Daily Deal: Blue Apron 3 Delivered Meals for 2 People
from the good-deals-on-cool-stuff dept
Whether you're new to the kitchen or you're looking to spice things up with exciting, seasonal recipes, Blue Apron will deliver just what you need. It's simple - you'll get fresh, gourmet recipes and the highest quality, sustainably-sourced ingredients to bring them to life. The Blue Apron 3 Meals for 2 People delivers pre-portioned ingredients for 3 recipes to be cooked & enjoyed by 2 people delivered to your door, and it's on sale now for $27 (54% off) in the Techdirt Deals store. You can also select a family plan where you get enough for 2 recipes for four people for $35 (49% off).Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
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I hope what they actually box is better than what they used in their promo pictures, because that onion and garlic are obviously foreign imports, which makes me question the sustainably-sourced claim.
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It's hard to quit
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Unless they are marketing their delivery service to home-bound people who can't get out and shop for themselves, what is the point of having perishable food shipped to people's houses?
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Yeah, I don't really get it either, suppose it saves some time shopping and looking for a recipe, but the trade-off seems a bit expensive in time and money.
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Re: "sustainably-sourced"
It's a silly term for any kind of farm produce, which by definition is always going to be "sustainable" as long as there's a market for it.
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No mention of organic ingredients...
Home cooked meals are definitely a good thing, and this is still a step in the right direction.
We need to escape the processed food industry.
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This prevents purchasing more than necessary, and as such, wasting food/money in the process.
Whether that's a reality or not, I don't know.
They also do all the work of choosing what you'll be making, and finding the recipe. I'm not sure if that's a bonus or not, but people have become immensely lazy.
Furthermore, it seems we've reached an era where people would rather order their product than go get it themselves - chalk that up to the "Amazon effect".
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Re: It's hard to quit
But then reading the terms, I realized I would have to expend effort to cancel after the promotional was done. That's where I drew the line - I absolutely hate services like that.
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Been there, done that
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Re: Been there, done that
Cooking spinach, for example, is something I do to salvage spinach which has gone bad. Four bucks worth of supposedly fresh spinach turns out to be going soggy, well before the sell-by date, so I chop it up and cook it down into a spicy goulash dish which could equally well hve been made with sixty-nine cents worth of canned spinach. Ditto for cauliflower and broccoli au grautin. My rule of thumb is that if something needs to be cooked anyway, then frozen or canned is just as good, and can be gotten in quantity and stored in the freezer or on the shelf until needed.
Similarly, I prefer to eat cheese on good bread, or on a neutral cracker. I accompany it with pateurized fruit juice, instead of wine, but the principle is much the same. It is when cheese is "off" that one uses it for cooking.
I was discussing food with my mother recently, and she pointed out that, at nearly sixty, I am the last generation to have been routinely fed at home. After that, the women all had jobs, and their cooking became full of compromises.
Here are some suggestions for young people wanting to learn to cook.
Cook a simple vegetarian dish, based on canned or frozen vegetables, with no meat, butter, or oils, and no cheese except for a topping of Parmesan cheese. Use lots of herbs and spices, and try out different flavors. On a vegan or near-vegan basis, it is much harder to go wrong. Your first excursion into meat-cooking should be a can of tuna (chunk light), which you can make into chili, curry, etc., or into Ceviche with lime juice, tarragon, etc. Add a cheese tray, with the best bread you can find, and assorted fruit juice; and the best salad you can manage, to make a complete meal.
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If you wnat to get dried herbs and spices by mail, that is a sensible proposition.
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Pendery's World of Chiles & Spices
http://www.penderys.com/
This is an old established company (1870), in its fifth generation of family management, which has made a successful transition to the internet.
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You don't want to be getting your recipes prescribed to you with your groceries. Get a set of cookbooks
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Adele Davis, Let's Cook It Right (there are editions up to 1972, I have the 1962 edition)
https://www.amazon.com/Lets-Cook-Right-Adele-Davis/dp/B00AMXSEFS/ref=sr_1_1/161-7199760-8072 528?ie=UTF8&qid=1470848104&sr=8-1&keywords=lets+cook+it+right
https://www.amazon.com/Lets -Cook-Right-Adelle-Davis/dp/0151501661/ref=sr_1_2/161-7199760-8072528?ie=UTF8&qid=1470848104& ;sr=8-2&keywords=lets+cook+it+right
This is one of the standard good cookbooks., a book which has stood the test of time.
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A couple of vegetarian cookbooks:
Frances Moore Lappe, Diet for a Small Planet, 1971 et, seq.
https://www.amazon.com/Diet-Small-Planet-20th-Anniversary/dp/0345321200/ref=sr_1_1/154-1573456-3 862909?ie=UTF8&qid=1470848724&sr=8-1&keywords=diet+for+a+small+planet
and the companion volume:
Ellen Buchman Ewald, Recipes for a Small Planet, 1973 et. seq.
https://www.amazon.com/Recipes-Small-Planet-Ellen-Buchman/dp/0345324927/ref=sr_1_1/154-1573456-3 862909?ie=UTF8&qid=1470849056&sr=8-1&keywords=recipes+for+a+small+planet
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Karen Brooks, The Complete Vegetarian Cookbook, 1976
https://www.amazon.com/Complete-Vegetarian-Cookbook-Karen-Brooks/dp/0671805525/ref=sr_1_sc_1/154 -1573456-3862909?ie=UTF8&qid=1470849774&sr=8-1-spell&keywords=keren+brooks+the+complete+ vegetarian+cookbook
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Frederick Rosengarten, The Book Of Spices, 1969, 1973
https://www.amazon.com/Book-Spices-Frederick-Rosengarten/dp/0515032204/ref=sr_1_1/154-1573456-38 62909?ie=UTF8&qid=1470850040&sr=8-1&keywords=frederick+rosengarten+the+book+of+spices
An encyclopedia of spices, with recipes.
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