Bubba Elvis XIV wrote:tuulen wrote:
If people in New York City will pay big money for the best salmon, then people in Helsinki will, too, because everybody wants the best!
Tuulen, this is
Finland Forum, not
France Forum.
When it comes to buying food the majority of Finns care about 2 things. Firstly, the food has to be produced in Finland. Secondly, the food is cheap. The majority of Finns do not pay 'big money' for good quality food. There's even data out there to support this.
Can I ask how much time have you actually spent here? You seem to have a very romanticized view of Finland and Finns.
Yeah... good thing I wasn't drinking anything when reading that... I would have needed a new keyboard. That is just... that is
not what everybody wants here. Seriously! If you think that you have absolutely no idea about what Finland is or isn't.
I buy actual salmon for Christmas, because, well, I will splurge a bit then... and I want
gravlax, but the store bought is just waaaay to expensive for something I can make equally well at home and it's pretty easy to do anyway. But otherwise I buy rainbow trout as that is almost as good as salmon, unless it's very fatty. Sometimes you can get salmon cheap, almost at the same price as rainbow trout, so then I might actually buy salmon instead. But expensive wild salmon...

.
At least I buy expensive when I really, really want it, and cannot make it myself or find anything that comes close to it for cheaper. But if I can find something comparable for much cheaper... hell no I will buy the expensive stuff. I come from a poor family, who were even poorer in the earlier generations (all the "swedish finns are all rich" people can go stuff it as far as I'm concerned)...
I can afford a bit of luxury now, but I rather save my money where I can so I can actually afford the stuff I really want at the #!#"#"" prices I have to pay. And I assume that is the reason behind the mentality here... most of Finland has been really, really poor. When you had to worry about how to make it through the winter, getting the
best value for whatever money you had was important, not getting
the best.
The romanticized view of times gone past here foodwise is not some sumptious feast of food... it's
pettuleipä (bread made out of flour extended with the inner layers under the bark when people were runnig out of food), people working hard on
kaski to get land to make into a field, baltic herring, and various foods that is hardly eaten now as we don't
have to eat them anymore (most, including me, have no clue what most of those foods actually are). It's poor man's life and poor man's food.
Oh, do you know what the older generation calls "the spoiled younger generation"?
Pullamössö-sukupolvi. I do remember pullamössö... pulla mushed into coffee (I made it into O'Boy cocoa) until it's all soggy, and then you eat the whole thing with a spoon. Because, to the older generation, that is what the "spoiled generation" got for a treat. My generation and younger are actually spoiled waaaay beyond that, we actually got candy! Now they get it every week! When I'm old and grouchy I'm going to start to complain about the spoiled
lauantaikarkki-sukupolvi.