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Turkey dinner for just $189 a plate

Posted Nov 09 2007, 12:25 PM by Donna Freedman
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The turkey ads showed up in my mailbox the other day. This week I can get a gobbler for 39 to 79 cents a pound, or even for free if I were to spend $100 at one store.

Compare that with the $4.99-a-pound cost for the "heritage" (exotic breed) turkeys featured in a recent article in Pacific Northwest, the Seattle Times Sunday magazine.

Author Lynda V. Mapes described supermarket turkeys as having "cottony meat" and as being "so blanderized by industrial-style production it can be like eating sawdust with butter."

The chef of a renowned regional restaurant orders the heirloom turkeys each year, Mapes wrote. "Not just any bird, after all, would do for his nine-course holiday dinner that goes for $189 per plate and up, including wine."

Last year's menu included a choice of poached white meat on king bolete mushroom bread pudding, confit of leg on mashed delicata squash with shallot, or herbed crépinette on cabbage with quince. Then there were the side dishes, like cauliflower fenugreek soup with slivered scallop, Montana paddlefish caviar on sea urchin flan, and "gently roasted" black cod with carrot lemon-thyme broth and three colors of beets.

I don't doubt that those high-end birds taste terrific. But I cook the cheapest turkey I can find each November, and have yet to encounter the flavor of either cotton or buttered sawdust.

Shrinking paychecks, social statements
I'm all for genetic diversity in both livestock and seeds, and definitely believe in the concept of family farms. (I grew up in a family-farm region.) But this article rubbed me the wrong way, and not just because I had to look up the word "crépinette."

What I inferred from the piece is that anyone with any brains/class would go for an heirloom bird, with or without the paddlefish caviar. They're yummy. They're part of sustainable agriculture. Their feathers are beautiful. What's not to like?

The fact is, many Americans have a hard time paying for regular groceries, let alone Thanksgiving feasts. The turkeys from the farm mentioned in the article average 8 to 13 pounds, or $39.92 to $64.87. At 39 cents per pound, the cost of supermarket gobblers in that size range is $3.12 to $5.07.

For some people, $39.92 is a week's worth of groceries. They don't have what Wal-Mart chief executive Lee Scott called "the economic luxury of making a broader social statement." Scott was referring to the fact that many people need to stretch their dollars as far as possible.

That goes for groceries as well as gewgaws. It's not that low- and middle-income people don't want to support family farms and sustainable agriculture. It's that they can't afford to do it. This week, eggs are a dollar a dozen at Albertsons and $2.99 a dozen at PCC Natural Markets. Which do you think a cash-strapped buyer will choose?

Incidentally, a crépinette is a small sausage wrapped in caul fat.

Shopping for a better world?
I think concepts like food co-ops and community-supported agriculture are swell ideas. But not everyone can pay the freight -- and some people can be a little sanctimonious about their own choices.

I personally know a couple who choose to buy mostly organic foods because they want their kids to have the healthiest possible start. To do this they must sacrifice in other ways. They don't make a big deal about it. They just do it.

Meanwhile, some of the people who rant about Wal-Mart and factory farms and diets for small planets do so from a position of privilege. They can afford to shop at specialty markets and sip shade-grown, fair-trade organic coffee because they have good jobs and/or don't have kids to feed and house.

I had this discussion with an old friend and fellow frugalist. He wondered about people who call for boycotts of big-box stores.  These people may be well-intentioned, but he believes they are not taking into account "the real needs of, say, a single parent on low wages desperately looking for the cheapest diapers she can find."

Anyone who knows me knows that I'm all about intentional buying. To me, that means being realistic about the money you have. A minimum-wage earner probably doesn't shop for a better world: "Are these carrots organic? Is this chicken free-range?" He or she is more likely to be in the position of, "I've got $30 left until payday. How am I going to eat?"

That's why people shop at Wal-Mart, and why people buy the cheapest turkeys they can find: because it's what they can afford.

To paraphrase F. Scott Fitzgerald, the rich are different -- they can afford Thanksgiving dinner that costs $189 a plate and up. Including wine.

Comments

 

I'm all about purchasing a turkey at Wal-Mart and slow cooking over night.  Its just as juicy and flavorful as the $189 turkey, and the wine I can purchase a bottle of great wine at Trader Joes for $1.99.  What I want to know is, being from Montana, what is happening to the rest of the paddlefish?  The meat from this fish is wonderful poached.

