by
Bill Holmes
There
seems to be a conspiracy by grocers and retailers
against those of us who live in a household with
one or two people. I've noticed this for several
years because I've often lived alone or with only
one or two other people. A
situation in the last couple of days brought it to mind again so here
goes my rant.
Last
week, Kroger had crawfish on sale. It was the frozen kind from China
(not obvious from the ad) but
that's OK for the times Louisiana fresh crawfish aren't available.
Seemed like a good time to cook some up. I'm
a big fan of Louisiana cooking, both Cajun and Creole. My favorite
Louisiana dish is probably etouffee although
gumbo ain't bad. I guess you
can use almost any shellfish, seafood or mild meat to make etouffee.
I'm partial to crawfish and shrimp, either separate or combined. Of
course I needed a few more ingredients besides the crawfish. That''s
where the problem started.
I'm
not a strict follower of recipes but if you're going to make any
Creole or Cajun dish you probably are going to start with the
trinity. No, not the religious trinity, the Louisiana cooking
trinity. Onion, celery and bell peppers. Peppers and onion are not a
problem because I use them
most days. I tend to eat a salad five or six days a week. Now celery,
that's another story. I'm not a big celery fan, except in recipes,
and don't have it laying around. I needed about
one cup of chopped celery. That's about three trimmed
medium stalks. Have you ever tried to buy three
stalks of celery? The hermetically sealed washed and trimmed celery
packages contain eight or ten
trimmed stalks. A fresh bunch
of celery is made up of ten or 12 larger stalks
plus the leaves and root. If you only need a cup of celery there is
going to be a little left over. The fresh bunch
is always cheaper and usually better, so that's what I bought.
The
next challenge was that I needed some flour. Depending on the recipe, I needed a blond roux or a slurry for thickening.
That takes only between one
or a very few tablespoons of flour
for either choice. No flour in the pantry so that
went on the shopping list. The smallest package of flour I found was
two pounds. I now have two pounds
minus one or two tablespoons
of flour. I don't bake and I don't bread stuff to fry. What else can
I use flour for? I bought a small bag of flour, probably
two pounds, shortly after I moved back to Texas with Dad
in 2003. I'm guessing I breaded some veal or pork
for Dad. He liked a little breaded and fried
meat now and then. I put whatever flour was left over into a glass
container to keep the bugs out. Probably about five years later I
came across that container. No bugs or mold but
I thought it best to dump it, probably two pounds
less a few tablespoons. Now
ten years later I have another new bag
of flour. The original glass flour container has been repurposed and
I don't have another airtight container big
enough for two pounds (minus a tablespoon) of flour. Need
some all purpose flour? I mixed the flour with a
cup of white wine (instead of water) for
the slurry. Now I have a half bottle of wine left over too. Oh wait,
that's not a problem.
These
are just my most current gripes. Over the years I've tackled what I
thought was a simple recipe only to find out that I needed five new
ingredients. Check the bank balance if you need five
new spices or herbs. One
little jar or tin can
set you back more than five dollars. That's five bucks for a pinch if
you don't normally use that spice or herb. I'm
not talking about truffles or real saffron. That
dish you thought you would make with the on sale chicken (or
crawfish) suddenly costs $27 per serving because of the other
ingredients. Yes, it is sometimes cheaper to go
to a restaurant for that food you are craving.
As
for the huge packages of food, I have seen some attempts at more
reasonable sizes. When in Florida several years ago when Mom and
Dad lived in an area with several retirement communities, there were some
individual serving sized products tucked away on a high shelf. There
were even little jars of ketchup or mustard or mayonnaise, all
overpriced. Sometimes you can find the same
smaller sizes in a resort/condo area where there is a high
turnover, like the Piggly-Wiggly at Coligny Plaza on Hilton Head. The
problem is most of the products were neither very
healthy nor delicious. In
the grocery stores I now shop, I see older people (which I now am)
filling their carts with individual servings of frozen and
packaged meals. The food companies still make
individual serving size prepackaged products.
Most of these products are crap. Lean Cuisine,
Stouffer's, Healthy Choice, Hormel
and a few others occasionally stumble on a dish that is palatable but
they still are full of salt, fats and sugars. I know part of the
reason folks buy this crap is for convenience. That's OK, I buy
convenient crap food too on occasion. When an older
person is pushing a cart with a dozen Banquet or store brand frozen
meals I know it's not really by choice. It's cheap and convenient. It
will also kill you. Some of it is generational
culture. Many men of my generation and older never learned to cook
and have no desire to learn. My Dad could barely
make a simple sandwich, heat up a can of
Campell's soup or cook an egg
if he was starving. That's it. He either couldn't or wouldn't bother
to heat up a jar of Ragu and cook pasta. That's
despite the fact that it was one of his very
favorite meals. Spaghetti and sauce took two pots. That's at least
one too many.
Well
as usual, I've wondered all over the original subject and peripheral
subjects. Partially attributable to old age, ADD, dementia,
derangement, softening of the brain and mental decay.
I
wish I could find individual portions or at least more
usable portions of some ingredients. I wish those
that can't or don't cook could find convenient,
nutritious
and delicious foods that weren't full of crap.
Maybe as we baby boomers become infirm
the food producers and sellers will offer alternate product sizes and
choices. That will only happen if boomers have enough money and
desire for real food to make a difference. I guess the alternative is
to live in communes or co-ops.
Didn't some of us try that in the 60's and 70's?
So,
the etouffee was delicious,
the extra celery, onion and bell pepper
went into the stock pot along with some chicken
scraps I had in the freezer. I also was able to use that wine I had
absolutely no use for as stock or broth liquid. Now I have a couple
of quarts of delicious stock or broth. I can never tell the
difference between the two. I really don't have
much to complain about. I use most of my food scraps. I have enough
stock/broth in the freezer
for several dishes. I haven't had to cooked
rice or beans or make soup with
plain water in years.
Nevertheless
I'll still gripe about food and other packaging. If you go to Costco
or Sam's expect to buy two
dozen pork ribs or a gross of toilet paper. If
you go to a local grocery store, it would be nice to be able to size
the purchase to the recipe, family or occasion.
I
think my youngest son is
coming by this weekend to get
this batch of etouffee. I can make more. I even have enough celery
and flour for another batch. He loves etouffee
and most of my cooking. What good taste he has. He's also very
handsome, talented and extremely smart. It must be part of that tree,
apple adage.
Anyway, it's hard to shop and cook for one or two. A big freezer helps but eventually somebody has to eat the overflow.
By
the way, I still have almost two pounds of flour for sale.
wjh
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