Shoppers at a Minneapolis Cub Food Store explain what they've done to combat higher food prices this year.
27, after-school program coordinator
Used to: Eat a lot of fancy, "bourgeoisie food," such as expensive olives.
Now: Buys basics and cheaper store brands; doesn't eat out as much, takes lunch to work, brings her own coffee.
"But if you look at all the staples - rice, bread, milk, eggs - the price of everything is going up. So it's impossible to avoid."
51, photographer
Used to: Eat out a lot.
Now: Buys vegetables at farmers' markets and makes soups in big batches and freezes it.
"Potato soup is easy, cheap and good. ... I hardly ever eat fast food anymore."
49, commercial mechanic
Used to: Buy more meat and fruit.
Now: Can't afford much fruit; stretches the food he buys.
"Casseroles are good, because you can add a pound of hamburger to some noodles and probably feed three people. You won't get full, but you'll survive."
21, supervisor with United Postal Service
Used to: Eat what he wanted, including ice cream and orange juice.
Now: Shops the deals, has pared back on orange juice. "It seems like everything that's good for you - milk, bread, cereal, vegetables, fruit -- has gone up."
48, graphic designer
Used to: Buy steaks and higher-end beef.
Now: Only buys good meat when it's on sale; uses coupons.
"It's an event to go out to eat with my kids."
35, a Christian worker
Used to: Buy lunch out, eat more packaged food.
Now: Makes a big supper, uses leftovers for two days of lunches.
"If it's packaged, like a boxed pizza, it's only good for one meal. But if I bake it myself, it lasts longer."
Chris Serres
Just as Lawrence Kazmerski, a top official at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, was about to give the keynote address at the University of Minnesota's annual E3 conference at the RiverCentre in St. Paul, the lights went out, bathing the audience in darkness and a deep sense of irony.
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