Be thankful, that is what this Holiday is about... pessimism and negativity always run rampant, sort of like cancer.  Cure it with thankfulness.

i agee there is to much waste in us.they can throw away all that food.but who pays for all democrats and republicans food ,every one who donatesto their campaigns so they dont care if it goes to the trash.i help the food banks for people who are out of jobs or having rough times.

I could not with a clear conscience spend $189 for a meal knowing there are thousands of homeless people needing food and shelter. Let`s help those in need

Thank you, thank you, thank you!!  Unfortunately, the better-off-than-the-rest-of-us do not have a clue when it comes to buying groceries or staples.  Yes, I do shop @ Walmart because I can go there and know that they will have what I want, at a lower price.  I do not have the luxury of driving around for price comparisons when gas is over $3.00 a gallon.  Also, I shop at a discount grocery store that will offer free turkeys or Butterballs @ $0.39/pound if you spend over $50.  My husband died three years ago, with no life insurance and I am trying to pay his bills as well as my own and raise two daughters and a two-and-a-half year old grandson.  Yes, my daughters work and go to school.  I have a fairly good job, but money never goes far enough.  Walmart, Sams, and discount grocery stores are all I can afford.  I would love to be more polically responsible when it comes to supporting family-farms and lovingly raised organic turkeys, but it is not in my future at this point.  Please do not label me as non-caring, just try living in my world for a day.

There are several local  supermarkets at which I shop.  I have discount cards for all of them.  I constantly check flyers an ads for each market and shop for discounted items at these stores.  10 of these for 10 dollars, buy 1 get 2 free, etc.  It's amazing how much I've saved doing this. As far as expensive foods and condiments, All I need is what I buy at the markets and some imagine and I can create a gourment meal for myself in minutes using oridinary foods.  I'm j ust always thankful that I can HAVE a meal, no matter what it is.  

The rich will always be rich and they will do what they wish with their money.  I will not tell them what to do with it because I do not want anyone telling me what to to with mine.  As long as my family is happy, well fed, and well cared for, who needs to "butt in" my business?  The rich will always be extravagant to us because they can do things that we can't afford to do.  I do not care what they do and I do not want to know what they do.  There are just a few things that I want--bring our guys home, let my family grow and be happy, and everyone else--KEEP THEIR NOSE OUT OF MY BUSINESS!  PERIOD!

It would seem that some of you have forgotten that we live in a system that is based on supply and demand.  Quite simply, you don't have to purchase this exotic turkey for $4.99 lbs.  I am personally going to spend $8.99 lbs. (sale price) on a ribeye roast this season, and not because I am RICH, but because I SAVED for it and wanted something nice on the table this holiday.  In addition, I felt that some of comments on the blog were distrubingly socialistic in view, nothing is owed to any of us.  Work for what you want, and work for what you need.  Take responsiblity.

We are in the category of not "having" to shop at a discount, but the money I save when I do is better spent on our community.  One of our local churches prepares a community Thanksgiving meal....FREE TO ALL WHO COME.  In our small town of less than 2000 people, they served over 500 last year and hope to do even more this year.  My husband and I are THANKFUL to financially contribute to this event.  The food and fellowship are wonderful though surely not "designer."

I earn a little over minimum wage, but no one tells me how to spend what I make.  I donate to whomever I choose without having to hear how the money could have been used elsewhere.  Just because someone else was luckier, smarter, worked harder or was born into money, does that mean they can't use their money the way they want to.  Maybe Mr./Ms. Rich are too busy earning their money or contributing their time and money to some other organization that they don't have the time to make their own Thanksgiving Dinner.  Maybe they simply want a meal that they don't have the talent to create.  It's their money and we don't have the right to tell them not to spend it on a $189 plate dinner just because we can't afford to do the same thing.  Are you so certain that if you were rich that you wouldn't spend some of your money frivolously too?  I don't have much, but every week I waste at least $20 going out to eat when I can prepare the same meal at home at a cheaper cost and it would most likely taste better.  I'm sure that $20 could have helped someone in need, but I am someone who needs to spend what I earn the way I choose.

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