On Tuesday, July 12, 2016 10:18:45 jmsteele9...@sbcglobal.net wrote: > In the US, I would say relatively rare. It would almost require some > special interest, portion control for diabetes or weigh loss, interest in > cooking "foreign" recipes, etc. If the household has one, it is likely to > be a spring type, and moderate capacity to determine cooking times for > large cuts of meat, roasts, turkeys, etc. My current preferred scale is 4 > kg x 0.5 g, but I have some older ones. I do not have one suitable for > small amounts of ingredients; salt, spices, etc. have to be measured by > volume. Like all Americans, I also have an adequate supply of measuring > cups and spoons.
How hard would it be for someone in the US to buy a scale? Would he find it at a kitchen store? I bought mine online and it's been years since I've been in a kitchen store. I'm pretty sure there's one in (I think) Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, and there may be one in the mall in Asheville, but I was looking for a suitcase, not a kitchen tool. The email is partly written; I may send it on Sunday. Pierre -- gau do li'i co'e kei do _______________________________________________ USMA mailing list USMA@colostate.edu https://lists.colostate.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/usma