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junebug Posted - Sep 13 2005 : 12:40:09 PM

Due to Hurricane Katrina, the stores here in my town are all out of Folgers Coffee and don't know when they will be able to get any in, it seems a warehouse full of Folgers flooded and tons of coffee was lost, was wondering if anyone else is having a hard time finding the best coffee around, ( folgers) and what would be a close second? Us farmgirls need their morning cup of joe to get started so I'm hoping you can help me find a good replacement till Folgers comes back to our stores.....sigh.....Thanks......

Sisterhood of the Traveling Art.....

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
25   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
mellaisbella Posted - Oct 01 2005 : 05:08:27 AM
Rock on WesternHorse51! I totally agree with what you say. It is so very hard to not be judgemental of ourselves. The bible says "Judge not, let ye be judged" I used to think that that only meant that I shouldn't judge others, lately I am seeing that it means I shouldn't judge/be harsh on myself. I do feel hypocritical sometimes though as I try to "eat locally, think globally" and then I shop at the dollar store. I do so love the dollar store by sometimes wonder how much the people producing the product gets paid if I'm only buying it for a dollar ......sigh...
I think what is best is what you said "I have to be content with what I can do and try everyday to do something helpful for everybody" well said

"I wanna touch the earth, I want to break it in my hands, I want to grow something wild and unruly"
westernhorse51 Posted - Sep 30 2005 : 07:27:08 AM
Hi junebug, I love Folgers. We have no shortage yet that I know of. I drink much more tea then coffee but I do need and want that first cup of the day, then one cup in the afternoon. One thing I have to say about coffee and all other products. I wish I could say I didn't use this or that because someone who is making or producing it isn't getting treated fairly. For myself only I say this; in this world, I've learned to pick and choose my causes. Like everyone else, I've got my passions & causes but I found myself going crazy because one can literally see something bad in everything we use, eat,drink, wash,have fun with,etc. I started to see only negatively and not wanting to use, buy, or give because it was hurting someone or something. I am a, glass is 1/2 full person and I want to stay that way. Maybe I cant save the people growing the coffee, but I can save a dog from Katrina, give a child a place to sleep tonight or feed someone hungry which I do almost nightly at my job. I have to be content with what I can do and try everyday to do something helpful for somebody.

she selects wool and flax and works with eager hands Prov.31:13
MeadowLark Posted - Sep 29 2005 : 6:43:58 PM
No!!!! You can't have my cans!!! They're mine!!!

If I keep a green bough in my heart, the singing bird will come.
susanne Posted - Sep 29 2005 : 4:59:13 PM
I don't drink coffee but my husband does. He saves the big coffee cans for our conoe trips. I hate to portage and will shoot the rapids instead which results in a leak and the need for BIG coffee cans. Good luck with acquiring your drink of desire. Hey, can I have your cans?
junebug Posted - Sep 29 2005 : 12:30:26 PM
It's fine Lucinda, I treat myself to the real stuff now and then. I still can't believe you did that, so again, THANK YOU !!!! And keep a eye on your mailbox!

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
thehouseminder Posted - Sep 29 2005 : 10:24:53 AM
Hi Sue!

I'm so glad you like your coffee!. I hope it is okay that it is not decaf. The stocker at the store told me it was the most popular Folgers and you hadn't yet posted your preference.

It was really fun to know what a surprise it would be.
Lucinda

Who loves a garden still his Eden keeps, Perennial pleasures plants, and wholesome harvest reaps. ---Bronson Alcott

ByHzGrace Posted - Sep 29 2005 : 09:28:51 AM
We make big decisions everyday not only where we shop but what we buy.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/

Fair trade is available for tropical fruit,rice,sugar, tea and cocoa products.
junebug Posted - Sep 28 2005 : 11:39:56 AM
Good point SusieQ, didn't think of that. I'm not sure how many are using the plasitc cans like the tins ones, example: storage, but let's hope they are so the landfills are filling up with MORE plastic! Welcome Clare!

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
Clare Posted - Sep 28 2005 : 11:23:45 AM
Ellen! Thank you very much for this link. This is the type of socially conscientious decision that we must each make, because in the long run it's the only thing that will affect a change. I've bookmarked this!

May the sun bring you new energy by day, may the moon softly restore you by night, may the rain wash away your worries, may the breeze blow new strength into your being, may you walk gently through the world and know its beauty all the days of your life. ~~Apache Blessing
Susie Q Posted - Sep 28 2005 : 11:09:14 AM
Fortunately the coffee I use comes in metal cans but the Tasters Choice instant comes in plastic with a flip top lid. I hate it. It's hard to close and I have to spend more time fiddling with it. Now I just transfer it to an old glass TC jar that I had saved.

