Quoting Dave Drum to Shawn Highfield <=-
Apparently I live where food proces are very "reasonable".
Totally around the bend. What is holding you to the area you
are in? Surely if NWT has lower food prices than your locale -
even with their loooooong supply lines and transport costs -
there must be somewhere in Canuckistan more tenable price-wise
and crime-rate wise.
JIM WELLER wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-
Apparently I live where food prices are very "reasonable".
You certainly do. You are surrounded by productive, relatively cheap farmland and have numerous processors nearby who occasionally dump surpluses locally below cost. Case in point: your 49 cent chicken
thighs. Feed grains run $5 per bushel for barley and $5.85 for
corn and slightly more for livestock feed grade wheat that
doesn't make the cut to become flour. There's 48 to 56 pounds to a
bushel. It takes 2.5 pounds of feed to grow one pound of chicken meat
in 8 weeks. So the farmers' cost alone for feed is at least 67 cents
per pound of chicken raised, never mind their other direct and
indirect costs. The average producer price for a live chicken is
currently 84 cents per pound.
Totally around the bend. What is holding you to the area you
are in? Surely if NWT has lower food prices than your locale -
even with their loooooong supply lines and transport costs -
there must be somewhere in Canuckistan more tenable price-wise
and crime-rate wise.
Alberta has the highest income and lowest taxes in Canada with
moderate housing costs: Average household income is $126K, median
$94K. Even with Covid issues the unemployment rate is currently 7.9%
and house prices average $353K. In Peace River which is a pleasant
farm town without any nearby oil and gas activity, the average is
just $268K with older mobile homes in parks as cheap as $24K and one bedroom condos in an older walk-up starting at $42K.
Quoting Dave Drum to Jim Weller <=-
Apparently I live where food prices are very "reasonable".
processors nearby who occasionally dump surpluses locally below
cost/ The average producer price for a live chicken is
currently 84 cents per pound.
Is that in CAD or U$?
Currently my local Hy-Vee has "Whole Chicken: No added hormones
or steroids. No antibiotics ever." @ U$1.47 lb which is a
decent price point.
They also have 10# bags of leg quarters for U$6.90 (69c/lb).
New York Times is doing its best to push dark meat chicken in its
recipe postings.
Title: Samuel's Chicken Adobo
JIM WELLER wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-
Currently my local Hy-Vee has "Whole Chicken: No added hormones
or steroids. No antibiotics ever." @ U$1.47 lb which is a
decent price point.
Indeed. A low and very reasonable markup for slaughtering,
processing, transporting and retailing.
They also have 10# bags of leg quarters for U$6.90 (69c/lb).
So they have jumped up 20 cents or 41%. Relatively speaking, that's
worse than the price increases here.
New York Times is doing its best to push dark meat chicken in its
recipe postings.
Yeah, dark meat is becoming quite popular and is no longer cheap.
Title: Samuel's Chicken Adobo
Neekha's man Patrick has an Acadian dad and a Filipina Mom. She says
she used to like adobo when she was first introduced to it but has
had it far too often now and is completely tired of it. Apparently
her MIL is a poor cook so I offered to send Neekha my best adobo
recipes from trusted sources but she very smartly declined, not
wanting to upstage the woman.
Spanish, Mexican, Puerto Rican and Filipino adobos are all quite
different from each other.
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Adobo (Pork in Adobo)
Categories: Mexican, Pork, Chilies, Sauces
Yield: 6 Servings
Quoting Dave Drum to Jim Weller <=-
The 49c/lb deals I only ever see at Humphrey's Market - and I
think they have some "special arrangement" with Jones Poultry -
a nearby chooken processor.
That is the sort of adobo with which I am most familiar.
Title: Adobo (Smoked Chile Marinade)
Categories: Latino
3 lg Oranges
1 Lime
3 Chipotle chilies
2 ts Dried oregano
1/2 ts Cumin seed
JIM WELLER wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-
The 49c/lb deals I only ever see at Humphrey's Market - and I
think they have some "special arrangement" with Jones Poultry -
a nearby chooken processor.
Yeah, that's below cost. Jones is missing a huge opportunity.
Canadian processors export tonnes of frozen legs to China where they command a premium price, higher than breast meat. They also do a
major business exporting frozen chicken feet. Your tariff wars gave
us a huge advantage in recent years.
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