Grocery Shopping in Merida
Shopping for groceries in Merida, even after four years, is not the mindless but somehow comforting activity we used to take for granted back in California.
As the Mexican economy has improved and Mexican corporations have begun to join the 21st Century, grocery shopping in Merida has gotten easier and less strange.
Note we said "less" strange... but not NOT strange.
First of all, there's the all important choice of where to shop. For some reason, there is no one place that has everything we need on a regular basis. If we weren't fond of some of the foods that we grew up with and now feel we would rather not do without, we might be able to get by with the more local choices for grocery shopping: the downtown mercado (market), the neighborhood mercados, the ISSTEY, or the corner tendejones.
Mercados, Tendejones, Oh My!
The downtown mercado has great fresh local vegetables and fruits, as well as all sorts of exotic things made and grown locally, and a wide assortment of things everyone needs like socks, underwear, shoes, birds, pirated CDs, hammock hooks, flowers, huipiles, votive candles, pig heads and Christmas lights. It's incredibly picturesque, alternately charming and squalid. The problem with shopping in the mercado is we mostly want to whip out our cameras all the time, and very little shopping gets done.
And we can't find black tea or cinnamon Pop Tarts in the mercado to save our souls. On top of that, each neighborhood market is different. Our local mercado in Parque Santa Ana is good for fresh vegetables and fruit in season. Fresh squeezed jugo de naranja and toronja (orange and grapefruit juice) is cheap there, and for a quick panucho or a plate of cochinita pibil, it's the perfect place. But again, no Pop Tarts. And we wouldn't shop there for meat. Meat is there, out on the counter, but we just can't bring ourselves to buy it there.
Let's get something straight. We really don't eat *that* many Pop Tarts... consider "Pop Tarts" a literary device, a metaphor, to indicate any number of things that we want to buy that were widely available back in the States, but not here. As time goes on, the list of these products is less and less, or we care about them less and less... but there's always something!
Another shopping option is ISSTEY, the government-subsidized grocery store that is on Calle 60 at Calle 49. It's a great place to buy packaged goods manufactured in Mexico (mostly) and the USA. We can buy Ritz crackers, hot dogs, rice or toilet paper at ISSTEY, but no fresh fruits or vegetables. And, you guessed it, no Pop Tarts. If we're in the office whipping up a quick lunch and suddenly realize we don't have any mustard, or perhaps the hidden stash of potato chips has been invaded by marauding ants, then we dash down to the corner tendejon. In the States, long before 7-11 convenience stores, there were little mom and pop grocery stores. Remember those? They sold a variety of things you need just to get through the day, like mustard and potato chips and ice and aspirin and votive candles and little bags of colored balloons. Those stores still exist here in Merida. There's one on every corner, or so it seems. The tendejon near our office really outdoes itself by offering over 20 flavors of potato chips, along with freshly made salbutes and tortas. You can also get every kind of soft drink you might want, as long as you might want a Coke. Increasingly, the food offered at these stores seems designed to add to the increasing obesity problem, a sad development. We like the stores that still sell fresh food and some fresh vegetables or fruits, and we try to frequent them when we can.
Grocery Stores
So, that brings us to the next tier of grocery store choices, which we organize into three categories: Mexican chains, multi-national chains and bulk-item chains. The Mexican chains that have stores in Merida are Chedraui, Soriana, MEGA (Commercial Mexicana), Superama (owned by Walmart) and Bodega Aurrera, a Mexican-flavored lower-income version of WalMart (also owned by WalMart). Each have multiple locations here and all seem to follow the same model, which is similar to the WalMart here. Each store has groceries, a pharmacy, clothing, toys, a garden section, a hardware section... y tanto mas! Um, a word about Superama... it really is in a class by itself. Though owned by WalMart, it does its best to be the most upscale grocery store in Merida. It's located in the North, naturally (on the way to Gran Plaza on the right... you can't miss it). It feels the most like a US grocery store. And it has higher prices. Sometimes it even has better merchandise... but honestly, not often enough that we shop there all the time.