I think the plastic packaging is a ruse so coffee will go stale much quicker resulting in us having to buy more.
junebug Posted - Sep 28 2005 : 04:45:51 AM
I didn't know Hickory Farms made coffee too, sounds yummy, will have to try making that blend on my own. Thanks for sharing!

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
LisaBee Posted - Sep 27 2005 : 10:12:26 PM
I have recently started buying all Fair Trade coffee and tea, but I have to confess that I will still buy the Holiday Blend from Hickory Farms (rich, dark coffee flavored with cinnamon, vanilla and hazelnut) until I learn how to duplicate it myself. If you like flavored coffee, the combination of these three flavors is heavenly.

"There is no teacup too large, nor book too long.
junebug Posted - Sep 27 2005 : 04:50:53 AM
I had to share this act of kindness with you, Lucinda sent me a big can of Folgers coffee, but more important than the product, was the true spirit of a farm girl! I couldn't believe she had gone to the trouble and expense of shipping me a can to tide me over, how sweet! Lucinda, you are a special person and I am honored to call you friend, bless you and when you least expect it, I will return the favor, because one good turn deserves another! I will think of you with each cup brewed, THANK YOU SO MUCH........

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
junebug Posted - Sep 25 2005 : 1:48:44 PM
I had to make a compromise with the hubby, since I had to cut back on caffine, and he doesn't yet, we now drink half caf from Folgers, same great taste! Oh yes, I too miss the tin cans, they can in handy in so many ways, esp. around the holidays when I would save up the big cans and stray paint them a Christmas red and have hubby add a wire hanger and I"d fill them with homemade jams and goodies and use them as gift baskets. They also made for great storage inside and out and I have fond memories of all the ways the cans were used that mentioned above. I do think the plasitc cans can leach into the coffee? I don't like the bags either, but what are we to do? Thanks for the memories.......

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
ByHzGrace Posted - Sep 25 2005 : 08:08:39 AM
I live on the coast, salt airs and coffee cans don't mix.

In regards to no cans and the use of plastic have you read about the toxic effects of phthalates? Is cheap packaging worth this risk?


When you look at shortages, we must also look at deals where locally food/stuff are not able to be shipped out along I-10. Major markets have been lost on the Gulf.

for online coffee buying Pura Vida is 100% charitably owned and all of their resources go to help at-risk children and families in coffee-growing countries build more hopeful futures.
http://www.puravidacoffee.com/store/coffee/store_body.asp

I have missed reading you((( Lucinda))). My prayers ascend as you walk your grandmother to heavens door. I am a repair all descendant too.
thehouseminder Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 6:32:19 PM
Hi Meadowlark,

So nice to hear from you! I've been missing all of you. Been busy taking care of Grandma in her last days. One of us is with her 24/7. It's hard to see her failing but what a gift to have the time to tell her everything I have always wanted to tell her, ask questions I never got around to, and just have long good old fashioned girl talks.

Anyway, I still have my toy, metal, percolator. It is a 4.5" exact and working copy of the grown-up size, complete with the glass top thingy. One of my most vivid memories of my other grandmother is going from store to store trying to find a replacement for her glass percolator top. Of course, in that day, no one would think to throw it out but instead repaired everything. The "Fitz-All" brand top turned out to "fit none". I'm not sure if we ever found the replacement but we sure had an interesting time!

Lucinda

Who loves a garden still his Eden keeps, Perennial pleasures plants, and wholesome harvest reaps. ---Bronson Alcott

MeadowLark Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 5:36:06 PM
Lucinda, I love what you wrote about the simplest of things in my life... and now I have a new perspective on it because of you...coffee cans. Back in the 'good ole days" of the 80's as a young wife I saved those cans for my husband to store his nails, nuts/bolts all the metal stuff he had on his work bench. I used the big ones to make winter car survival kits out of and would put matches, sacks of trail mix, nuts, candles, cup for melting snow for his long drives to airports through rough winter weather. I used them to keep crayons in for my daughters art projects. I remember the coffee shortage of the early 70's and those funky decorated coffee cans. My Mom panicked when coffee hit over 3 bucks a pound! There was also sugar shortages too, and meat went way up in price about that time. I have an little 21 year old Itallian coffee bean grinder that I use to grind whole beans. It has never let me down and I love my bean grinder like a friend. Then I use an old fashioned perculator with the little glass top thingy to perk my coffee. Mmmmmm. Black with a little milk.

If I keep a green bough in my heart, the singing bird will come.
thehouseminder Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 4:53:08 PM
Junebug, do you drink regular or decaf???

quote:
What are people going to do without a coffee CAN to put their nuts and bolts in? How will smokers safely collect their butts until they are cooled and can be put into the trash? What will little kids carry their worms in when they go fishing? I don't think that they know what they've done.



