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by watwut
977 days ago
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In the past, with less engineered supply chains, people literally kept storage of non perishable food just in case. Just in case was either war or supply chain issue or crops issue. Just about only people who did not had that could not afford it. Buying just right amount of food for next two days is modern behavior. |
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In the quite-recent past, it was common routine to buy (or harvest) huge (by current well-to-do standards) quantities food "in season", and stockpile it for consumption months later. Historically, cheese exists because it's a way to store the nutritional value of milk - when you don't have access to pasteurization, refrigeration, and modern "steady-ish milk production 365-days-per-year" dairy operations.
And similarly (quite-recent past, before the green revolution and massive farm subsidies), far more of most people's income went toward buying food. So they managed their inventories of stored food pretty carefully - vs. modern "meh, whatever, I'll just buy more" attitudes.