Of the three Mexican chains, we have come to prefer the newly-opened and architecturally-challenged, garishly- orange MEGA store. While we decry the way the store looks (those big orange letters give new meaning to the term "eyesore"), we love the fresh-baked bread, the occasional foreign foods (at Christmas we found our favorite Dutch cookies there!) and the extensive meat and vegetable departments. We can buy most of what we need there on a weekly basis, though not all, and sometimes we even find an item of clothing we like there. Yes, we shop for clothes at Mega sometimes... now you know one of our dirty little secrets. Other local grocery store chains include Soriana, Chedraui, Bodega Aurrera (owned by WalMart) and Superama. Superama probably deserves a mention. It is an upscale grocery store that is also owned by WalMart. At this writing, there is only one in Merida, on Prolongación Paseo Montejo in the north (before you get to Gran Plaza, on the right, parking underneath). You can find gourmet items at Superama that you won't find at other grocery stores here. You can find more expensive cuts of beef, better cookies, cheeses, breads and organic vegetables. You will pay for the privilege, but sometimes what you are looking for is at Superama.
If you want to shop for groceries at a multi-national chain store, you have one choice: WalMart (photo above). Suffice it to say, WalMart has Pop Tarts. We cringe as we shop there, hating ourselves for supporting the cheap-labor-exploiting, local-culture-destroying, domineering corporate monster that WalMart is. But sometimes, it's the only place to find really important stuff, like... you know. (And to be fair, WalMart is a better neighbor and employer here than in the States. No credit due WalMart. It's Mexican law that makes them that way.) The most popular (with expats) Merida WalMart is located at the busy intersection of Paseo de Montejo and Avenida Colon, across from the Hotel Fiesta Americana. It opens early (7 AM) and stays open late (until 11 PM). It doesn't seem to close for holidays either. There are more WalMarts around Merida... at last count, we think there are three. One in City Center to the East and one just past Plaza Dorada to the West, and probably one has been built since you started reading this article.
A Tip about Tips
Before we go on, and while we are on the subject of employee relations, a word about propinas (tips). In your grocery shopping experience, you will regularly come across two kinds of service people that expect and deserve (usually) a tip. The first is the young man or woman who bags your groceries. In most stores, the grocery baggers are students, some of whom seem very young, but all of whom probably really value this opportunity to contribute to their family income. On rare occasions (and only if you ask) the baggers will actually bring your bags out to your car for you. But most people just let them bag the groceries and tip them a few pesos for the service (we usually tip 5 pesos or more if they did a good job). One of the things we love about Mega is that they also employ senior citizens as grocery baggers. Those seniors have carried a bag or two in their time and they tend to bag more carefully and thoughtfully. We always tip them at least 10 pesos. The second kind of service you will need (even though you wonder why you never needed it before) is the man who picks you up in the parking lot, pushes your cart to your car, unloads your groceries into the car and then navigates you out of your parking space and on your way. We must admit to feeling put upon by these (mostly older) men sometimes. But we pay 5 pesos usually for being waited upon as if feminism had never happened. And in all fairness, these men need to earn a living and there are probably plenty of people that love having their groceries carried out and unloaded for them. We find it rather unnecessary most of the time, but when we've done a lot of shopping at Costco or bought large and unwieldy items, those men do come in handy.
Big Chain Stores That Are Not WalMart
The bulk-item chains here are Costco and Sams Club. Sams Club is on Prolongación de Paseo Montejo, on the left before you get to Gran Plaza. Costco is on Avenida Tecnológico, which is Calle 60, only more north. They are both pretty easy to find. And once you are inside, you have to pinch yourself to remember you are in Mexico. A lot of things are missing that would be in Costco or Sams Club in the States, but they come pretty close.
Wal Mart and Costco are the only stores that have fresh milk. Sometimes we are able to buy milk from the traveling milk man who drives a little cart that goes "Moo!" (photo at right). His milk is fresh and pasteurized, produced by a local hacienda south of Merida. It used to be that Wal Mart and Mega were the only places that regularly carry organic boxed milk, but Superama at least also does now too, and now we can't always find it at Mega. WalMart and Superama have a growing contingent of organic fruit and vegetables. Wal Mart, Superama and Mega have the cat food our cats like (Friskies canned salmon), but Mega now carries it more often than not and has the special cut of meat (complete with marrow bone) that we buy for our dogs, URL and Mali. In fact, we asked for bones so often, Mega now usually has them packaged and on the shelf. Mega has butter from New Zealand and Denmark, and has even started to carry balsamic vinegar and English Breakfast tea in their special foreign foods section. And just when you think you have it all figured out, our favorite place to buy steaks has become the Covi liquor store (it's from Argentina... the steak, not the liquor store).
