Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

I did not own a fridge or any cooking appliances for my first year at Google. 3 meals a day at work + takeout on weekends.



In my apartment, the number one electricty cost comes from my fridge+freezer. (To be fair, I live in the sub-tropics.)


[flagged]


Is there any particular component of this that disgusts you?

You could likely do that and end up spending less money than buying food and cooking for yourself. If you don't cook you can free up your time for other revenue generating activities, chores, etc. Total cost of 2x to 4x delivered meals in my area could be $20 to $80. That's ~$320 or 80 less then the $400 number quoted in other places in this thread.

It's pretty rational behavior from the employees side of things.

And, even before Google, when I started living alone I realized I couldn't buy milk anymore because I don't drink enough milk fast enough to not let it spoil. I've switched to soy purely because it lasts months I'm my fridge safely.


protip: the horizon organic (or possibly other ultra-pasteurized) milks last a very long time in the fridge. I only use milk for my daily coffee and I haven't had a single carton go sour on me yet. it's a bit more expensive, but easily worth for people who don't consume milk very fast.


In some countries, ultra-pasteurized milk (and alternatives) is absolutely the norm -- packed in tetrapaks. And I agree: it is freaky how long that stuff lasts in your fridge. As long as you close it tight, and return it to the fridge quickly, two weeks is easy.


I will definitely be taking a look at that. Thank for the tip!


And large numbers of people cooking at home is a relatively recent thing


I question the accuracy of this. I grew up where going out to dinner was a luxury; we went perhaps once a week, and sometimes that was to a McDonalds or pizza joint, not someplace that charges $30/plate.


I meant going back a couple of hundred years - every one having a full kitchen and cooking most things at home is still in historical terms recent.


So in 1821 people were dining out all the time? I find that incredible doubtful, at least in the US.


Using collective kitchens and ovens


I can't even imagine how anyone could think this was true, even in multi-generational upper-middle class urban families.

I don't think you're lying, although I don't think you're correct; I'm just amazed at how different people's baseline contexts are. In your context, that's a reasonable statement, or you wouldn't have said it.


>> And large numbers of people cooking at home is a relatively recent thing

> I can't even imagine how anyone could think this was true, even in multi-generational upper-middle class urban families.

In the context of the sweep of human history of about two million years, people exclusively cooking at home being relatively recent is true [1]. Restaurants are a relatively recent invention [2] [3]. What we conceive of as normal meals is relatively recent [4].

Communal was the predominant cooking setting for many modes of cooking like baking for most of human history. This was because fuel was brutally time and energy-intensive to gather and prepare until our species started to master tool-making to a sufficient level that individual households at the mainstream level could afford the necessary tools. It literally took organizing a community to sustainably run much of what we take for granted in an individual middle class developed world household kitchen today.

Cooking over an open fire is likely the oldest mode [5], and that fire takes a fair amount of effort to sustain solely at the household scale, and the archeological evidence for humans routinely and widely making fire instead of sustaining it continuously suggests routinely and widely making fire is relatively recent (100's thousands instead of millions of years ago) [6], and even then it was common to borrow fire from a neighbor than making it, so arduous it was to make fire or expensive it was to acquire the tools. Our species only really started to relatively routinely cook during the Paleolithic age about 200,000 years ago [7], starting with open fire roasting, then proceeding from there (boiling came after roasting, ironic since boiling water is considered by us as how we start teaching children to cook) [7].

There is a simple experiment you can conduct today to validate this on your own: with nothing but a flint suitable for knapping (which in itself is an accomplishment to de novo achieve), and plain cotton clothing (to give you a head start), work out what it takes to start a fire, sustainably gather fuel, sustainably gather calories and nutrition, and scale it up to a minimum genetic variability group. It is incredibly exhausting, and prone to all kinds of failure modes.

The sheer amount of agonizing, brutal, incremental effort over the millennia it took our ancestors to "just" get to the stage to develop agrarian systems (and there is even debate if even that was a prudent choice [8] [9] [10], though for the record I'm pro-agriculture) is mind-boggling. By comparison, our current state of civilization is just LARP'ing "grinding", and gamers talking about grinding take that to yet an entirely different level. I give our ancestors their due: they were a set of some tough hombres, and we collectively do indeed stand on the shoulders of giants.

[1] https://food52.com/blog/17568-the-centuries-old-form-of-publ...

[2] https://www.history.com/news/first-restaurants-china-france

[3] https://slate.com/human-interest/2019/03/home-cooking-food-h...

[4] https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-20243692

[5] https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23230980-600-every-hu...

[6] https://www.livescience.com/when-did-humans-discover-fire.ht...

[7] https://lithub.com/why-and-how-exactly-did-early-humans-star...

[8] http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/538/was-adopting-ag...

[9] https://www.livinganthropologically.com/archaeology/agricult...

[10] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43118


How much milk do you drink that it spoils? I can have milk for a week in fridge and it doesn't spoil


About one bowl of cereal a week.


Fair enough. Zero trolling: Have you considered just buying a half-pint (~250ml) of milk at the covenience store, instead of (presumably) wasting much more? Just an idea. :)


I have, and it still goes bad. I've done quarts and those still go bad. Pints might work but at that point it's just annoying because I have to head out for milk often. Soy milk works fine for me. I hate the idea of wasting/spoiling food and I've never had soy milk go bad.


Why wouldn't you eat something free that's prepared by highly skilled experts with top quality fresh ingredients and a healthy recipe?


I, too, buy good quality takeout food about $30-60/daily. Please stop shaming. Not everyone likes to cook food.




Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: