Category: grocery
12/27/08 12:06 - 36ºF - ID#47194
Year-end groceries - December 2008
That's right. I didn't particularly feel like shovelling my way to Guercio's. I went to Biglots and Wegman's instead. To spite them both and generally pout about my forced Guercio's deprivation, I am going to refer to them collectively as Weglots.
Oh yeah. AND I CAN'T BELIEVE WEGLOTS WAS OUT OF PEANUT OIL!
Way to kick me in the guts, Weglots!
Ahem. The groceries.
1. Weglots fat free milk. 1 Gallon - $2.39
This seems like a cool mug to have, huh? I thought so too, but I think the lower end might be kind of hard to clean. Hmmmm...
2. Weglots low-fat vanilla yoghurt - $1.99
3. Dole Mixed Frozen Fruit - $8.59 (Still the best deal around - considering the sky-high fruit prices and the dearth of variety.)
4. Weglots Iodized Salt - (2) $1.00 (Believe it not I stock up on salt. I might be headed for the no-good land of hypertension later this century, but I just can't lay off the salt. Mmmmm.... Salty!)
5. Weglots organic firm tofu - $1.99 (Damn. This used to $1.29 in 2006 and $1.79 earlier this year) Tofu, the vegan zombie. DIE DIE!
6. Pepperidge Farm Puff Pastry Sheets - $3.49 (I *had* to get thiis. I think I am slowly dying inside because I can't get crazy spicy super-hot street samosas with chutney anymore.
I can't deep fry without tripping the fire-alarm, so this seemed like a good alternative. I will let you all know how this turns out. :))
7. 4. Fleischmann's Rapid-Rise Yeast - $1.59 ($1.59 for a bunch of one-celled fungi?! Meh. Even lab supplies are cheaper. Maybe I should just steal some from the lab.)
8. Weglots baking powder - $1.29 (After months of living in denial about the utility of Sodium Aluminium Suphate, Calcium Sulphate and Monocalcium Phosphate, I think (e:Heidi)'s cookies have finally made me see the light and inch out of baking umbra.
Maybe not into the baking light yet (because I refuse to heap the tablespoons of butter for the baking) but possibly into a kind of baking-powder-yeast-illuminated penumbra. I am still not convinced about the corn starch though. I mean, isn't there enough starch in the flour anyway??! Why do you need more starch and that too, made of corn??!)
9. Pane Italian Bread - $2.00 (This used to be $1.50 not so long ago. Not to be confused with Pano's. I doubt whether they use this fine fibre-less bread in that eatery even though this is like the cheapest bread in the "live" bakery. For the uninformed, as opposed to the "dead" bakery where you can see only shelved baked products in plastic bags, in the live bakery you can actually see a stone hearth oven and live bakers flitting around. )
10. 5 pounds of Grapefruit - $3.99
Contrary to what this demented person -> would have you believe, my opinion is set in stone.
11. 3.18 pounds Broccoli - $4.10
12. TOMATOES. AT LAST. 1.87lb @ $2.49/lb: $4.66
13. 5 pounds Clementines - $4.99 Such a great deal - if only they stopped selling them in those ridiculous wood boxes!
14. Pears Colombian Supremo Coffee Sampler - $0.50
Pears? Hmmm... Whatever. Can't be too bad when its just fitty cent.
15. TWWWWWIIIIIZZZZLLLLEEERRRSSS!!!! - $1.50
16. Black Peppercorns (Some random brand unlike the super-elite Thalassery ones that (e:zzzzoobaaaarrr) got some posts earlier) - $1.00
17. Baking Sheet - $4.50 (In continuation of the penumbric baking migration I mentioned earlier).
18. Andy Capp Hot Fries - $0.49 I am trying REALLY hard not to get these on a regular basis. I swear this is the first pack since... well a number of months.
19. Bar of Dove Origins dark chocolate - $1.80
20. "LiveActive" Post mixed berry Crunch cereal with inulin - $2.00
I admit it. I bought this cereal more as a matter of curiosity than any kind of I-must-try-this-cereal driven mania. Apparently it has inulin.
This substance is supposed to promote the growth of some of my "friendly" unnamed gut bacteria.
I am vaguely bothered by these catch-phrases and claims. How do we know for sure, seeing as each of us have 500-600 species of different bacteria as compared to any of our fellow-humans, that what is "friendly" for one person is equally friendly for others? What if this is what we are actually promoting?
These probiotic foods have steadily been populating the shelves of the "nature's marketplace" at Weglots. And we are still quite a long way off from learning what the human gut microbiome really does. Just sayin'...
21. "Works" Toilet Bowl Cleaner (2) - $3.00
Yeah. It BETTER work.
Total: $57.81
The grocery trippiness is over. Hopefully, no more grocery trips through this godawful slushy snow till next year, and yes, more Guercio's in 2009, please. :)
Permalink: Year_end_groceries_December_2008.html
Words: 818
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: {dodo}
12/24/08 06:04 - 46ºF - ID#47175
Rahmboid Overdose.
And I admit. A bit nauseating. Ugh.
