The Deleted Scenes - New and Old #126
How Kroger Became the Biggest Sushi Seller in America, Wall Street Journal, Jaewon Kang, August 19, 2023
When I write about food, I’ll sometimes get comments that I’m a little snobbish or have very expensive tastes. I think people underestimate how diverse and cosmopolitan Americans’ tastes have become and are becoming. As few years ago I was doing some random Google Maps exploring in honest-to-God middle-of-nowhere Virginia, and I read the handful of reviews for a little general store. Two of them mentioned the delicious samosas. This is also interesting, given that, as far as I’m aware, sushi was basically unknown in most of America until the 1980s:
I wonder what obscure “ethnic” dish is being served in an immigrant-heavy neighborhood somewhere right now that will one day explode in mainstream popularity? It also makes me think of the sushi rolls I used to get at ShopRite in the early 2000s, in central Jersey. They were made in-store, and were as good as your average restaurant. A few years ago they switched to more expensive and less tasty sushi, made by different people and with different branding. I still miss those old ones. A salmon roll, up to 2015 or 2016, was $3.50. The article mentions supermarket sushi being cheaper than restaurants, but it depends which restaurants. Many supermarket rolls cost the same or more than the average restaurant price for the same item. You’re paying, in part, for convenience. I also think the lower end of sushi restaurants has proliferated a lot since I was a kid, such that a lot of restaurants are basically making sushi at a supermarket level, rather than the other way around. Read the whole thing. It’s a great piece.
Also:
And:
This is an illustrated policy and data piece that’s also very readable. Give it a read. ‘Private Tyranny’ Is Less Private Than You Think, Reason, Stephanie Slade, October 2023
I’m not a libertarian, really, and certainly not in an ideological sense. I’m much more skeptical of corporate power than Slade is—I think “violence” is far too high a bar for critiquing corporate power, when companies like Amazon or Airbnb can do things like shut down your account for no reason with no appeal, or when American land use relies so heavily on private developments. Cordoning off constitutional rights to government actions, in a country where most of life transpires in the private sector, means no rights most of the time. But I’m also wary, to say the least, of authoritarian Catholicism, the subtext of the book she’s reviewing by Sohrab Ahmari. You get this interesting dynamic in American politics—each side has, or is widely presumed to have, an ulterior motive, and so it’s hard to argue the merits of what people are actually saying. We all assume the argument itself is just a front for something else. I probably agree with Ahmari on corporate power more than I do with Slade on the limits of regulation and government solutions. But I’m more afraid of the ideology I think that Ahmari is concealing. Maybe I’m being unfair. Give it a read; you decide. What’s interesting here is not the snark or the product reviews, but this broader point:
There’s a little more of this kind of analysis here. It’s a fascinating shift and it may be an important one. Related Reading: Thank you for reading! Please consider upgrading to a paid subscription to help support this newsletter. You’ll get a weekly subscribers-only post, plus full access to the archive: over 700 posts and growing. And you’ll help ensure more material like this! You're currently a free subscriber to The Deleted Scenes. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
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