There's only two types of cheese in my local grocery store; Shredded cheese that forms a mesh when heated, and cheese squares that forms into plastic when heated
New Brunswick, Canada.
Surprisingly I've actually found better cheese in Maine as opposed to here. Sure it's not cheese slices, but you heat it for a minute and then you can dip nachos into it/spread it on a hotdog
OK. Loaf of bread, $2.99. Kraft singles, $3.49. Stick of butter, 1 lb is $3.99 so we'll say $1. Campbell's tomato soup $1.39. The only way I'm seeing this work is if we make 16 of these using the entire loaf and all the singles. We'll need two cans of soup. and better make that 2 sticks of butter. So........$11.26 to feed four a snack or two a lunch sounds actually pretty legit. Of course you should also add in the cost of the stove heat and the water/dish liquid to clean up.
That is ridiculously expensive for a generic load of bread! Looking at the exchange rate (I'm in Uk) I don't pay more than $2 for a loaf and that's a named brand. If it was a supermarket brand you're looking at under a $
Oh, I agree. It's ridiculous. But not a single Tesco or Sainsbury in sight. I'm in an area where the housing costs are about the same as I was paying in Richmond/Kew. But no Botanical Garden and no Rugby next door.
Surprisingly I've actually found better cheese in Maine as opposed to here. Sure it's not cheese slices, but you heat it for a minute and then you can dip nachos into it/spread it on a hotdog