It's tough being an exclusive locavore, I try to eat only as local as my grocery store permits... I wish there's some coop for local produces in my 'hood...
In your hood, you talking ghetto now girl Im not sure but i think in montreal you might just be able to find that.
LOL, I was lazy, is all. In fact, even in Montreal you can't quite find exclusively locavore meals unless you visit Jean-Talon everyday at 6am... Which I don't think I can handle...
I will never succed in trying to be a 'locavore' as I always prefer the international products. Thai fruits, Japanese sashimi, German sausages and asparagus etcetc. And I'll be too squeemish too for chopping animals like a Flemish Giant rabbit or some chickens. Can't even eat it when I once saw how one of my grandma's killed a chicken for dinner.
Thus my notion of "I try"... I would buy Canadian (Quebec/Ontario to be exact) berries over those from US, but if certain produces simply CANNOT be grown elsewhere, I still buy and eat them, though definitely at a lower frequency...
^would you even buy the Canadian ones even if there are more expensive or less tasty than the ones from outside Canada (or Quebec/Ontario)
Hmmmm, so far that hadn't happened, since the local ones are in fact fresher... But I get what you mean by the whole more expensive drill. I would say... it depends. -sweat I don't mind paying up to 20% more for local produce... But if it's extreme cases like $2 pint of blueberry vs. $6 pint of blueberry, I got to say I must shamefully deny being a locavore for a while... -^_^
Lemme guess, you never went grocery shopping in HK outside of supermarket? You betrayed Canadian products. -shock
Well, I am as true to Canadian products as the next broke student. And I think the 20% margin of preference I give Canadian products is very generous already... -unsure