Permalink: Rahmboid_Overdose_.html
Words: 16
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: the odes
12/24/08 04:32 - 45ºF - ID#47173
Wake up and smell the New Year....
- Thank you for this gem of a strip, Bill Watterson. :)
Permalink: Wake_up_and_smell_the_New_Year_.html
Words: 16
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: opinion
12/16/08 06:04 - 23ºF - ID#47084
The PEPFAR: For e:Joshua.
(e:joshua): I am not convinced about the arguments you make about the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) - the anti-AIDs program you mention. HIV is not a simple and straighforward black and white moral-amoral disease. However, Bush's funding has insisted on treating the disease as such.
I am not primarily an HIV researcher, but I try to keep up with the field news. Strong and repeated evidence shows that HIV spread is successfully targeted by an enveloping multi-pronged strategy including (but not limited to) condom distribution, sex education, needle-exchanges, and antiretrovirals.
All this is NOT possible without understanding the behavioural side of the disease as well. And believe me, the behavioural aspects of this disease are mind-blowingly complex. The roots lie in what makes us elementally human and what makes us aggregate into societies.
The Bush funding on the PEPFAR came with certain caveats that totally astonished the scientific community. The PEPFAR mandated that the beneficiaries spend ONE-THIRD of its prevention budget on programs that promote abstinence until marriage. PEPFAR money was blocked from going into needle-exchange programs and increased condom access intiatives. This mandate (unlike the credit system) was NOT trust based. The recipient nations had to sign an anti-prostitution pledge written by the Bush administration, vowing to oppose prostitution and almost go to the extent of outlawing it.
Scientific HIV research communities across the world as well as human rights groups were borderline shocked at how such massive federal money could possibly be poured into such a non-scientific, ill-advised medieval non-evidence supported strategy to combat AIDs in one of the most diverse society driven continents on the planet.
It flew in the face of overwhelming evidence that prostitutes are the major implementers of the anti-AIDS behavioral preventive measures and that condoms are an eminently effective measure against ALL sexually transmitted diseases (including AIDS). The PEPFAR program demonstrated a deep-rooted ignorance of the nature of HIV in Africa - a disease more driven by poverty and gender inequality than by iniquity. Additionally, the program buried its head in the sand when it came to the scientific fact that AIDS is not just an STD. It's a blood-borne disease and drug users do contribute a sizeable chunk to the incidence of HIV positive disease.
The PEPFAR recipients were virtually banned from including sex workers in the prevention strategies and were forced to leave them out in the cold. The strategy was heavily criticized by most of the donor countries except US. They demanded scientific evidence for this measure and the PEPFAR FAILED to demonstrate any evidence. YET, they went ahead.
The PEPFAR was initially not just directed at Africa, it was directed at a number of Latin American ("developing") countries as well. Some of these countries flat out refused the aid (eg. Brazil) because it was so... well, for lack of a better word, foolish. These countries have since (or even before PEPFAR came along) implemented successful (and documented) strategies that have brought down incidence rates.
The PEPFAR, on the other hand, has had no (or very skeletally reported) scientifically documented improvements in incidence rates in continental Africa. The program was a major embarrassment to the Bush Administration abroad (if not here and among the morally insular) and in scientific circles because of this reason. There was an element of glee and "We told you so!" among other international donors. Earlier this year, the objectives and implementation of the program were re-evaluated and the whole crazy 1/3rd money for prevention-via-abstinence-only caveat was struck down. I am not 100% sure about this but the brainless anti-prostitution pledge STILL stands.
When you donate $15 billion to a cause, you better understand how you are spending the money. Moral crusades are never the best guides in medicine.
Permalink: The_PEPFAR_For_e_Joshua_.html
Words: 657
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: art
12/15/08 10:39 - 28ºF - ID#47073
Dancing Tiger, Singing Dragon
Nice music, though. :)
They may have hired some Chinese to fill in the roles and dance around, but the storyline is as transparent and brainless as always, the songs are crazily catchy and the colours are as popping as ever. Hahahaha.
- Chandni Chowk is the insanely vibrant marketplace in front of the Red Fort in the walled city of Old Delhi. My school was a just a brisk walk away.
I don't think any place in Delhi comes even close to the madness, the surging crowds, the ear-splitting sounds, the oblivious stray cows, the reckless rickshaws, the overstocked book-shops and the awesome and divinely delicious street food that make up Chandni Chowk.
Permalink: Dancing_Tiger_Singing_Dragon.html
Words: 157
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: {dodo}
12/10/08 07:48 - 26ºF - ID#47019
Rahmbomania...
The first one was posted by (e:drew) in the chat:
The second one was posted by (e:james) in the chat:
From:
Thank you (e:drew) and (e:james)! These totally made my day! :D
Permalink: Rahmbomania_.html
Words: 57
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: grocery
12/07/08 08:12 - 11ºF - ID#46991
The Boring-est Grocery List - Dec' 08
1. Wegmans Lite Wheat Bread - $2.49 (18% dietary fibre goodness per serving! Who'd have thought!)
2. Wegmans fat-free milk - $2.54 (All you snobby whole-milk lovers, YEAH, I happen to like fat-free milk. Shut the hell up.)