Farmer's Markets
Do you miss those farmer's markets back home? And organic produce? Aside from the local mercados, which are essentially always farmer's markets, you might want to try the Slow Food Market, held on Saturdays on Avenida Reforma on the northwest corner of Avenida Colón. Here you will find vendors selling things like organic vegetables, honey, home-made Korean and Peruvian dishes, cupcakes, organically-raised chicken and fresh bread. This Saturday market has become very popular with many expatriates and locals alike, and has become a time to shop and visit with friends for many of us. The Slow Food Market is part of the global Slow Food movement and you can join the local Merida chapter to be a part of this increasingly-popular event. If you want to know more about it, call 999-913-8674 for more information in English or Spanish. If you are a fan of organic foodstuffs, you might also want to try the lovely (and tiny) natural foods store on the Prolongación de Paseo de Montejo (just south of the Office Depot corner) called Ya’axtal Eco-tienda y Café.
Got Milk? Uh... Not Really
Speaking of milk, when we first moved here, shopping for groceries at WalMart was strange in itself. WalMarts with groceries hadn't come to our town yet. We got over that easily... but then there was the milk issue. Some of us drink milk every day... and every other time we went grocery shopping, there was no fresh milk at WalMart. No fresh milk! How can that be? Fresh milk at the grocery store is just... well, a given. Its like air or something. Years later, we still cannot count on fresh milk at WalMart, but now we have the milk man with the truck that goes "Moo!", or we have boxed milk. Boxed milk has a slightly different taste, but it stays fresh a lot longer, we can buy it anywhere and those boxes fit in the refrigerator better. And frankly, now we're used to boxed milk and don't care as much about fresh milk. When in Rome...
Mayans apparently don't get along well with milk, so milk is not a priority for them. But yogurt... that's another story. Every grocery store in Merida sports an amazingly long and well-stocked yogurt aisle. Not a section, an entire aisle. There are more kinds of yogurt and liquid yogurt and yogurt flan and yogurt with granola and yogurt with nuts... you get the idea. Yogurt is big here. And while the yogurt in the grocery store isn't appreciably different from yogurt in the grocery store back home (thank you, globalization), we've had delicious fresh homemade yogurt in restaurants around the Peninsula. One word of caution: if you like plain yogurt, check the ingredients. Most yogurt sold as "plain" here in Mexico has sugar in it.
Bakery Etiquette
In the bakery section of most grocery stores, there is a large selection of breads and pastries. All the offerings are laid out on open air shelves for maximum exposure. You, the shopper, are expected to go to the bakery's central counter and pick up a large round silver platter and a pair of tongs. Balancing your plate in one hand while you push your cart around, you pick out the baked goods that you want and bring them back to the counter, where they are bagged and weighed and returned to you, ready to pay for at checkout. The variety of baked goods is quite astounding. WalMart, Chedraui, Soriana and Mega all have their own bakeries, so everything is fresh. They don't seem to bake with preservatives here (that's a good thing) so bread goes stale quickly. We've learned to buy just what we need for a few days.
Fruits and Vegetables
The same is true, by the way, of fruits and vegetables. (We have read that fresh fruits and veggies in supermarkets back home are for the most part "radiated for freshness" i.e. exposed to radiation so that they don't rot as quickly. The jury is out on whether this is good for humans or not). Fruit and vegetables go bad faster here as well. Partly, we think it's the climate. But even in the big grocery stores, we think they don't "radiate for freshness" here. (2009 update... sadly or not, we aren't sure, this isn't as universally true anymore. Some fruits and veggies are looking just like the ones in the States and lasting just as long. The locally eaten and Mexican-grown ones, not so much.)
Fruits and vegetables in the mercados are actually available based on the season in which they are grown, just like in the "olden days" in the US. They don't have mangos all year round... only when they are in season. But when they have them, they're locally-grown and delicious!
