This past week I helped watch my friends’ four kids while she and her husband were on a getaway to Bali. One morning I had the three-year-old with me and we ran
into a store to buy some vegetables before we had to do kindergarten pickup.
I was just hoping for some carrots or maybe some green
beans, but on this auspicious day, the store happened to have broccoli, which is quite a treat
here. I was in a hurry, and the broccoli
– individually wrapped in plastic wrap – looked decent enough (i.e. no visible bugs and not too much mold) so I grabbed four and
checked out.
When we got to school to pick up the kindergarten boys who
live on Pos 7, I noticed the car was starting to smell weird. The boys confirmed it for me when they hopped
in the car.
“Ew, what’s that stinky smell?” one exclaimed, pinching his
nose.
I glanced to the back of the car, where my groceries
were, hoping it wasn't the broccoli I just bought. “Ah, who knows. We’ll just ride with the windows down.”
“But – but – there might be drunks!” one boy protested. Our neighborhood is known for drunks and even our kids know the "windows-up" protocol for driving up our road.
“It’ll be ok,” I assured him. “I just came from Pos 7 and
there were no drunks out today.”
When I got home and finally dealt with the groceries, the
first broccoli I unwrapped released a terrible rotten smell into the
kitchen. Into the pig bucket it went.
‘Maybe it was just that one,’ I thought hopefully, gingerly opening the next one. Nope, all four stalks were rotten – they
looked fine on the outside but were positively nasty once opened.
I related this story to some friends this past weekend and they laughed and
commiserated with me and we started to share rotten food stories. One friend had just bought some cream cheese
that was all crumbly – if cream cheese is frozen this is what happens. Another friend recently had a UHT box of milk
explode on her at home, just after buying it from the store.
You never know what you'll find in the grocery store |
We shared all the things we have to do at a grocery store.
Sniff the butter (recently David and I were at a store and saw a friend by the refrigerator - David sidled up to me and said, 'Did you see her? She was surreptitiously smelling the butter.' I shrugged. 'What's the big deal? How else will you know if it's good?'). Squeeze the flour to make sure it’s not got a hole in the bag
(that means bugs). Make sure something is still vacuum packed if it’s supposed
to be. Squeeze fruits and vegetables for freshness.
We learn these things the hard
way. Some things we can catch before we buy them. Others are truly a gamble – like meat. Once I bought ground beef that smelled like a donkey when I cooked
it up.
But we soldier on – because, well, we gotta eat. And we laugh, too. And we don’t judge each other
when we see one another sniffing butter at the store.
1 comment:
Shopping is "Iffy" here too but nothing like what you have to face every day. God Bless you ALL!!!!!
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