Yes, yes! I don't think they know what they have done either!

At Halloween, Mom would issue each of us kids a coffee can and we would sit down at the kitchen table and sort through our Loot. We were allowed to eat a few pieces of candy right away, trade off the stuff we didn't like (circus peanuts and necco wafers in my case), and the rest went into our own personal coffee can for storage. After school, we would get into our coffee cans and eat a few more pieces.

Mom also stored extra staples, like the sugar she got on sale, in coffee cans.

We used them for small toy bits, worms, our treasures like rocks, shells from bird eggs, our acorn "tea sets", the list goes on and on. We also melted wax in them when we made candles and Dad melted lead in them to make sinkers for fishing and bullets for his muzzle loader. Dad even made a cookie cutter for Mom from one when she didn't have the shape she wanted.

Does anyone remember the coffee shortages of the 70's? I was just a kid but I remember that Mom had this whole network of women. They called one another anytime a store actually got coffee in and whenever they saw a sale. Folgers had decorator cans with jungle scenes, etc. They gave away children's books too. All this to get customers to go ahead and by their coffee even though the prices had gotten outrageous. (As if serious caffeine addiction were not enough).

You know, I really should like coffee, I got roughly three pots per day before I was born!!!

Is Folgers the only brand in plastic jugs????

Lucinda

P. S. I just edited this because one of my dear friends just pointed out that it is obvious that I do not drink coffee (I repeatedly misspelled the company's name.)

Who loves a garden still his Eden keeps, Perennial pleasures plants, and wholesome harvest reaps. ---Bronson Alcott

LJRphoto Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 3:23:45 PM
Lucinda, I don't buy Folgers and would only drink it if I was in someone else's home and didn't want to be rude. But, I too was saddened when I noticed that they switched to plastic. What are people going to do without a coffee CAN to put their nuts and bolts in? How will smokers safely collect their butts until they are cooled and can be put into the trash? What will little kids carry their worms in when they go fishing? I don't think that they know what they've done.

"Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect." -Mark Twain

http://ljrenterprises.blogspot.com/
thehouseminder Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 1:03:49 PM
I wish I liked coffee! It smells so Fabulous! I used to beg my mom to let me be the one to open the new cans. Then I'd do the big deep sniff. Mom used to tease me that I might like it better if I snorted it.

Is anyone else creeped out by the fact that it now comes in "plastic" cans? I would think that would impart a really nasty taste to it. Besides, how are we supposed to make that cute little footstool without traditional coffee cans?!?!?!

Lucinda

Who loves a garden still his Eden keeps, Perennial pleasures plants, and wholesome harvest reaps. ---Bronson Alcott

junebug Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 12:27:00 PM
A gal with the same name and addiction, I"m with you! LOL Thanks for understanding. It's gotten better here, our stores are getting some folgers in, the big cans anyway so I will stock up and am eager to try others listed here. Thanks to all who posted and to the one who offered to send a can, bless you, but the postage would be crazy, your sweet to offer and I appreciate the thought! Weather it be coffee, sugar or gas, I think we can all agree, many more storages are ahead, sadly.

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!
Susie Q Posted - Sep 23 2005 : 12:10:05 PM
For grocery store coffee I like Yuban. CostCo's Kirkland brand is ok in a pinch.

A gas shortage I can handle, a coffee shortage is entirely different.

It's my drug of choice and I refuse to give up my life long addiction.
theherblady Posted - Sep 19 2005 : 10:31:52 AM
Thanks Mary~~ I found the website at www.cravenscoffee.com~~
Jan
quilt8305 Posted - Sep 19 2005 : 10:24:38 AM
For all you coffee snobs: Check out Craven's coffee roasted and packaged in Spokane WA. They make a blend they call Earth and Sky which is full-bodied and delicious. I know they ship to Tennessee, so they probably ship anywhere.

The great use of life is to spend it for something that will outlast it. Wm. James
junebug Posted - Sep 17 2005 : 08:38:40 AM
Yes, there will be many more storages now, and being frugal will be the smart way to get by. I"ve always been thrify and I buy local when I can. Anything that was shipped into the port in New Orleans can be expected to go up, coffee being a big one and now sugar too. Buying Folrgers is a treat for us, so far I haven't found anything cheaper that tasted good. I was gifted with a small bag of organic coffee and I love it and will treat ourselves whenever we can. Were also tea drinkers too. I shop once a week at a local salvage grocery store where I can save BIG time on alot, even a good line of organic items. Lumber has gone up by 40% and will continue to, I think it's time to live by our grandmothers advice and start a trend, frugal is cool!

I'm not 40 something, I'm 39.95 plus shipping and handling!

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