I am trying to do better about being wasteful with food. But what amazes me is how the junk food never gets thrown out. The produce and dairy, and sometimes even meat makes it to the trash regularly. I have intentions of cooking more, but somehow never quite get there.
I have been dieting since January and use different sources to keep me motivated. You are right, there is an obsession with consuming junk food. People don't even seem to toss stale chips or cookies. I walk by the counter at work and toss anything that has been sitting open all day and if it was put in a bag (I'm talking about donuts that get wet in a plastic bag), I do toss it only to hear, Who ate the last donut? Yet people will toss an apple that was there a day or two. With junk food I hear, that you have to eat it because it is wasteful to throw out. Maybe because a bag of chips is 4 dollars and a bag of apples is $2? Anyway, this is the message I got this morning:
Wednesday Sabotage: Throwing away leftover Halloween candy would be a waste of money.
Response: The money is already gone. Eating all of these treats and gaining weight will not bring it back. Now that Halloween is over, consider throwing away or donating leftover candy and treats.
I saw a documentary on fast food and several working poor parents were interviewed and they said they bought a lot of fast food meals for their families because it was all they could afford.
I think this is not really about cost, $3 per kid, maybe $6 per adult. A simple meal of would be about the same.
I think cost is an excuse, it is more about time, convenience, instant gratification , skills (cooking, planning budgeting) and access (stores, transportation).
I grew up with a single mom in the projects of Hayward. Mom didn't know how to drive, we were on welfare. Clothing was from purple heart and we were poor. But she shopped ingredients, we were all engaged to carry backpacks to carry food home after a 2 mile walk as soon as we could walk that far.
She bought whole chickens, fresh and canned produce, and yes, hot dogs and bologna. We had end of the month struggles; pancakes, peanut butter, oatmeal... when families have access, tools and knowledge cooking at home is cheaper.