If you were to blindfold me, drive me to any grocery store in
Dave and I stood frozen at the front doors of a Sainsbury’s, a few blocks away from our place, as other customers flew past us, bee-lining with precision from shelf to shelf, filling their baskets. I envied them. We had no idea where to start. We had to learn how to grocery shop all over again.
I had unwittingly imagined that our experiences doing some grocery shopping in Rome across the street from our campground would be suffice practice in the art of buying food in Europe. There, we learned very quickly that in order to purchase produce, one had to bag the item, place the bag onto a weighing scale and punch in the product number. The machine then spit out a sticker that had a barcode and the price printed on it, which you stuck onto your bag. All the cashier needed to then do was scan your bag at the checkout and voila! How wonderful!
Being in an Italian grocery store was almost like going to another museum or an art gallery – new exciting packages and brands with labels you can’t read, so you’re never quite sure what’s inside. We once bought a six pack of yogurt, only to later realize that it was a yogurt drink. That was a fun surprise. They also sold wonderful, more appetizing things, like Buffalo Mozzarella, mango Tic-Tacs, and freshly made zucchini and cheese pizza for less than 2 Euros a slice.
But this wasn’t
We bought 1.7% milk in a plastic jug, smooth Tropicana orange juice (as opposed to the Tropicana orange juice with juicy bits), and three peppers – one yellow, one red, one green – that came prepackaged together in a bag. We passed by prepackaged pancakes, croissants and
Every, and I mean every, package contained the same nutritional information labels, from which you could learn a whole array of information about the product. For example, were you aware that a 4 gram serving of white, granulated sugar contains exactly 4 grams of sugar and nothing else? Did you know that sour cream is in fact suitable for vegetarians? Or that one apple provides you with one portion of your five daily servings of fruits/vegetables? I don’t know where
We bought until we couldn’t carry it anymore, a technique learned from my friend Taryn, a Torontonian who has to carry home all her shopping. “Never get a shopping cart, or else you’ll end up buying more than you can handle!” Wise advice, as we had no Toyota Echo but a moderate walk awaiting us. We unloaded our baskets onto the ridiculously small counter with no black conveyor belt and bagged everything ourselves. Our technologically lacking credit card that had to be swiped and that produced a receipt that had to be signed, was scrutinized by the cashier. It seemed to take him a while to remind himself again how exactly this stone-age era contraption worked. He examined Dave’s signature in the way that made us feel like we were underage, trying to sneak into a club. The good news was that the whole trip cost us less than twenty-five pounds – about fifty-five Canadian dollars. Not bad at all.
We carried our loot home and realized that we hadn’t actually bought our own groceries for our own home in about two months, and it felt good. We had survived the adventures of our first shopping experience, and went home to a meal that we cooked ourselves. For dessert I couldn’t wait to have some rice pudding (all to myself – when Dave sees it he throws up a little bit in his mouth), but funnily enough, our fully equipped kitchen did not come with a can opener. After poking and prodding at the can with the mystery appliance found in our drawer (we hadn’t quite figured out what this metal contraption with a black handle was used for – apparently not opening cans), Dave took to it with his Swiss Army knife. As we poured the rice pudding into a bowl we realized that the inside of the can wasn’t covered in white plastic like all tins in
4 comments:
Well welll wellllll.........Thanks for providing such a entertaining and enlightening account of your journey so far........this will be my entertainment source for the next ?? months, as you know there's never anything to watch on the "telly" (i'm guessing it's OK to use brit-slang with you guys now !!!) You know that we are living our lives vicariously thru you and enjoyed your "take" on life as newcomers to a strange but beautiful country.Brought back many memories, both of moving to Canada (time 1) Turkey, and then back to UK and finally to Canada (time 2)Keep it up.......makes great reading.......We had a U2 song this morning @ Westedge and it made me teary, as I haven't listened to them since before you guys left.....I was remninded of how far away you are......anyway that all from me......love Moma xoxo
Well welll wellllll.........Thanks for providing such a entertaining and enlightening account of your journey so far........this will be my entertainment source for the next ?? months, as you know there's never anything to watch on the "telly" (i'm guessing it's OK to use brit-slang with you guys now !!!) You know that we are living our lives vicariously thru you and enjoyed your "take" on life as newcomers to a strange but beautiful country.Brought back many memories, both of moving to Canada (time 1) Turkey, and then back to UK and finally to Canada (time 2)Keep it up.......makes great reading.......We had a U2 song this morning @ Westedge and it made me teary, as I haven't listened to them since before you guys left.....I was remninded of how far away you are......anyway that all from me......love Moma xoxo
Hey Jenn & Dave,
Excellent. We loved it. You should think about publishing this in a Canadian and UK newspaper(as is or edited!) as it will be well read. As mom said it did remind us our journey and similarities!!!
Love you all and will write soon....
Kemal
Hi guys...
GLad gto see you are eating well and not having to starve being in a foreign land and all. Hope that crazy walk didn't leave you bed ridden like that walk Jenn and I took so long ago.
It's great to read your adventures... feels like you are not so far away.
Naomi
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