Wild turkeys, Highway 36, Kansas. July 2016. |
As a rule, the winter holiday season doesn't evoke much merriment in me. Rather, it is a season to be borne in stoic resignation.
I'm not one of the folks who gets depressed around this time, luckily.
Nope - it's the unrelenting Christmas songs, congested parking, congested stores, and shortened tempers among people who seek prime parking spaces, that make me sigh in deep martyr mode. I am inconvenienced.
The imposition on my selfish little world doesn't cease until the end of the first week following New Year's, with that final flurry of hustle-bustle prompted by gift returns, hence long lines at the customer service counters.
Except!
Turkey goes on radical sale in advance of the feast days! Hallelujah, I sing! I can buy a big ol' turkey for a bedazzling price, throw it in the oven, pull off the meat, make soup if I want, and feed on the meat for many days.
Until this year, that is.
This year, with the purchase of my first turkey of the season, I saw that my heretofore satisfying ROI on holiday turkey purchases was over.
First: The bird spit and sputtered all over my oven walls while cooking, which meant I had to invest unanticipated time and labor into cleaning the oven.
Second: It used to be the time and labor I invested in pulling the meat off the carcass were offset by my ability to make soup from the carcass. Only .... I released my large cooking pot to the wild in my last move.
Third: Is this all the meat I got from that deceptively plump bird?
In the forseeable future, then, I'll stick to my usual plat of boneless, skinless chicken breasts that I roast en masse in my oven.
A bread oven outside Rustavi, Caucasus Georgia. August 2011. |
Although the price for skinless, boneless chicken is about 188% higher than the holiday-turkey-on-sale, the opportunity costs of the sale-turkey exceed the financial savings by far. Not to mention I'm paying for the turkey carcass, which I do not consume.
Bread oven (tone) and fireplace in Tbilisi, Caucasus Georgia. April 2012. |
Evidently, no topic is too banal for me to write about.
Here is my article on the economics of laundry.
In a lukewarm effort to raise the level of discourse on the topic, here is a more erudite article on the economics of holiday turkey.
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