I have this distinct memory of grocery shopping with my sister shortly after returning from Guatemala. We walked through the produce department, where tomatoes were $0.99 a pound. My sister thought that was a good price, and suggested we buy them. "What?! 99 cents a pound?! Are you crazy? That's almost 10Q a pound, and I can get them from the woman at the corner stall for 2Q." [Note: Q = Quetzal, the currency in Guatemala, at that time roughly 8Q = $1]. I didn't buy the tomatoes. We moved on. Onions were too expensive, because I could get them 2 pounds for 1Q at my favorite vendor. Carrots, apples, and pretty much everything I wanted to buy was the same; outrageous "gringo" prices. um, yeah, gringo prices, since gringos would pay a lot more in the markets in Guatemala since the expensive prices were still less than what they would pay at home!
Adjusting to what I considered to be the outrageous prices on produce in the US, in comparison with the incredible prices I had seen all over Central America was really difficult for me. And yes, I look forward to seeing great prices again when we move. But for now, I'm in the US, and I am simply never going to find tomatoes for 20 cents a pound!
While we've started growing a few (very few!) of our own veggies, we don't produce nearly enough for our needs, so I'm constantly looking for fresh veggies at good prices. When I lived in California, I was part of a CSA, but where we are in Texas, we have not been able to find a CSA in our area with pick-up days/times that work for us. Instead, we've found a veggie co-op that buys in bulk from the local farmers market every two weeks.
This co-op is run by a woman in my sisters' homeschool group, and most of the members are also members of that group. In an effort to save on cost, everybody contributes $30 every 2 weeks, and one or two people in the group do the shopping every time, then come back to the organizer's house and split the goods:
At 8 am (yes, that means that the veggie buyers have to hit the market before the crack of dawn!), the rest of the members of the co-op arrive, pack their veggies into their boxes, pay for their portion coming in 2 weeks, and head home to enjoy the bounty.
When we first started this, we shared a portion with my sister, but we found that it was more veggies than we would sometimes eat before they were going bad, and we hated for them to go to waste. Now we share our half with another sister, and we end up having to buy a little more, but we prefer that over wasting food.
This week, this is what our quarter portion looked like:
Once it was all laid out and grouped together, it looked like this:
We got:
- 1 head of leafy green lettuce
- I head of broccoli
- 1 head of red cabbage
- 1 large baker potato
- 3 red bell peppers
- 2 yellow onions
- 4 tomatoes
- 1 huge nectarine
- 3 apples (one is not in the pic since Pooh already ate it)
- 2 oranges
- 5 tangerines
- black grapes (maybe 1/2 pound?)
- 1/2 bag of baby carrots (also not pictured)
For $7.50, I think that's a pretty good deal! I'm trying not to imagine how much better it would be in El Salvador! I admit, though, that I'm intensely curious as to how much this would cost me at the local grocery store - I think I may have to do a little cost comparison later today!
- 1 head of leafy green lettuce $1.00
ReplyDelete- I head of broccoli $1.00
- 1 head of red cabbage I've never seen it here, but the green cabbage is $1.50 for the size shown your pic
- 1 large baker potato about 1lb? .35 cents
- 3 red bell peppers Again, not common here, but 3 green peppers is about .25 cents
- 2 yellow onions (red onions) .30 cents
- 4 tomatoes .50 cents (they are very expensive right now
- 1 huge nectarine I don't know
- 3 apples .75 cents
- 2 oranges .25 cents right now they are 8 to 10 for a $1 in a few months it will be 20 for a $1
- 5 tangerines $.50
- black grapes (maybe 1/2 pound?)$1 at least grapes are expensive here
- 1/2 bag of baby carrots Don't know, but I did buy 6 big carrots on Friday for a $1
Pretty much the same as you paid, but here you have to shop in season. I love avocados but right now they are just too expensive but the potatoes are crazy cheap now. 3lb for a $1. Apples are always expensive but you can substitute them for mangos, anonas, bananas, cocos, maranon, you get the idea. Brocolli and lettuce are also expensive here, but I think that is because they are imported (but that is just a guess)
In any event judging by your love for fresh fruit and veggies I think you will love the selection here
Oh, thanks for the comparison! When I buy (other than the co-op) I really only buy in season, but the co-op sometimes gets great deals on other stuff. It looks like the prices on peppers, onions, tomatoes, and oranges are a lot better there in general. I can't wait to have access to the tropical fruits that are outrageous here! Is anona like a chirimoya? I love those, but here the prices are typically $3 per pound or more, so we rarely eat them.
ReplyDeleteI have never seen anything like an anona before moving here but these guys have a great pic..http://www.whatsupelsalvador.com/2011/08/crazy-ass-tropical-fruits-and-nuts-of-latin-america-a-blogterspective/
ReplyDeleteHappily for me orange season seems to have started early this year. This morning the truck passed selling 20 for a dollar. They make great frescos!