r r\ Tuesday • June 9,1998 The Battalion GGIELIFE bj V h )he i Keys to unlocking the inner frugal gourmet Gray Whitten staff writer I’d Like to Buy the World a (Cheap) Coke by Chris Martin Good or evil. Ford or Chevy. PC or Mac. Coke or Pepsi. In a di chotomized world with only two sides of the fence, these are the choices one must make. For those engaged in academic pursuit, a multi-faceted world of infinite choices unfolds like a pa per fortune teller. One choice avail able to the financially embarrassed student is generic soda pop. As .shame evaporates from the colle giate mind, so to dries up the social suicide involved in being spotted [drinking a generic cola. H-E-B Our Own Original Cola Appearance: Their “original” is packaged much like the “classic” Coca-Cola. Seal on the front reads “Value & Service Since 1905,” which one hopes is not how long it’s been sitting on the shelf. Beware the skunky cola. Taste: Low aftertaste, which is good, but also low taste, which is bad. Parade Cola Appearance: Diagonal geome try in 1970s aesthetics. The most generic looking of the bunch, like one of those sitcom cans that sim ply says “Cola.” A definite reputa tion buster. Taste: Like swishy hair tonic. Albertson’s A+ Cola Appearance: Clean and simple, like a friendly neighborhood checkout boy. Features a large “A+” logo set in grunge type, bringing C ollege is a time to think of food differ ently. At home you may wake up, have a nice break fast, grab a sandwich for lunch then meet with the family for some quality time around the dinner table. The life of the world-class uni versity student is not quite so orga nized: wake up; drink a 20-ounce bottle of Mountain Dewin hopes of not falling asleep during software engineering lecture; eat something involving grease and cheese on the way home from the library; supple ment with fresh candy. Then the late night urge to snack appears, with absolutely no consid eration to the fact that the pizza joints have already closed. It’s up to whatever is hiding in the pantry — so often a lone box of Pop Tarts — or one of their more economically priced cousins. graphic designer David Carson’s pathetic aesthetic to the grocery store aisles of America. Taste: Slightly rubbery, like a dog chew toy. Sam’s American Choice Cola Appearance: It’s Mom, Charlie Brown, a Ford Festiva, profession al wrestling and apple pie all rolled into one. Taste: Nicely sweet. It’s the cola next door. H-E-B Our Own Original Dr. B Appearance: Again, I must question the originality of any red dish-brown can with a medical de gree that didn’t come from Waco. Taste: It’s cough syrup! Hey, that explains the “Dr.,” right? Dr. Parade Appearance: Cool gradient stars at the bottom of the can. Cool like having to wear a Johnny Carson sports jacket M N ^ E-mail data- a8ai % $ Off Your First Month’s Rent!] $ $ $ % $ Off Your Security % ■Ii , a w , *mWmm* SI • > . : :v: . ^ * ' : wm ' COUEGIAtt RESIDENCES 117 Holleman Drive West Tel.: (409) 696-5711 College Station .Texas 77840 Fax: (409) 696-5661 Office Hours Mon-Sat 10-6 Sunday 12-6 Check Us Out on the World Wide Web: www.dmcmgmtcom An Community © Developed fey Dinerstein Companies Those thinly frosted shingles be come a food group of their own for some people, myself included. Per haps an analysis of a few of the many varieties available to the starving intellectual who doesn’t like noodles is appropriate. • Pop-Tarts The granddaddy of them all. Made by the good folks at Kellogg’s and advertised relentlessly, Pop- Tarts clock in at roughly 25 cents a tart. When lightly heated these real ly are tough to beat. One can as sume all those sales profits have been put to good use in the ever growing field of tartology. With evenly spread frosting and filling that almost fills the edges, Pop-Tarts score big in all categories. Try melt ed butter for an added taste treat. • Toastettes Brought to you by the people re sponsible for the Oreo — Nabisco. Toastettes, like Pop-Tarts, come eight to a box and score a 22-cent- per-tart ratio. Generally softer and less flavorful, I didn’t receive the same cinnamony joy that I did with the first example. And to be honest, the translucent brown frosting does nothing for its aesthetic appeal. Taste: It tastes, I swear, ex actly like a fresh-out-of-the blister pack StarWars action figure smells. Albertson’s A+ Dr. A+ Appearance: Traditional red dish-brown can, but with shocking blue square housing A+ logo. A generic cola unashamed. Taste: Free and easy. Absolutely no hint that you are drinking car bonated prune juice. Sam’s American Choice Dr Thun der Appearance: The only “Dr.” with no period at the end. Back ground art is nearly identical to Dr. B can, including vertical lettering. However, the only thing that should be called “Dr Thunder” is a Lynyrd Skynyrd single or a cool ri val Mercury Cougar on “The Dukes ofHazzard.” Taste: Sweeter than A+, not as sweet as H-E-B. Chalk it up to the cheapest per-tart price of the three brands sampled. You get what you pay for. • Toast’ems The food scientists at Flavor Kist labs may have had spies over at Nabisco. Toast’ems are very similar to the Toastette. The fact that the names are slightly different helps promote this theory. Featuring the most gen erous frosting distribu tion of the three brands and filling that seems to actu ally be made from ingredi ents found in the natural world, Toast’ems do stand out a bit. At 27 cents a tart, they are the most expen sive. Maybe they need the cash to pay off their shiny new web site. Pop Tarts are the sentimental fa vorite, but for pure chewing satis faction don’t overlook the Toast’ems. And if you’re one of the lucky students who’s financial situ ation demands you decide between a super-sized lunch and a load of laundry, there’s always Toastettes. Hopefully this will help some lost souls out there realize the way to tart-induced happi ness. Or at least avoid 4 a.m. hunger pangs. Set the toast er oven for low, and heat ‘em up. Member FDIC First American Bank, SSB