3. Wegmans low-fat vanilla yogurt - $1.99
4. A 6 pounder bag of Dole frozen mixed fruit - $8.59 (where else can I get peaches, pineapples, melons and berries for $1.49/pound, in the winter???)
5. Tribe 40 spices Hummus - $1.99 (I admit it. Athenos does not have this delightful flavour of hummus and I have tried several times to emulate store-bought hummus but failed miserably!)
(Yeah! I tried this particular mix of spices. What a big lie.)
6. Wegmans dry roasted unsalted peanuts - $4.49 (I <3 peanuts. Very handy for throwing at people and in food.)
7. A 5 pounder box of clementines - $5.99 (This is a great deal. Nearly 50% of Guercio prices for the same clementines. But why did they have to sell them in wooden boxes? I wonder how many trees they had to chop down for boxing these clementines. :/)
8. A 4 pounder bag of Grapefruit - $4.99 (YUM. Grapefruit! All the way from Florida. Way to go, carbon godzilla.)
9. 6 pounds of Granny Smiths - $5.94 (My staple emergency/substitute breakfast, lunch, dinner, snack etc. From New Zealand, this time - for some international carbon-smashing.)
10. Savoy Cabbage head - $0.88 (Interesting looking cabbage, I have never tried this before. I wonder how it tastes...)
11. 2.86lb Broccoli Crowns - $3.69
12. One Danish Pastry - $1.25 (They JUST took it out of the oven. I had to get it or die of longing.)
13. Keebler Club Crackers - $2.50 (this butter-loaded thing is for the office drawer that has been in a sad state of emptiness for a while now).
Total: $47.33
The receipt is telling me that apparently, I saved $1.24. OMG. I am over the moon. The boring-est grocery list has ended. It will be back to haunt you in around a week (or maybe two) next. That's it. You can all scoot now.
Permalink: The_Boring_est_Grocery_List_Dec_08.html
Words: 396
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: e:strip
12/06/08 12:00 - 21ºF - ID#46983
Happy Birthday, Janelle!!
Here's wishing you an amazing year ahead, full of delirious happiness, riotous colours & exotic awesomeness! :)
Here's to an extra-wonderful birthday!!
Permalink: Happy_Birthday_Janelle_.html
Words: 75
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: art
11/28/08 05:44 - 36ºF - ID#46876
Yeah, we totally needed this change!
Permalink: Yeah_we_totally_needed_this_change_.html
Words: 17
Location: Buffalo, NY
Category: eating in
11/28/08 02:11 - 40ºF - ID#46870
Black Friday Green Lunch
Permalink: Black_Friday_Green_Lunch.html
Words: 26
Location: Buffalo, NY
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@(e:drew): I am not sure which post that was... I am a sucker for skeletal accessories. (pun totally intended!)
@(e:libertad): I am glad you liked it. :) Though now seeing yours and (e:mike)'s comments, I am somewhat freaked out that I am being psychoanalysed and judged this minute by my groceries!!! And yes, it is the evil works. I got it because it has hydrochloric acid in it and I wanted to scrub the rust off of my bathtub. Its been annoying me for a while now. Bleach isn't doing much for it so I figured it was some limey hard-water deposit + rust. HCl does a good job of melting any Ca-Chloride or Ferrous Oxide complexes. I know it is toxic but I am intending to pour it down the drain in bulk. It actually melts away any rust and if pipes are old and rusted along the way, there is a chance that it might eat through them. It does not harm intact steel/copper. Maybe if the pipes are rusted, they need to be replaced?
@(e:mike): You are welcome! :) I share your guilty pleasure as well. Mostly, I don't have a grocery list and I try and look at people's carts to see if I might have missed something. Hehehe.. Sometimes I buy new things because people ahead of me have those things in their carts! It sounds crazy but a lot of times I remember stuff that I have forgotten to buy or try new things that I never would have otherwise.
@(e:metalpeter): LOL. What did you say about bones and milk in that post?? Now, I am curious! Fat-free milk has all the other components - proteins, carbohydrate sugars, minerals (Calcium etc.) and added Vitamin D. They just take out the fat and reserve it for other purposes such as cheese making, processed foods etc. Yes, I know. Real baking is such fat-ridden orgy. I guess that's why I think I can never be a good baker. I don't generally use milk in my cooking. There are one or two Indian speciality dishes that call for whole milk but I never make them because they also require copious amount of sugar - something I never have.
The furry creature is a hamster.
Yeah, you make an interesting point. We struggle with that very question of precise dietary assessment in all the measurement techniques we use in nutritional epidemiology.
(e:tinypliny) I do have one question that I don't get, if you have no fat that what is in the milk?, HA. Don't forget if you use it to cook you have to somehow make up for the fact that there isn't any fat even with 2%. My other question is what was that furry creature? That video led me to see some ad for a think a gum that took me to other Booby videos.
On a side note looking at what people buy when at a store like Wegmans can kinda tell something about them or there eating habits, but you don't know if they are buying for them selves and if so for how long of a time so you kinda have to guess.
How long does it take you to write & illustrate these?
- Z