To follow up on my recent post about the low cost of living here, I’ll share a bit about eating on the cheap in Ecuador. Truly, it can be hard to spend more than $10 on a meal – or $5, for that matter. But if you want to drop some dough, you definitely can at some of Quito’s fancier joints like the upscale sushi spot I visited today where prices were on par with anywhere in the US.
Ecuador is filled with tiny mom-and-pop shops (some might call them holes-in-the-wall) that serve cheap meals, like a plate of chicken or steak for a few bucks. But the real jackpot is the almuerzos, set lunches that cost between $1-2. These lunches come with a drink (soda or fresh juice), soup, salad, rice, and typically chicken (although you can also have steak). And these are no puny lunches either – they can definitely fill you up.
Sometimes the language barrier we face can be a challenge in even the most familiar of situations.
I was just feeling a bit hungry so I decided to head down to the corner 7-Eleven and pick up something for lunch. I looked through their refrigerated section and found a delicious looking mixed vegitable noodle bowl (noodles, letuice, egg, and a spicy sauce) for only 2000 won. I picked it up along with some multi colored rice balls (tteok) and went over to the register to pay. The girl behind the counter scanned the bowl, looked quizzically at the register as it made a long beeping sound, and looked back at me with an expression I’ve come to know means ‘I have no idea how I’m going to explain this to you…’. Eventually she gestured at the sell by date on the package: 06/28/09 and said, a bit unsurely, ‘date’. I said ‘date?’ back to her and made Korean index-fingers-in-an-X gesture for ‘no’; she nodded. I tried to gesture that it was perfectly ok with me if she sold me almost expired letuice and noodles, but it seemed lost on her that I’d still want to buy them. Eventually, hungry and tired of trying, I returned the noodles to their origional location on the shelf (which she didn’t seem to have a problem with) and bought some rice triangles instead. They were good I suppose, but damnit… I wanted those expired noodles!