cooking 0 27-05-2006 12:26 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:51 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 FoodBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Food and drink"