The fruits and vegetables are increasingly fresh and available all year long in the grocery stores (unlike when we moved here). When we first moved here in 2001, we had a hard time finding good lettuce, and celery was sold by the stalk, but only occasionally. All that has changed now. There are bags of celery and choices of lettuce. The choice of chilis is astounding, as well as lots of veggies and herbs that you don't find easily in the States (epazote, anyone?). WalMart and some of the other stores sell fresh fruit and vegetable juice in the mornings (it's fresh, and it's usually sold out by noon). The meat is mostly good, and the pork and chicken are delicious here. There's a wide variety of good fresh fish and shellfish. And as we mentioned, we can get Argentinian beef, which really does taste better than any other kind. We've found the pork chops are the best at Costco, but we prefer the steaks from Mega. Your mileage may vary.
Ordering Meat and Other Details
By the way, if you find yourself wanting sliced turkey or ham, you'll probably have to go to the meat counter and order it. The packages of pre-sliced meats are not plentiful in any of these stores (although Costco is starting to carry quite a selection). When you order your meat, you have to tell them how much you want in kilos. Un cuarto is a quarter of a kilo, un medio is a half. We've found that two people have a hard time eating through un medio of sliced meat before it goes bad. You can also buy tocino (bacon) this way, though pre-sliced bacon packages are easier to find. We generally prefer the San Rafael brand (silly us... because it is more expensive we think perhaps it might be better) and we generally stay away from the FUD brand, because we think it's a very silly name for meat.
Usually there is only one brand (maybe two) of cat or dog food at a given supermarket. There is a slightly bigger selection of pet food at the pet shops and at your vet's office. Organic foods are starting to show up more at WalMart and Mega and Superama. Until recently, really good bread was practically impossible to find. We tolerated Bimbo's Mulitgrano (multi-grain) and still like it for sandwiches. Some of the stores have fresh-baked french and sourdough baguettes, though 'sourdough' seems more of an suggestion than a reality. And on Friday, Saturdays and Sundays, Costco has four different kinds of whole-grain baguettes (pumpernickel raisin, whole grain, etc), as well as a La Brea bread, all of which are truly delicious. For great local fresh-baked bread, you must try Monique's Bakery. Her breads are all fresh-baked, organic and totally wonderful... and she definitely bakes sourdough bread. The emails she sends out every week are literary gems most of the time too! (email Monique at moniqueduval@aol.com)
Shopping Styles
Beyond the contents of the stores, there are differences in the "style" of grocery shopping in Merida compared to the States. The reason the balancing act in the bakery department doesn't seem like a big deal to most people is that no self-respecting Meridano would dream of going grocery shopping alone. Families shop together, turning the chore into an event. Saturdays seem especially targeted for this activity. Most expats we know avoid Saturday afternoon shopping because they don't seem to like crowds as much as the locals. It's a definite cultural difference. We often run into friends and acquaintances on Sunday mornings, which is a quiet time to shop because most of the gente decente are in church.
In the States, most of the 'behind the scenes' work of stocking shelves and pricing in grocery stores is done in the middle of the night. You rarely see that sort of activity when you are grocery shopping during waking hours. Not so in Mexico. In Mexico, the stores don't stay open 24 hours a day. The ONLY thing that is open 24 hours a day are some farmacias (pharmacies) and the little convenience stores, like 7-11 and OXXO. So the aisles of every grocery store chain are often crowded with employees, pallets and boxes. They don't seem to think that shoppers should have the right of way, either. Ask us, go ahead, if we find this incredibly annoying. No, on second thought, don't ask.
Often sharing that crowded aisle are food company representatives anxious to stick something in your mouth. Some days are worse than others. Sometimes there will be a little table set up in every aisle, with a lovely young woman handing out little cookies or tiny cups of yogurt. On a good day, someone is handing out tiny cups of vodka. This from a State that won't sell you liquor before 11 AM, after 9 PM, on Sundays and on voting days. And, as we discovered when Wilma was bashing Cancun, if a hurricane is anywhere in the neighborhood.
Easier Every Day
We have found it is getting easier to find almost anything in the grocery stores here. When we first moved here, the tea selection was limited to menta (mint), manzanilla (chamomile), canela (cinnamon) and negra (black... but no self-respecting tea drinker would bother). Now we have English Breakfast and Prince of Wales and Chai, but still not the same incredible selection we are used to in the States. The all-important Pop Tarts (the product, not the metaphor) came along about 2003, and then mysteriously disappeared. Now you can get them at Costco, sometimes. Real maple syrup is only available at Costco, and only sometimes. We don't do frozen dinners or frozen foods much anymore. What would be the point? Most locals agree, so consequently the selection is small. The only American brand of ice cream is Haagen Dazs and they must hide diamonds in it because it costs a fortune. (Though we admit, sometimes it's worth it...)
