Shopping for the North

I have been shopping a bit lately, two trips into Winnipeg to pick up supplies to last a year of teaching in the North. I have two pet suppliers, Dino’s on Notre Dame just west of Isabel, and The Great Canadian Wholesale Club at Route 90 north-bound just north of Ellice Avenue.

Dino’s is a very interesting place. You can always find 10kg sacks of cornmeal and beans there and sacks of rice, too. For $20 a sack of beans lasts me all winter and is a great source of protein. I use a pressure cooker to do the job in 30 minutes, less if soaked. Rice takes only 5 minutes in a pressure cooker although the time taken to reach operating temperature is a bit longer.

The Great Canadian Wholesale Club is interesting too. It is a big box place with huge carts and sacks and cartons of stuff. I like the fresh produce. I bought farmed mushrooms, green bell peppers and onions. The onions have increased in price a lot for some reason. A 50 lb./22 kg sack cost $27 this year but was only $18 last year but that is way ahead of Northern Store prices which can be $3/lb where I work. I bought fixings for pizza too. Sauce and cheese and lean ground beef which I make into salami. I bought two bushel cartons of bell peppers and two sacks of spinach which I blanched and froze. I diced and blanched 50 lb of carrots which I froze. 10 kg sack of dried peas to make pea soup all winter only cost $7. Five minutes in the pressure cooker will do it.

I usually use Morton’s TenderQuick for making salami but I cannot find it in stores these days. Fortunately, I discovered Canada Compound at 900 Bradford Street between the two halves of route 90 just south of Saskatchewan Avenue and north of Wellington which sold me a lifetime supply of something similar to Prague Powder for a few dollars a sack. I mixed 22 lb of lean ground beef in a large pot with two tablespoons of the stuff, two tablespoons of garlic powder, one tablespoon of pepper and one tablespoon of Mrs. Dash to make my salami. I mixed it thoroughly and allowed it to marinate a day with refrigeration. Then I formed it into loaves about 8 cm in diameter by hand and wrapped it in SaranWrap/food wrap and baked in a 300F oven for one hour. It took two batches in my oven. I punctured the bottom of the wrapped loaves with a fork and caught (most of) the drippings in a cookie sheet on a lower rack. It was a little difficult to form the loaves. It would have helped to include a cup or two of cornmeal to make the mix more cohesive but I did not want to open the sack I will ship by air. This salami will survive a while without refrigeration as sometimes happens along the way. Ground beef after it thaws is much more perishable.

I dried the mushrooms and onions in a drier from Bosch Kitchen Centre on Pembina Highway. The driers are expensive but pay for themselves in a year of not shopping at the Northern Store… I sliced the mushrooms longitudinally about 8mm thick and place them barely touching on the trays. They dry in a few hours at 140F. The onions I diced and dry at the same temperature. You want the mushrooms to be soft but shrunken and the onions almost crisp but not brown. I dried peeled garlic in 2mm slices at 115F for 12 hours.

One of the rare gems and one of the few canned products I ship north is catsup. I buy it in cases of six large cans. One can will last me a month and I use it on everything: soup, pizza, pasta, meat, and diluted as tomato juice.

I like to bake and bought 8 10kg bags of whole wheat flour, yeast and sugar. I extend the yeast by using the sourdough technique so a pound will last me all year. I bought 10kg of white granulated sugar and 4kg of brown sugar for cinnamon buns. Don’t forget lots of cinnamon, raisins, prunes, and nuts… You can buy a substantial 18L jug of canola oil there and butter, too. I am trying to lose weight so I am cutting down…

Altogether I filled two carts at the Great Canadian Wholesale Club and spent $1000. That will last me 300 days in the North, about $3.33/day. If you shop at the Northern Store, it will likely cost you $10 unless you buy their $5 pizza and not eat one or two at a sitting… I think my groceries are a more balanced diet. I have been eating this way in the North for 14 years and it works for me. I hope it helps some newbie teachers live more affordably.

One last note. As you may have to shift cartons loaded with these heavy items, be sure not to put too much weight in each carton. You can put a heavy bag in the bottom and your clothes on top, for instance. Use cartons with no openings or wrap contents in plastic to prevent dust/sand/dirt from runways getting in.

Don’t forget Hallowe’en treats for the kids. About 200 pieces is enough in many communities and you can always deal with leftovers. ;-)

- Robert Pogson

5 Responses to “Shopping for the North”


  1. 1 oldman Aug 16th, 2010 at 9:12 am

    My God Pog, I had no idea that teaching in the far north required THIS much prep work.

    I hope that you get reimbursed for this expense.

  2. 2 Robert Pogson Aug 16th, 2010 at 9:49 am

    A lot of people assume because they were students they know what teachers do. Like a lot of jobs, spending time preparing pays dividends. I save $2000, I figure, for the week I spend shopping and preserving food, annually. I hate shopping but I love eating. It’s a mixed blessing. Teaching in the North has a variety of pay-schemes. Where I teach, in Manitoba, the employer pays for 1500 lb. of air-freight annually. That’s worth thousands of dollars to me. In Nunavut and Northwest Territories, the employer pays freight on lots of stuff, but not food. Some places provide freezers and others do not. Where I am I have a large freezer which I did not use last school year because I dried most of my stuff and it shrinks. I also brought stuff in at Christmas and in the spring. I have most of my stuff up there already so I am bringing more frozen food this year.

    It used to be that it was worth at least $10000 more a year to teach in the North but the Government of Canada, in their wisdom, has not provided regular pay increases so we are now behind southern pay levels, but you cannot beat the benefits: small class sizes for high school, park-like surroundings, fresh air, water and subsidized transportation, freight and housing. This is my last year of teaching, for sure this time, and I am trying to prepare myself physically and mentally for the challenge. The mind is willing but the body is weak these days. Later in the school year, the mind could go…

  3. 3 Richard Chapman Aug 16th, 2010 at 12:35 pm

    Reading your post has left me ravenousness. Wow. You have laid out a template for frugal living, at least in the food department. My grown daughter is beginning to experiment with ways of not living wastefully. She makes her own soap and sews a lot too. I’m going to send her your post here. I’m sure it will inspire her.

  4. 4 Robert Pogson Aug 16th, 2010 at 12:43 pm

    and we intend to bag a few blueberries and mushrooms this fall. ;-)

    I wish my wife could relate to frugal living…

  5. 5 oldman Aug 16th, 2010 at 2:40 pm

    “I wish my wife could relate to frugal living…”

    My father once regaled my mother on the joys of camping. After hearing him out, she said

    “No problem Dear, we can go camping,
    just make sure to drop me of at the hotel on the way….”

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