- Messages
- 10,939
- Location
- My mother's basement
Anyone else getting hungry?
Congratulations to you for having the financial resources to be able to do so. But most people are not so fortunate and must rely on what's commercially available.
The other side of that coin is that foods last a lot longer now.
The type of chemicals used changed radically in the late 30's with chlorine-based pesticides and insecticides (chlordane, lindane, endrin, DDT...etc), which were orginally developed for wartime. The 1940's through 1960's became known as the "Golden Age of Pesticides" due to their ubiquitous use. If you ate produce from 1936-1972, you can bet it was loaded with these.
HudsonHawk,
Because it is no longer produced or available locally. Shortcut growing cycles to increase profitability meaning ungrown products, transit times from abroad or the other end of the country, and preservatives and pesticides have a definite affect on the foods.
Maybe I'm relying on my own memory too much, but I grew up on canned (sometimes frozen) vegetables, soups, etc. No kid is going to eat his vegetables if they are dumped from a can and then cooked to a sludge.
Congratulations to you for having the financial resources to be able to do so. But most people are not so fortunate and must rely on what's commercially available.
I had to laugh when I read this. When I was growing up everybody had a vegetable garden. Housewives made their own jams, pickles, and preserves. Later the deep freeze made storing your garden produce easier. Buying everything from the grocery store was an affectation for the rich.
Best thing in the world to eat is raw carrots, straight out of the dirt. Wipe them off on your sleeve first if you're spleeny.
I had to laugh when I read this. When I was growing up everybody had a vegetable garden. Housewives made their own jams, pickles, and preserves. Later the deep freeze made storing your garden produce easier. Buying everything from the grocery store was an affectation for the rich.
You can cut the cost of meat by half or more, by buying beef and pork by the side or quarter at the abatoir or slaughterhouse. Some of the neighbors would club together and buy a critter from a farm or auction barn and save even more.Having a vegetable garden is one thing. Most people I know have one now. But substistence farming and raising and slaughtering your own beef and pork requires resources that most people simply don't have today.
Congratulations to you for having the financial resources to be able to do so. But most people are not so fortunate and must rely on what's commercially available.
Hey, lay off, that's his modus operandi you're talking about!Do you see the contradiction here in your jump to unfounded conclusions?