China is like South Korea, Japan and perhaps a few other countries that can be labelled as "fake Asia": a gloss of modernity (We have cleaning robots on campus!) with an underbelly of Stone Age values (e.g. try to be "queer" in any form...). I am not saying that the rest of the world is better, but please be careful about what you are jealous of. Ok, cynicism aside, we also get dozens if not hundreds of "milk tea" chains, but also proper tea shops with humongous amounts of choice. If you have a chance, I definitely suggest you to try Pu'er tea ("oxidised black", i.e. very strong in flavour, which you can actually
buy on Amazon, go figure). The cake I am linking to is not cheap, but 357 grams (13 ounces?) is a good 357 full cups: pu'er tea is *strong*.
I also suspect that Oolong might be "old news", but why not offer a reminder? I drink a lot of mysterious stuff, because the "lady from the
Clamp anime-style shop" I visit has developed the habit of selling me brews that are exceedingly obscure, or my money back. We converse in French and some Italian (Wuhan was a French protectorate until the 1920s), and she smokes the traditional needle-like pipe you only see in historical movies and anime, I swear. I am currently drinking a variety of mountainous green tea from some mountains south of Wuhan (where I live), that I could only describe as "ice mint and moss" in flavour. Dark emerald green in colour, and it is actually stronger than coffee.
Yes, though: nutrition-conscious diets can also be built on not so glamorous ingredients that tend to have stable prices are not simple to devise, but at some point I simply decided to maintain my student habits into my "adult life", since I had a few occasions in which I tried to spend more money ("hey, I have a good salary now!") and I quickly experienced inflation/price fluctuation stress tests. It does help that in China fresh fruit is easy to obtain (fruit shops are common and sell a bit of everything) and some varieties are delicious. Lychee, Jujube and Pomelos are healthy and frankly better sweet treats than any ultra-processed candy. They are also traditionally seen as "fruit for the poor", so they always tend to be cheap. I also have fodmap problems, but I use them to my advantage: with a bit of potatoes in my dinner, I can obtain a fake sense of fullness, since it takes me ages to digest them.
I'd say that I tend to eat this "poor man's diet", which has its socio-cultural and nutritional merits, and seems to serve me well as a shield from inflation. But no mackerel? Similar to tuna in flavour, way less fat and mercury (I cannot remember why, though), and if you buy it fresh, it is *delicious* in the oven with just some salt.
Some other observations:
I walk everywhere, and I rent bicycles or scooters when I need to cover longer distances (or use the subway). I will probably buy a car in 204X or so, when I will return to Italy for retirement, or perhaps brave the adversities and use a bike. I don't mind driving - on highways. So, petrol and cars are inflation factors I have almost become unaware of. At home, I have solar panels and even if electricity bills are generally low in China (thanks to the
Three Gorges Dam), eight hours of decent light per day cover all daily cost and even heating costs/cooling costs (winter/summer) (and energy for rainy days, too). I guess that with a certain commitment to "smart life", more than the Buddha-like mindset, avoiding the effects of inflation becomes easier under the right conditions.
...it is also true that I constantly need to keep track of exchange rates when moving saved money or handling expenses to and from China, but those are factors almost entirely beyond my control. I do transfer savings when the yuan is usually at its strongest, though. I'd comment on my new contract at work, but it would probably be more on the off-topic side.
"The only desire the Culture could not satisfy from within itself was one common to both the descendants of its original human stock and the machines [...]: the urge not to feel useless."
I.M. Banks, "Consider Phlebas" (1988: 43).