We went shopping for food this past Monday. We almost made it through August without a full food run – just a small run to our local supermarket for Diet Coke (first time we have bought since before the stay at home – we had been drinking it only a half glass with Saturday night dinner, and then only since the start of May. We also bought some other items which are not sold at the Walmart Neighborhood Market at which we have done our food shopping.
I have been using a ¼ strip of a page of paper on the refrigerator for a shopping list and then when we start to talk about going shopping I have been copying the list into a spreadsheet file. I try to sort by where I think the items are located in the store as I don't want to take out my pen and to cross items we have found off of the list and want to avoid having to double back for missed items also. This trip I did two related things – I brought a pencil stub to write with (if I felt it should not come home, I could toss it out when we left the store) and I also used the back of the shopping list (and the pencil stub) to list generally the items in the food aisles, especially those we buy. I realized my shopping list was pretty close to where the items were located anyway – I did have 2 aisles reversed in the list. Next trip I will try to list what is in which aisle of the non-food items.
Before we went I had started making a master list of items we buy or might buy in the supermarket to make sure that when making future lists I don't forget anything. (List is mostly made by husband saying or my realizing that we just took the last of something or have few enough of the item left to last beyond a week or so or one of us saying something like - “hmmm, wouldn't it be nice to have “Brunswick stew” (or something else) for dinner – do we have what we need to make it?” After I returned home I resorted the master list by which aisles I had found the items to be in. The master list is in 3 columns (so more of it can be seen at time while making up the shopping list – in a 4th column) – food, cold food, and non-food. By looking down the list as I make up our shopping list for the upcoming supermarket trip I can make sure I don't miss anything. Maybe we will continue to shop for more than a day or two at time, like we used to in the old years when I did the food shopping alone while husband was still working outside the house, it does work very well.
We found most of the items we were looking for – I could swear that supermarkets carry Chinese hard noodles – maybe it is just this store that does not. It took him 10 minutes to decide which “I think want different cookies this time” he wanted. He likes nicer than white bread when he has a sandwich, so he bought an Italian loaf baked in the store and wanted to buy rye bread. The rye bread is small compared to the white bread and the what we call – the store bread so he decided to buy 2 loaves. (We bought 4 loaves of white bread, use one and part of one fresh and freeze the rest as the expiration date approaches.) In normal years we maybe buy one loaf of white or store bread and maybe don't have any bread in the house for long periods of time. He could not decide between the “hard” and the “soft” rye breads from the same company – I told him to buy one of each and then decide which he liked better for next time, we did.
I figured while we were shopping we should buy some ant traps – generally need them on and off. We could not find the bug spray section. I asked an employee – he pointed at a rack hanging from the end of an aisle. None there – I mentioned this and he sent me to Aisle 16 – made sense to me that was dog food and stuff for the house – only another rack hanging from the end cap – guess there is not much of a calling for bug killer stuff in the supermarket? When/if we go to a regular Walmart I will check there and buy same.
And now – the big disorganization happens. In the trips we have taken to this Walmart for groceries – about 3 or 4 times since the stay at home started – there have been no lines at checkout other than at self checkout. This time it seemed there were big lines at all of the registers – and the lines ran up the aisles and people were close together. Husband picked a line. I was concerned that it was a small number of items or less checkout and went up to check. I then saw that where we normally check out seemed now to be empty. I went and checked and it was – problem – not going to take out cell phone with gloves I have on and he won't check – so I had to run back to him and then back to stand at register while he figured out how to get there. (Umm, go to back of store and up the big aisle that comes forward – this took a lot of thinking? And he walked there so slowly.)
The system he has developed for food shopping is he wear gloves and pushes the cart. I wear gloves and select the items and put them in the cart. (To his mind this keeps the cart and food unvirused.) So I have to take the items out of the cart and put them on the belt for the cashier. (Before the pandemic we only did self-checkout, now we always go to a cashier.) I put the heavier cold items first and then the lighter cold items, followed by the heavier not cold items and finally the lighter not cold items. We want the cold items bagged together so we can deal with them first when we get home before they warm up – both for wiping off with alcohol on paper towel piece and then figuring where to fit the items in the freezers (one is part of refrigerator and the other is a small dorm refrigerator sized one in our basement). Fitting them in is not easy. An example – we have been buying what I call frozen box dinners – these are the precooked, heat up, commercial company frozen meals in the freezer cases. I told him we had room for 7 of them (based on what we had used and the room I had for stacking them). He picked out 6 of them – okay, that's better as more room for something else, right? He then decides to buy a box of frozen fried chicken (which I reminded him he did not like last time and that there was much less in the box than it looks like it will have) – it almost the size of 2 of the boxed dinners. I explained to him that we could buy that – but one of the box dinners has to go back due to space limitations. He found a bag of fried chicken strips instead.
I started putting the items on the belt to be rung up. It is again a huge order as we are buying for a month and hopefully beyond. He is standing there watching me – remember, only I can touch the food. I finally suggest he go to the other end and watch how the cashier is bagging the items. He comes back. The cashier is not bagging them – they do not have any bags!! He starts to panic. I unpack as quickly as I can and then start reloading the food she has rung up into the cart, thinking all the time what to do. Oddly I had looked at the two reusable shopping bags we had gotten back at the end of February when the state was going to no disposable plastic bags and thought about about bringing them, but did not. We had brought one disposable bag as he sprays the cart with Lysol before we start using it and I like to hide in the van as it is in such demand this days. I figured we must have other bags in the van and told him we would be okay. When I asked the cashier if this was something permanent – they had run out of bags at 2 pm. (This was 5-6 pm.) Not sure if it was a question of people doing extra food shopping as heavy rain was to come for the rest of the week (which is why we were shopping Monday), it was the last day of the month or what, but good to know it was not a change in policy.
In the car I had about 4 disposable plastic shopping bags, a paper shopping bag (bigger than a supermarket bag from some other store), and clean plastic garbage bags – I am guessing leftover from craft shows we have done and used them to carry woven items or such. I put the breads in the paper shopping bag – just fit all of them (including a pack each of hot dog and hamburger rolls). I put cold items into the 4 plastic bags which took most, but not all of them. I then used one garbage bag for the rest of the cold items and a couple of garbage bags for the non-cold food.
When we got home we dealt with the cold food in the shopping bags first and then I used the empty shopping bags to bring in the rest of the cold food. After the cold food was put away, I started on the non-cold food, again using the shopping bags to bring them in – bread came in last.
After all of this time and work – we came up short a rye bread! We thought we lost it on the way on home after paying for it, but when we checked the receipt – we had never paid for it – either it fell out of the wagon, did not make it up the belt at the register – or a fairy took it out of the cart – and with how things are lately, I am so not sure it was not the last.
THOUGHT OF THE WEEK -
It pays to make a shopping list before going shopping all the time – better than a trip back for a forgotten item. Even more so now with the Corona virus about. It helps one deal with a larger order quicker and with much fewer running back for items not remembered as one went through their aisle. Today much more so than even before – one wants to go in, shop, and get out as quickly as possible to spend as little time out near people as possible.
A good Labor Day holiday to those in the U.S.
Like many others I have spent most of my life trying to deal with clutter and get organized. I am still on this journey, which by its nature will never end. I have read most of the books on organizing subjects and found none of them to match my problems. I want to share my efforts with others as a nonprofessional dealing with disorganization. Join me in my attempts to keep my life organized enough while still having a chance to enjoy it.
Thursday, September 3, 2020
COVID 19 #21 - FOOD SHOPPING DURING THE TIME OF CORONA
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