Ries
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- Mar 18, 2008
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I guess it depends on what you eat in the US.
Personally, I find food here to be a lot cheaper, for anything FROM Argentina.
Of course, anything imported is expensive.
But I eat a lot at home in Buenos Aires, and I buy a lot of things here that are much cheaper than the same things cost in the Seattle area. Obviously, meat is cheaper here. I buy organic chickens, and eggs, from a little store a few blocks from my apartment, in Barrio Norte, and they run about half the price of similar stuff in Washington.
Fruits and vegetables, in season, are quite cheap here.
Local cheese and fiambres are cheaper- I can get the BEST salami from Tandil for a quarter the price of Salumi in Seattle.
Obviously, wine is dirt cheap. Beer is not bad, for swill- 12 pesos a liter for Quilmes. I used to pay that for a quart of Rainier, in the early 80's, but beer in Seattle is more like double or three times that price. Easy to pay ten bucks for a liter of microbrew in the northwest.
Local liquor is cheap- I buy Amargo Obrero, a liquor somewhat like Fernet, for 38 pesos a liter- in Washington State, if it was available, it would be 38 dollars. My wife likes Campari- its around 40 bucks a bottle in Washington, about 7 dollars here.
I eat out here, and it blows me away how cheap it is for what you get. I can go to a really good restaurant, and pig out, for 250 or 300 pesos a person. At the blue rate, thats what you pay for midrange or below in Washington. I was at La Cabrera the other night , 250 each. A restaurant of similar quality in Seattle would run you 4 times that for what we ate and drank.
I eat quite well here, I dont think its expensive at all.
Of course, if you demand imported stuff, you pay a lot. I eat local.
Rents are high here because real estate is a place to park money in a way unknown in the USA. And, its a big city, and the fun places to live are more expensive- you can find cheap places an hour bus ride out from the center, sure, but who would want to live there.
Public transportation is dirt cheap, safe, and runs 24/7. I ride collectivos all the time, and, even after the Jan 1 price increase, they are still going to be about 1/10 the cost of buses in Seattle.
Oh, and music, art, theater, dance, cinema- all very cheap.
Check out my thread about seeing bands.
Juana Molina was somewhat expensive, at 80 pesos, most concerts I go to are more in the 40 to 50 peso range.
Again, you pay ridiculous prices for "imported"- American metal bands can run you 30 or 40 dollars for a ticket, but stick with the local music scene, and you can have a great time for five bucks.
Personally, I find food here to be a lot cheaper, for anything FROM Argentina.
Of course, anything imported is expensive.
But I eat a lot at home in Buenos Aires, and I buy a lot of things here that are much cheaper than the same things cost in the Seattle area. Obviously, meat is cheaper here. I buy organic chickens, and eggs, from a little store a few blocks from my apartment, in Barrio Norte, and they run about half the price of similar stuff in Washington.
Fruits and vegetables, in season, are quite cheap here.
Local cheese and fiambres are cheaper- I can get the BEST salami from Tandil for a quarter the price of Salumi in Seattle.
Obviously, wine is dirt cheap. Beer is not bad, for swill- 12 pesos a liter for Quilmes. I used to pay that for a quart of Rainier, in the early 80's, but beer in Seattle is more like double or three times that price. Easy to pay ten bucks for a liter of microbrew in the northwest.
Local liquor is cheap- I buy Amargo Obrero, a liquor somewhat like Fernet, for 38 pesos a liter- in Washington State, if it was available, it would be 38 dollars. My wife likes Campari- its around 40 bucks a bottle in Washington, about 7 dollars here.
I eat out here, and it blows me away how cheap it is for what you get. I can go to a really good restaurant, and pig out, for 250 or 300 pesos a person. At the blue rate, thats what you pay for midrange or below in Washington. I was at La Cabrera the other night , 250 each. A restaurant of similar quality in Seattle would run you 4 times that for what we ate and drank.
I eat quite well here, I dont think its expensive at all.
Of course, if you demand imported stuff, you pay a lot. I eat local.
Rents are high here because real estate is a place to park money in a way unknown in the USA. And, its a big city, and the fun places to live are more expensive- you can find cheap places an hour bus ride out from the center, sure, but who would want to live there.
Public transportation is dirt cheap, safe, and runs 24/7. I ride collectivos all the time, and, even after the Jan 1 price increase, they are still going to be about 1/10 the cost of buses in Seattle.
Oh, and music, art, theater, dance, cinema- all very cheap.
Check out my thread about seeing bands.
Juana Molina was somewhat expensive, at 80 pesos, most concerts I go to are more in the 40 to 50 peso range.
Again, you pay ridiculous prices for "imported"- American metal bands can run you 30 or 40 dollars for a ticket, but stick with the local music scene, and you can have a great time for five bucks.