In this topsy turvy world of Englandishers and Scontlandos publicly brexiting one another in the street, the price of everything (except one's labour funnily enough) seems to have gone up a ton.
About four years ago perhaps, the lot near the end of my road (which was once a Texaco garage beside the entrance to the M53, much-loved as it represented sacks of sweets for the nice car journey to a summer holiday with my grandparents, and a pub I knew nothing about called the Twenty Row) was the site of a shiny Lidl supermarket.
Aldi and Lidl to me have always been the closest thing to walking into a parallel universe. Everything is there, exactly where it should be, but everything is completely different. I was always disappointed that the magazine racks in both shops don't feature completely made-up celebrities like they really were from another world.
Sometimes I'd go in there for little things like milk or sugar or toilet rolls, stuff that you wouldn't expect to majorly change across an interdimensional jaunt, but never for big things. Or the food stuff basically. But now, I kinda go there for all kinds of stuff, and I'm surprised.
I was inspired to write this since the price of fishfingers (Birds Eye thank you please, I don't know if Ross are still around but they better not show their face around here again) has gone up as well, and the boxes of 30 that you could easily get at Asda seem to have disappeared and everywhere now only sells them in boxes of 10 or 12.
I'm an incredible picky eater. My complete diet consists of probably less than a dozen things that I can name, and I hate trying to make do with things I'm unfamiliar with.
I'm uncertain about eating the Asda ones, only having eaten them since my mum didn't notice they were different when she got them out of the freezer and my dad gave the most parenty 'oh they looked the same in the shop I didn't know' excuse ever. Granted, they tasted pretty nice and I couldn't tell the difference but there was a principle at stake here damn it. I'm not going to be manipulated into eating unfamiliar fishfingers, nice or not. Asda foodstuff varies in quality all over the place, like the milkshake bad, the juice okay, the buns delicious IF they're soft otherwise they're terrible, ham slices delicious but sausages and sausage rolls disgusting. There doesn't seem to be a quality floor. I rely on fishfingers to live, I don't need to be worrying about that kind of crap.
Which brings us to tonight, where in the freezer we are out of fishfingers again and it's quarter past nine in the evening and I'm playing F.E.A.R. Perseus Mandate and I am one hungry Hungry Gary. Lidl is less than two minutes away. What'll be the harm right? I'll get a bit of zig and a bit of zag and cook it and hopefully something will taste nice.
Well bugger me if Lidl's 'Ocean Sea' cod fish fingers aren't creamy and delicious. The potato waffles were nice too, though like a lot of potato waffles they require a ridiculously high oven setting so you can't cook anything with them unless you keep an eye on the lot constantly.
I'd had some thoroughly rank fish fingers and beefburgers as a kid. Usually at crappy birthday parties for other kids in school held at leisure centres and stuff. Rock hard tiny fish fingers and floppy greasy horrible thin burgers. It was enough to almost put me off eating food ever again.
But tonight I'm officially logging my epiphany that these crazy shops that have landed from another world are indeed here in peace.
Lidl: Obscenely delicious strawberry 'delbona' yoghurt drinks - yoghurt you can DRINK. Like their super cheap and nice white chocolate (Aldi has delicious white chocolate too. In fact frickin' Euro Shopper, that mainstay of newsagents all over the country, has delicious white chocolate. Asda have a whole bunch of own-brand chocolate, but they DON'T DO WHITE.), I daren't touch it in case I immediately put on a stone every time I go in the shop. The ham slices are good, which surprised the heck out of me. Bacon too. Haven't had the courage to try the sausages. They used to have the better tinned mandarin segments out of the two shops (Asda's are FUCKING FOUL), but I think they might have changed them recently.
Aldi: Carino raspberry shampoo, love it. Diplomat decaf tea bags. Their Fruit & Grain bars are a rip-off off the Kellogg's Nutri-grain bars, but they're apparently ripping off the NGs from a couple generations back. NGs are crunchy and cake-like now, but FAGbars are more grainy and less sweet. I feel like I should have a pallet of these things in case of a disaster. Peach halves. Don't think Lidl sell these.
I used to eat either peach halves and mandarin segments from a tin at work every lunchtime. It's fruit right? What do you mean it's all sugar? Geez... you try to make an effort, and all you get it 'no ur doin it wrong'.
I live with my family at the moment, but I've been wondering if I only lived next to a Lidl or Aldi, would I actually need to go to Asda or Tesco for anything now? Until Aldi or Lidl stock Wall's Sausage Rolls then I guess I'm stuck.
What stuff have you found in unusual supermarkets that you found really nice?
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