Have you ever been on a road trip in the middle of nowhere USA and popped into a small town grocery store? It's mostly canned goods and cheap low quality food. The equation with food is simply higher quality will always be more expensive. Where do you find the wealth (usually)? In a city.
I'm in more of a heartland-style rural area (but still near enough to a large city). I'm sure if I were in a wealthy rural area like the Northeast it would be different. But again, wealth.
What we have out here is what salt of-the earth people have been left with. Everything is degraded. People here may work cattle and have farms, but they eat fast food. Most people where I live are obese and in poor health. But they have great hearts, as in, they are very good people. They're just sort of unaware of what food can do.
Yes, there are people I can buy a whole cow from (we do sometimes). But, most see no issue pumping their cattle full of hormones (it's how it's been done- it's become tradition in their mind at this point), There is a butcher (a pretty good one) I can use. But they look at me funny when I request for them not to put in MSG. Agriculture that is here is mostly on the industrial scale. So, the fruits and vegetables are all doused in chemicals and intended to be shipped far away.
We do have chickens. That works well. But with the price of feed I'm not sure it's necessarily cheaper. We a fairly large garden as well. But we've found that it's very expensive and work intensive to maintain it. I think it's just a standard equation of reality. Anything that is higher quality is more expensive. That's just how it is.
So what do we do? It's hilarious but we get most of our food by driving an hour back into the city, past the new Amazon warehouses that now encircle it, and to the Whole Foods with those dystopian biometric hand scanners at the checkout and where the people stunningly still wear masks. Total fail on our part. But, if I'm being positive, it is true if we were locked out of life like we were in 2021, I think we could cobble something together with what we have and with some negotiation with others around us.