I’m not one of these people, but I’ve heard that some people find almost all forms of cooking stressful, difficult and unsatisfying. These people suffer from increased food preparation costs that make $3/meal cheap by comparison.
These people suffer from increased food preparation costs that make $3/meal cheap by comparison.
I don’t think it’s correct to describe these mental costs in dollar terms. It’s more convenient, sure, but that’s not the same thing as cheaper. But yeah, now that I think of it cereal is probably $0.50/meal (skip the milk, goes bad too fast) but you don’t want that more than once a day, and it’s reasonably plausible that it would be hard to get two decently proteiny frozen meals for under $8.50 if grocery store selection is poor in your area.
It’s not that easy to convert marginal labor into money. Getting a second job is a high transaction cost, and alternatives like online surveys don’t pay well. I just don’t buy this type of argument except for certain very far from universal situations, e.g. hourly workers who have some leeway to set their own schedules.
Commercial soylent is overpriced. However, you can DIY for <$5/day, even if you need unusual amounts of food. Compare that to these numbers, which were the first thing I found. My $35/week is about 19% less than thriftiest food budget using conventional food for my gender/age. Plus I’m fairly large (but lean), active, and trying to add muscle/not lose weight, all of which should increase how much food I need relative to average.
I’m not sure I count as an “aficionado”, but I am a regular consumer of soylent, and not only cook but enjoy doing so. (Just not first thing in the morning, or when I have places to be.)
I don’t understand all these people saying that $3 a meal is cheap. Maybe their alternative is going out to a restaurant?
I’m not one of these people, but I’ve heard that some people find almost all forms of cooking stressful, difficult and unsatisfying. These people suffer from increased food preparation costs that make $3/meal cheap by comparison.
I don’t think it’s correct to describe these mental costs in dollar terms. It’s more convenient, sure, but that’s not the same thing as cheaper. But yeah, now that I think of it cereal is probably $0.50/meal (skip the milk, goes bad too fast) but you don’t want that more than once a day, and it’s reasonably plausible that it would be hard to get two decently proteiny frozen meals for under $8.50 if grocery store selection is poor in your area.
Labor costs.
It’s not that easy to convert marginal labor into money. Getting a second job is a high transaction cost, and alternatives like online surveys don’t pay well. I just don’t buy this type of argument except for certain very far from universal situations, e.g. hourly workers who have some leeway to set their own schedules.
It really depends on your base income. A programmer who makes 100k a year is in a very different situation then a college student.
Commercial soylent is overpriced. However, you can DIY for <$5/day, even if you need unusual amounts of food. Compare that to these numbers, which were the first thing I found. My $35/week is about 19% less than thriftiest food budget using conventional food for my gender/age. Plus I’m fairly large (but lean), active, and trying to add muscle/not lose weight, all of which should increase how much food I need relative to average.
Cheaper alternatives are either not-so-great nutritionally or take a decent amount of planning (especially if you’re cooking for yourself alone).
I am guessing that no Soylent aficionados cook :-)
And of course $3/meal is cheap compared to Starbucks lattes X-D
I’m not sure I count as an “aficionado”, but I am a regular consumer of soylent, and not only cook but enjoy doing so. (Just not first thing in the morning, or when I have places to be.)