My dear blog reader, if you or anyone you know agrees with the letter below, won’t you please share it, hashtag it, copy/paste it, add your name to it, and do whatever you like to get the basic sentiment out there? (And read on for an additional message to you that follows it.)
Dear Trader Joe’s, as well as other grocery stores and processed food manufacturers,
Food, glorious food! I love your stuff, and I adore it all the better when you sell it in containers that are healthy and easy to re-use.
Rather than cans and near-impossible-to-recycle (let alone repurpose) plastic vacuum-sealed boxes, sell us stuff in containers like these!…



Here’s the kind of jars I love best — think healthy, easy-to-clean, and uniform in which to store my beans, grains, flour, pasta, and such:
- Straight-sided and where I can easily reach in wash clear down to the bottom.
- Labels that require just a quick soak to remove.
- Better yet, no labels at all, as in the case of the adorable drinking glasses illustrated after this letter — how sublime that the Welch’s name appears only in fine print!
- Interchangeable sizes and lids would be extra classy!
The mustard sauce in the photo is great — and is all the better for the jar!
Yours truly,
da-AL — a customer who I doubt is alone
P.S. Don’t think you can get away with overpricing products with super-cute holiday gift-type containers and expect us to think you’ve done anyone a favor.
Back to you my dear cyberland friend,
As you can guess from above, I’m asking businesses to go beyond using less plastic. It’s lovely when grocers sell us food in glass jars. Let’s encourage them to take it up a gazillion notches by doing something that’ll benefit us while making us more loyal to them!
I hope you’ll share this with anyone who’s as upset as I am with how impossible it is to get away from plastic. Share this with individuals as well as with businesses. Even small gestures can go a long way when they’re multiplied. As consumers, our wallets wield immense power.
Every time I turn around, I read more scary stuff about how corrosive plastics are to our bodies, and downright catastrophic to the environment. There may have been a time when we deluded ourselves that plastic was better than glass, but these days, we know better.
When I was small, my family ate Welch’s jam. Why? Sure, it was tasty, and we needed something not too expensive for our toast — but with all the jams out there, Welch’s outsmarted the others! Theirs was in glass jars meant to be repurposed into drinking glasses! Customers wanted to collect the cute freebies while getting decent jams at the same time.

Win-win joy here, there, everywhere!! Pardon me while I do a little jig at the keyboard! Why the heck don’t all stores and all brands continue to do something like what I described?
For crafty readers and those of us who enjoy looking at stuff we’ll never do — here and here and here and here and here and here and here are some links. Key search words: repurpose and up-cycle.
Do you know an easy way to help stem the tide of plastic?
Discover more from Happiness Between Tales (and Tails) by da-AL
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.


I have so many Bonne Maman jars that I use for food storage that I once wrote a blog post about them. One of the many ways I have become my mother. I wish everything on the shelves were glass!
LikeLiked by 2 people
Hopefully we take the best from those around us 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hello Da-Al. Nice one
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you, Kurian 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
You are very welcome
LikeLiked by 1 person
Great post. That is also what I’m saying.
Unfortunately, re-usage is not possible in most cases.
LikeLiked by 2 people
We had Flintstone glasses when I as a kid. Even water tasted better drinking from them.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Anything tastes better with cartoons, no?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Avoiding plastic is very difficult in Denmark. There is absolutely no water to be had in glass bottles in any supermarket. The largest juice producer has just started to sell their eco cold pressed juice in plastic bottles instead of tetra packs. The second class juice from concentrate is still in tetra packs. If you talk about that with a shop assistant, they just point out that plastic is collected for re-use in Denmark. Really, where are all those products made from re-used plastic? They are not aware of the damage plastic does to our bodies via the food. I fill everything over into glass bottles when we get home. Luckily, the water bottles are deposit bottles. The orange juice bottle I put into the recycling container and hope for the best.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Same here. Those awful stickers they put on fruits are made of plastic…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, the apple stickers (mostly on apples here), but only on imported apples. We make jokes, if one apple does not have a sticker, musing if we should complain about this … 😉
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lolol it is good that you can laugh 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person