tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3656881569336871801.post8546999981469130267..comments2024-02-23T11:07:06.781+02:00Comments on 8 Months In Ukraine: Ukrainian flavors: courageous and creative!Crazy About Ukrainehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16990920799981173553noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3656881569336871801.post-21919186470151197752011-10-11T13:05:53.097+03:002011-10-11T13:05:53.097+03:00Wow, I am shocked to hear that about buckwheat and...Wow, I am shocked to hear that about buckwheat and (especially) cucumbers! I thought for sure those products would tend to be local ones!Crazy About Ukrainehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16990920799981173553noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3656881569336871801.post-36515837094958198402011-10-11T11:18:49.241+03:002011-10-11T11:18:49.241+03:00Well, Katherine, in the past times Ukraine was qui...Well, Katherine, in the past times Ukraine was quite extensively developed in agricultural sense.<br /><br />But now there're only certain kinds of food that are grown or raised around here for mass market. E.g. chicken, some pork, _medium_-sized potatoes, wheat products (the list isn't over but it's not that long). Nowadays one rarely can find in regular shops veal or _big_ apples, tomatoes or cucumbers etc that were grown/raised locally.<br /><br />You might be shocked, but even buckwheat (which is a folklore grain grown for centuries in Ukraine) had to be bought in China...<br /><br />Of course one can find quite decent home-grown food on food markets like Благбаз or Алексеевский (near one of the corporate classes you teach), though I wouldn't recommend for a foreigner like to go there alone.<br /><br />PS: When I mentioned 'Ukraine is a 3rd world country' I meant that the country doesn't enforce food standards, thus helding a passive role in this politics. Though we are not yet a 'failed state' like Somalia.RomanThttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14050938392796656569noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3656881569336871801.post-54109597549530552082011-10-08T12:21:33.525+03:002011-10-08T12:21:33.525+03:00Hi Roman,
Thanks for your concern. Don't worry...Hi Roman,<br />Thanks for your concern. Don't worry, I'm not a junk food kind of girl. I just bought these so I could at least take a picture of them and try them. I tend to eat more гречка and borsch than potato chips!<br /><br />Also, about food being healthier here.....yes and no. I think it is healthier in certain ways: fruit, meat, and vegetables. For example, in the US there's always a lot of wax on the fruit I eat (apples, etc) and usually there's pesticides on the non-organic veggies (cucumbers, peppers, etc). It seems like people grow fruit and veggies more naturally in Ukraine. That post "ode to Ukrainian apples"....that was one of the few times I'd tasted an apple not coated in wax! Also, the meat here is ... uh ... fresher ... right? They're not shipping it from Vladivostok to Ukraine. It didn't come from a cow raised with 8,000 other cattle and fed antibiotics and corn, right? Or am I wrong? <br /><br />You may well be right in the sense that the food safety industry is less developed here and people's safety doesn't seem to be as important. There's definitely a lot of chemical-laden products on the grocery shelves and those chemicals probably aren't tested as carefully as the chemicals in the US. Also, basic sanitary measures are sometimes...lacking, perhaps.<br /><br />What do you think? Do you agree or disagree? Did I miss anything? I don't think Ukraine is necessarily a third-world country. I think it's more second-world. Ukraine is waaaay more developed than say, Somalia.Crazy About Ukrainehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16990920799981173553noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3656881569336871801.post-35559547093271356442011-10-08T11:48:15.417+03:002011-10-08T11:48:15.417+03:00Katherine, for your good mood please pay attention...Katherine, for your good mood please pay attention to the contents on the chips package you consume. The producers often use a lot of sodium glutamate (E621) and alike. 'Chinese food syndrome' doesn't contribute to good well-being AFAIK.<br />I don't want to butt in into your private life, but food in Ukraine isn't always as healthy as you might have got used in the US. 'Third-world country', after all... ((RomanThttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14050938392796656569noreply@blogger.com