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PraiseBeToScience on scored.co
25 days ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)3 children
Unrelated to EBT, but I've recommended to a lot of younger people just setting out on their own to bite the bullet and pay for things like Blue Apron for a couple of months, because nobody knows how to fucking cook, and those things do an excellent job teaching you how to cook.
It's obviously more expensive than just the raw ingredients (to some degree, often times those meal kits have stuff in them that can be hard to find in a normal grocery store in smaller quantities - ever tried to find arugala? If they even have it, it's in a giant fucking tub that you may end up throwing away half of), but you have no choice but to learn to cook.
Kids don't know how to cook, they can barely fucking do simple head maths.
25 days ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
True, but I will also add to this that a regular ordinary cookbook does a lot of good things. Look for something specialized on raw food, with only recipes containing raw ingredients and no slop. Some of these even comes with weekly menu's, including a shopping list for weekly shopping.
Many meal kits are often expensive and tend to come with customized packages dimensioned for a fixed set of meals. These may contain additional processing. If you cycle two or three menues with a high amount of variation, you'll get two or three week cycles, were many of the raw ingredients will be circulated properly and eventually you'll remember what to buy when going to the store. That way you'll always have fresh meat and vegetables in the fridge.
A major barrier when living far away from a store is that you tend to not wanna go there just because you're missing one ingredient. That's were a lot of people sadly fall back to processed slop. All by design because niggers stealing food causes many stores to shut down, creating so called food deserts. Although this problem also exist in rural areas, tho without the niggers.
It's obviously more expensive than just the raw ingredients (to some degree, often times those meal kits have stuff in them that can be hard to find in a normal grocery store in smaller quantities - ever tried to find arugala? If they even have it, it's in a giant fucking tub that you may end up throwing away half of), but you have no choice but to learn to cook.
Kids don't know how to cook, they can barely fucking do simple head maths.
Many meal kits are often expensive and tend to come with customized packages dimensioned for a fixed set of meals. These may contain additional processing. If you cycle two or three menues with a high amount of variation, you'll get two or three week cycles, were many of the raw ingredients will be circulated properly and eventually you'll remember what to buy when going to the store. That way you'll always have fresh meat and vegetables in the fridge.
A major barrier when living far away from a store is that you tend to not wanna go there just because you're missing one ingredient. That's were a lot of people sadly fall back to processed slop. All by design because niggers stealing food causes many stores to shut down, creating so called food deserts. Although this problem also exist in rural areas, tho without the niggers.