(Haven't found a diamond yet though...)
Grocery shopping is a microcosm of the world we live in, wherever that happens to be. Mexican grocery stores are catching up with American grocery stores by leaps and bounds, while not replacing the traditional mercados. The worst thing about grocery shopping in Merida is those darned employees crowding the aisles (don't ask!). The best thing is the incredible range of choices from the downtown traditional mercado to Mega... y tanto mas!
Comments
Working Gringos 12 years ago
Bill, you should consider advertising what you are looking for on YoListo.com.
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Bill in Merida 12 years ago
Recently arrived. I'm looking for a desk and chair. I am a writer and I'm looking for cheap and comfortable. Any help is appreciated.
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chica 12 years ago
I am still new to the area, working through not having a car. Not speaking Spanish has made things difficult to locate. I have been to 2 of the large Walmarts in Merida, and i have been to a few other large chain stores in Merida. I am looking for two things: Greek yogurt and Grape Nuts cereal. It does not have to be the name brand cereal. I used to buy an off brand in the states but i cant find it here anywhere. Does anyone know where I can find these things?
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Paradise Found 13 years ago
We are from the East Coast (New York - Connecticut) area before retiring to Cozumel recently. The article about the grocery scenes is cracking me up. I can definitely relate to the grocery shopping experience. Living on the island here in Cozumel, I swear that what you can find on the shelves depend on what the boat brings in that day, or week! We quipped that the boat 'did not came in' when we cannot find something on the shelves that were there at one time. Counting this move to Cozumel, Mexico, I have been an expat 3x; so, all-in-all, I am taking in the cultural differences in stride, and am rather enjoying it!
In Cozumel, we also have 'supermercados' such as Chadraui, Mega, Aurrera, and Sam's (although the arrange of merchandize they carried is nothing like what I've some to expect from other Sam's stores ). One of the things that struck me as amusing is this: while both Chadraui and Mega sell canned sodas, example, "Coke Zero", Chadraui will stock and sold theirs as loose cans, while in Mega (which is just across the street), they're selling theirs either in 6- or 8 packs (depending on the sizes of the cans).
As a retiree with time now to enjoy cooking, I noticed that seasonings and ingredients are very limited. For example, I can find only one delicatessen ("Maharaja") on the entire island that carries wonton/spring-roll skins. I thought I saw glutinous rice on the shelve in one of the stores (forgot which one, so I visited all of them)... but, nah, no luck. I am thinking about taking the ferry across to Playa Del Carmen and see what I can find there. So any information will be much appreciated if anyone knows of a store that carries Oriental ingredients. I see a lot of banana leaves in the vegetable aisle, but wonder whether Lotus leaves is something that's thought of as only being sold in Mars?! Same thing with gluttonous rice. Is rice flour used in any Mexican cuisine?
Oh, here's another Mexican phenomenon that we've noticed: A lot of furnitures are sold in 'a set'. Asked the shop-keeper or the attendant if a recliner, for example, can be purchased by itself, they will looked at you like you are trying playing a gringo trick to rip them off!
Elsewhere in the blog, I believe I read somewhere in regard to the 'cost-of-living'. While what one eats and ones lifestyle expectations are as personal as the shapes of individual snowflakes, let me throw in this info and see if it helps. In Cozumel, our house here is bigger than the house that we sold in the U.S. before our move. We just paid our annual property tax, US$87.00. Our comprehensive property and auto insurance for the year are about $780.00 and $650 respectively. Waste collections in the State costs us around US$21/mon. Here, we paid about US$14.00 for the entire year (and the conditions of the road upkeep shows it too!). Yet, we noticed that our trash is begin picked-up almost daily.
Separately, my husband had a lesion on his forehead removed. Now, he had this lesion for quite a few years dating back to when we were still living in the US. But this time, it grew as a blood-mole and bled when he scratched it accidentally. My husband was examined by the doctor (who turned out to be the surgeon as well) -- no appointment; had the growth removed by laser within the hour; medicine and subsequent followed-up... US$280.00 total.
