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This message was self-deleted by its author (OhNo-Really) on Sat Dec 10, 2022, 08:29 PM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.
hlthe2b
(102,357 posts)Walmart, Target for groceries (in addition to the health food stores and Whole Foods--and Sunday farmer's market). The wide variation in prices, even for staple products like milk and produce is almost unbelievable now. I admittedly was never a coupon nor comparison shopper before, but boy I am now. If it is a little difference on a few items I will forgo making another trip to another store because of the hassle during COVID, but boy... Watch your receipts too. Even markdowns aren't always ringing right.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(25,895 posts)I doubt I've ever had one as high as $100.
But yeah, grocery prices vary from place to place and from store to store.
I really would love to see the rest of that grocery receipt. Although I will say $86.52 for honey should have been at least 300 pounds of honey.
And looking closely at the amounts of some of the things, I'd say that person is doing some serious hoarding.
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)Im high risk. I can probably survive through January with my storage. The 15 lbs if dehydrated veggies is ground into a veggie powder. Rice & broth is meager but can survive
jimfields33
(15,948 posts)My sister in Indiana pays a buck and change. Huge difference!
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)jimfields33
(15,948 posts)Mosby
(16,350 posts)unless it's the gallon size, but why does someone buy 4 gallons of dressing.
sir pball
(4,758 posts)Look at the first line, the ginger root - the 0.81 lbs @ 2.98 is above it, which is the reverse of every receipt I've ever seen. It's 3 bottles @ 3.98 each of the dressing, then 4 jugs @ 21.63 of the honey. Still a lot of honey, but at least the price is right.
Mosby
(16,350 posts)still, 20lbs of super expensive honey?
https://www.rockymountainhoneyco.com/collections/all
sir pball
(4,758 posts)It is a lot of honey, but it doesn't go bad - my dad buys 10# at a pop in Costco, he goes through one every couple of months. If you have a larger family, it could be a quarterly purchase or something.
I'm more concerned about the soup mix and garlic powder, are they running a restaurant out the back door?
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)$20 for less than a pound. I paid less than $6/lb
Ive used this for decades. I use my Blentec to make a powder because Veggie Powder is a rip off. This blend makes everything taste great.
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)Helps with our allergies
Totally Tunsie
(10,885 posts)Shopper bought 3 @ $3.98, probably the 13 oz., equaling $11.94 for total of 39 oz. or about 1/3 of a gallon. A gallon is 128 oz.
For pricing comparison, Target has 13 oz. for $3.89, so 39 oz. for $11.67.
https://www.target.com/p/litehouse-homestyle-ranch-dressing-13oz/-/A-12920959
Ms. Toad
(34,087 posts)They were looking below at the price for honey. (4 @ 21.63)
Trailrider1951
(3,414 posts)Winco near Sumner, WA. This is the lowest price store in my area. Some of those per item prices seem to be about 10% or 15% higher than my store. Others are about the same. I only shop here about once a month because it is a very popular store and is nearly always crowded. Most people wear masks. Tuesday morning senior hours are the best for me. If you hate crowds, avoid shopping on Friday through Sunday.
Safeway in Orting, WA. Prices here are much higher than Winco, but if you have a club card, it will save you some money. I only go there to pick up a few needed items, easy in and out. It is a much smaller store than Winco, in a small town, so it gets less traffic. Most people wear masks.
Other stores in the area include Fred Meyers (prices are exorbitant, some higher than Safeway), Grocery Outlet (never been there, the traffic on 410 in Bonney Lake is horrendous), and various convenience stores (won't shop there, also very high prices). Also Target (meh), Walmart (no freakin way) and various farm produce stands (usually fresh fruits and veggies, prices will vary). Good luck, all you financially challenged shoppers out there!
shanti
(21,675 posts)I've been shopping at GO for ~30 years now, so it's where I buy most of my groceries. The prices are good, but you have to watch for the expiration dates. They have lots of things that I never see elsewhere, so you have to snap it up quick if you see something you like. Check it out, you may be surprised.
