Look On Aisle 5
Have you ever stopped to
calculate how much time you spend in each section of the supermarket?
Apart from the non-food
areas of drug store supplies, rubber goods, and diapers, most stores
have about
10 distinct food areas: produce, dairy, meat, ethnic foods and pasta,
canned foods,
prepared foods, drinks, frozen foods, snacks, and deli.
The areas where most of
our intake should focus, if we are watching our weight and our health,
are
always on the edges, against the wall: produce, meat, dairy. We can
easily navigate
through 80 or 90 percent of the store without bumping into them.
Next week, I’ll get
vegetables, we promise, as we wade into the packaged and frozen foods
that fit
so much more neatly into our time-starved, rat-race lives. It is so
much less time
and trouble to microwave a plate than slow simmer or steam something,
plus
there’s all that cutting and chopping time we just can’t spare.
The frozen stuff doesn’t
taste as good but luckily the manufacturers figured that out and added
butter
sauce or cheese sauce to give it more flavor, a few nuts or other
crispy
additions to add some snap – nothing is plain any more.
We stock up on packages
loaded with chemicals we can’t even pronounce. We pick up bags of quick
snacks
with nary a nutrient in the bunch. We throw fluffy breads and crackers
into our
cart, knowing they are merely edible plates.
Ten years ago, I lived in
a Korean neighborhood. I couldn’t read half of the market’s signs and
ingredients but shopped there anyway because of the atmosphere,
dominated by an
enormous variety of produce that took up at least half the store’s
space.
Trying totally new, strange-looking roots and fruits was exciting:
sometimes
marvelous, occasionally vile.
We have taken our markets
into the age of the superstores where everything is available but
nothing is
natural. What are we doing to our poor bodies? We feed them junk and
then spend
a fortune on trying to acquire the “natural” look. Fat chance (pun
intentional)!