We both brought our medical histories with us. After reviewing our medical histories, our Doctor prescribed the equivalent medications to us. We noted that prescriptions here can be re-filled without the "3 times only" condition. While in the States, refills translate to a trip to the doctors office (a guaranteed income stream for sure to them), which did nothing but jacking up the costs of health care for me. Straight-up, we are not rich gringos and did not retired with a 'golden parachute'; just your average Joes who worked hard; believed in living within one's budget; understood that life is short, but that enjoying the fruits of our labor is still possible. We truly love it here.
So, thank you again for your most enjoyable article.
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Tamara 13 years ago
I found Frank's Redhot Sauce at Pascadeli! They are on Calle 56, between Calle 37 and 39. They also have basmati rice (the only place other than Superama that does), and lots of Thai, Chinese, and other goodies.
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Tamara 13 years ago
Hi guys,
Thanks for the great info. I have been living in Merida for a few months, and I have been looking everywhere for Frank's Redhot Sauce. I noticed someone else asked about it a while back, but I haven't seen any responses yet. I know that Costco in Cancun had it in a gallon size jug, and a couple of stores in Playa had it, so it might be worth a trip out there.
I've looked in the Super Chedraui across from Gran Plaza, Superama, several Walmarts, and everywhere I could think of.
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Gerda Kadisch 13 years ago
Hy! I just found your Website and hope you can help me . I have a hard time finding Flax seed oil in liquid form.G N C have it sometimes. Would you know of other Stores who would carry this product? thank you Gerda
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sophie 13 years ago
Great article, and comments as well!! Having worked in various health food stores over the years before becoming a registered Nutritionist, I am especially interested in the sourcing of foodstuffs and ingredients in Mérida, Valladolid and the area... if the expat community indeed grows as expected, when I relocate myself, I would seriously consider opening a health food store, even possibly a Wholefoods branch, focusing on and encouraging local small enterprises!!! *cogs a-spinnin' *
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Retired Couple 13 years ago
Thank you for the details, spent the winter in Progreso and returning in January. Your article helped to prepare us to understand the difference from shopping in the US. Be sure to use the local corner stores and if they don't have it, ask and they will get it for you if possible. Also in the local bakeries or stores go in and order what you want for a specific date or occasion. You will not believe the quality and amount of what you will get for the price. We found they truly cater to their customers. Also we found we only bought food for a maximum of three or four days to keep it fresh. Just could not bring ourselves to freeze fresh food and there is no need to. So you really get to know your grocer. As far as the workers in the aisles, you can ask them what is new coming in, or if they have that item you cannot find. Again, we find they really try to please their customer.
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Working Gringos 15 years ago
Hola, Corrine... as for health food stores, no, there are not health food stores like we are used to in the USA and Canada. We do have a growing community of people holding a SLOW foods market with organic foods and other goodies every Saturday morning. Great whole grain and other yummy breads there. Monique, the breadmaker, also makes kiefer. Organic yogurt? no. But there is one brand without sugar (only one, out of THOUSANDS) in the markets. Every grocery store has a small (growing?) organic section nowadays, and there is one organic label of foodstuffs that comes out of Mexico. But you'll probably want to stock up on those organic supplements in Miami (Houston is closer). Yes, there are homeopathic doctors here... homeopathy is more commonplace here, in our experience. Hope that helps. Suffice it to say that you don't move to Merida for the organic food opportunities...
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Corrine Gogal 15 years ago
Good information in this article. Good to know about where to find real maple syrup and balsamic vinegar. My big question is this, I will be living in Progreso and Merida as of August/September this year and need to know if you found any "real health food stores" where I can buy a variety of supplements like we have here in Canada and the US? I would be keen to find a place that also sells organic foods, breads, milk (so I can make my own kiefer) or buy organic yogurt without any sugar. I suspect Walmart carries some supplements, but they don't have the variety like the health food stores have here. I wanted to avoid having to order my various supplements on line or go to Miami every 3 months and stock up. I guess I could look into switching to homeopath, as I've heard there is at least one in Merida that is over 100 years old. Any news about this?
Thanks
Corrine Gogal
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