Second is Costco. I should buy stock in that store!
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)Is it distance from main store?
If you have a minute maybe share which items. 🙏
I think the community can empower shoppers to force the hands of grocers
We have no price gouging protections now
Very nice to share. Thank you.
Trailrider1951
(3,414 posts)This is my latest grocery run:
I hope you can read this. If not, I'll try to translate LOL. I go to this store because: 1. Low prices 2. It has most anything I want 3. Only about 5 miles from my house
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)Decoy of Fenris
(1,954 posts)Someone's buying habits are way out of whack. This person probably needs professional psychiatric help for hoarding.
MissB
(15,812 posts)And wont open them again until our county is in another reopening phase at the county level.
renate
(13,776 posts)I haven't shopped there since March, and the bulk bins are what I miss most. If I ever did decide to go in, they'd be why, so now I totally won't. Thanks for this information!
I'm sorry for everybody who can't use the bins until this is over, but I feel less sorry for myself now about not being able to shop at my favorite store.
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)The spice containers were not all available. I use a lot of spice mostly Indian cooking. Now experimenting with essential oils. Yummy!
renate
(13,776 posts)I know we're supposed to make our own blends, but I don't, and I like theirs so much that I wouldn't anyway.
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)My daughter accidentally bought me a life supply of Garam Masala 😂
She thought either or meant both.
I think we land in our favs. I pop the mustard, roast the cumin, grind the fenugreek fennel coriander curry leaves but not always all. Always some Garam Masala for kick.
Hooked on Kitchiri or is it Kitchari?
Fresh veggies from garden, kitchiri, my spicy sweet sauce maybe some tomato paste & coconut milk is my heaven.
Retrograde
(10,156 posts)but they now sort of have them back: they have now repackaged some of the bulk products into smaller containers, same as they have for their olive bar.
Retrograde
(10,156 posts)depending on where you are, what the store has to pay for labor and its physical plant, what's in season, local costs of living, etc.
The store I usually shop at is a family-owned one (of a chain of two) in a California town notorious for its high real estate prices. Pre-epidemic, it was on the way home from the local senior center and next door to my husband's retirement gig, so it was convenient as it didn't require a separate shopping trip. When I used to go back to Western New York to look after my mother for a few weeks at a time, I noticed that prices at my family's favorite store were regularly much cheaper: the strawberries grown less than 100 miles from where I live were about 25% less in New York than what I pay for them here, even though they were trucked across the country.
Unless you're comparing national brands of processed, packaged foods it's hard to really compare since meat, fish, and produce are the most variable items. In Western New York, for example, veal was priced about the same as beef, since it's a big dairy region; out here it's a lot more expensive when you can find it at all.
Buckeye_Democrat
(14,856 posts)Traveled to New England back in the 80's and I was surprised by the much higher prices at a McDonald's. Also heard an employee tell a manager "What do you expect for $8 an hour?!" when I was paid minimum wage of $3.35 an hour in Ohio back then.
OhNo-Really
(3,985 posts)Kids get paid more
Buckeye_Democrat
(14,856 posts)... because of inflation in the meantime, but it was definitely a struggle. I was one of the lucky young adults whose parents allowed me to still live with them. (I helped them in several ways and my personality was very low-maintenance, so that probably helped.)
Worked alongside some other guys who did all kinds of things just to survive. One particular place was weird as heck to me, with a bunch of guys in their upper teens and early 20's living with 50+ year-old divorced women. I think many of them had those much older "girlfriends" just to have a roof over their heads, and several of those women were given the homes during their previous divorce settlements.
EllieBC
(3,041 posts)Pound of butter is $4.50. 3lb bag of apples is $7. 1lb strawberries is $4. I bought non kosher chicken thighs, 6 for $8.
Loaf of bread can be as little as $2 for wonder white or $7 for something healthier.
Food is pricey.
Buckeye_Democrat
(14,856 posts)EllieBC
(3,041 posts)Its not a super funny joke though when you have 3 kids and a husband and you are trying to stretch those dollars.