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bucolic_frolic

(53,818 posts)
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 09:40 AM 6 hrs ago

Waxing nostalgic, is food procurement permitted here?

I just don't remember how food was packaged. I recall a meat counter at a small strip mall store, with wooden floors and one glass front display, dimly lit. They sold a few fish, and some other proteins. It must have been packaged in waxed paper. This about 1965. I don't think it was an A&P, which was down the sidewalk a few stores, but it could have been. The A&P was standardized footprint to a great extent, wood floors, 2-3 checkouts, high tin ceilings, fresh ground coffee. Purple price stamps on each item. The checkout slides were wooden, you just pushed the food along. When did we graduate to styrofoam trays? I don't recall how chicken and beef were packaged in the 1970s. I think fresh fish was often wrapped in white wax paper in the 80s, 90s, then on to plastic. There wasn't as much frozen food back then. Vegetable in white cardboard cartons, wrapped in a label and glued; a few of those operations still persist today, and there are a few manufacturers with cardboard packaging in frozen foods - butternut squash, the Michelina's line for example. Too much plastic, not enough food.

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Waxing nostalgic, is food procurement permitted here? (Original Post) bucolic_frolic 6 hrs ago OP
Let me think Jilly_in_VA 6 hrs ago #1
I"m pretty sure the styrofoam trays were used for supermarket meats by the 1970s. surrealAmerican 3 hrs ago #2

Jilly_in_VA

(13,785 posts)
1. Let me think
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 10:05 AM
6 hrs ago

I used to ship at a neighborhood market, the Sunshine Supermarket, in the early 1970s, and I don't recall it being as rustic as you describe. We did get our meat from the meat counter where it was displayed and you could pick out exactly which piece you wanted, and I recall it being wrapped in "butcher paper" which was white but waxed on one side. I loved our butcher, who also owned the market. His name was I.J. "Jack" Schvid. He is long gone now, and may his afterlife be as happy as he made his customers. After we moved, we shopped at another neighborhood market, Len's Super Val-U. It was a little bigger, but it boasted an in-store bakery. I do remember that this store was probably the first one I shopped at that had its meat wrapped in plastic wrap on styrofoam trays. We rarely went there ear;y in the day though, and for one specific reason---we learned from a friend that the baker had fresh hot pumpernickel bread and would sell it to you unsliced if you went there late at night when he was taking it out of the oven. There is nothing better than fresh hot pumpernickel, slathered with butter!I can still taste that....

surrealAmerican

(11,728 posts)
2. I"m pretty sure the styrofoam trays were used for supermarket meats by the 1970s.
Thu Dec 25, 2025, 12:18 PM
3 hrs ago

It was one of the reasons my mother wouldn't buy meat at the supermarket. She figured the were hiding the unappetizing side with that styrofoam, We got meat at a butcher shop, where you could see the whole thing before they wrapped in paper.

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