Last Wednesday afternoon, on the way home from a nice lunch at Siam Noodle with GWiv and SteveZ, I decided to stop at Fox and Obel. I hadn't yet tried out their new valet parking system.
Although I pride myself on being a good shopper, I have many ongoing episodes of reckless abandon, sort of a split shopping personality if you will. There's the Good Shopper Evil Ronnie , who is proud to present to the Peapod delivery person a $1.00 off coupon for a bag or dried cat food. This Ronnie is beaming all over when he finds his 24 can case of Caffeine Free Diet Cokes on sale for $3.99. Good Shopper Evil Ronnie loves to take a couple packages of turkey wings, some flour and root vegetables to create a pot of turkey and dumplins that'll just about make his and The Lovely Donna's toes curl up, creating an austere yet satisfying feast that even Antonius would be proud of. Today, the good shopper Evil Ronnie bought one of those large dressed whole catfish at Issacson and Stein, for about two bucks a pound, which, after cutting into thin steaks, and breading with a flour/cornmeal mixture, became wonderfully cheap and delicious fried catfish sandwiches (fried in a combination of peanut oil and Bruce Cook's organic lard) with homemade remoulade sauce and squishy, fresh S.Rosen onion rolls. No burnt flour taste here

and dirt cheap.
Well, last week at F$O, I was the other Evil Ronnie. At the butcher counter, I picked up a 2 lb. + piece of boneless dry aged prime strip loin at $28.95 per lb., to roast later in the week. I felt a little guilty, but kept moving to the right, over to the seafood counter, where I picked up three beautiful swordfish steaks, about an inch thick each, going for just under twenty a pound.
As I headed over to the cashier, I grabbed a diet coke for the ride home.
$.12 back from a hundred.