This article is about how much more expensive America is than the rest of the developed world, but I wanted to talk about the difference in food quality that it also discusses between the US and Europe.
The twelve dollars I spend at Tesco in London, the equivalent of a low-end American grocery store, like Food Lionโโโeven that quality is (much) better than at the best American ones, Whole Foods, Wegmans, and so on. Do you see the point? The best I can buy in America is worse than the worst I can buy elsewhere. And that difference only gets bigger in Europe proper.
Whenever I visit anywhere in Europe and then come back to the US, I invariably lose weight. Not because I gained any in Europe (the increased walking negates any additional calories consumed), but rather because it takes me a long time to adjust to just how terrible all American food is in comparison so I nearly stop eating.
American food is so vile and you donโt even know it till you visit somewhere else.
What the author says is true โ the worst European food is better than the best-available American food. I ate a sandwich from a gas station in Germany better than the best sandwich I can get anywhere that I know of in America for any price.
And the worst bakeries in Europe are better than even the very best ones Iโve found anywhere in the US.
I ate some blueberries once in London that I couldnโt believe they were even blueberries they tasted so damn good.
Why is American food so particularly terrible? I am not really sure all the reasons. But itโs shocking the difference when I eat a meal there and then fly back to America to attempt to choke down the horrible swill available here.