• NSRXN
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    113 days ago

    I evaluate basically all my food with what I call “hotdog math”. my wife hates it. my local gas station sells hotdogs at 2/$1. the free toppings can push the calories count near 550, but I know nothing comes close, so I round down to 500. milk beats oatmilk on hotdog math, and carries a wider diversity of nutrients, to boot.

    • @NoisyFlake@lemm.ee
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      312 days ago

      Cow milk is usually only cheaper because of subsidies, otherwise it would be much more expensive.

      • NSRXN
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        -112 days ago

        I don’t know how this can be verified, nor does it matter at the point of sale

    • @lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de
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      212 days ago

      Your wife is right to hate it. It’s rather shallow and narrow-minded.

      That aside, if calories-to-price is your metric, are you growing your own food?

      • NSRXN
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        112 days ago

        if calories-to-price is your metric

        it’s a metric for food I buy, and anything less convenient that a gas station hot dog that costs now power calorie is a hard sell. I don’t live on has station hot dogs, but they are, in my opinion, a good standard for convenience food value.

        I also drink soylent, which is only like half as good as hotdogs, but the nutrient balance is incredible.

        my wife says my spreadsheets are how farmers feed cattle.