Which Chipotle doesn't do. |
I'm OP and yes, I was hoping to get close enough and or expect substantial savings. Neither really happened and I spent much more than I would have guessed. I think the challenge is when everyone likes the protein variety Chipotle offers. I'm not trying to convince myself or anyone else cooking for your family in general isn't worth it. I cook for my family 5 or 6 nights a week! |
The key to getting a cheap BMW is to...go buy a Honda Accord? |
WF Guac is so expensive and not sure what "good salsa" is, but you would have saved by making these from scratch! |
How much was the Whole Foods quac? What kind of steak and chicken? You probably used a higher quality meat. |
You are a really nice person. I had written OP off by page three of this thread (lazy, bad cook, just wants to order food out) but you are actually getting them to try. We have so many good cooks on this forum with creative ideas that it can be hard to keep encouraging when someone is determined to be obstinate. You are a good person. FWIW last time we had Chipotle (1x in 10 years in an emergency) we all got diarrhea. Also, guacamole should absolutely have lime juice in it. Doesn't need to be fresh. I pick up fresh limes at the asian food store for cheap but also a big bottle of lime juice for backup. |
I think you nailed it, hard to compete with their economy of scale when a family wants options. I know they make a ton of money, obviously, but their margins really don't seem very high once I tried to make bowls myself. |
I think it's $10 or $11 for the largest container? |
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I’m trying hard to see how OP spent $50. Here’s a rough budget:
2 avocados - $3 2 cans beans — $3 Rice — $1 Tomatos — $2 Onion$1 Salsa $5 Lime $1 Chicken, 2.5 pounds $21 That’s like $37– maybe a little more if you use skirt steak. If you’re paying more for organic of course you can’t really compare that to chipotle prices. I do think between 5-10 pp is reasonable budget for make at home burrito bowls. Restaurants will get some economy of scale, certainly. (There’s an SNL skit about Arby’s where they are wondering how Arby’s can make that big meat sandwich for $5.). If you buy the massive meat packs at Costco or Walmart and separate them out, you can save money. Same with buying big bags of dried beans instead of canned beans. Even the six pack of avocados at Costco saved a bunch of money. This is all one reason why I never feel bad about buying a $15 salad at Chopt. It would be pretty expensive to buy all those items and it would take me for ever to separately prepare the 15 different things I put into the salad. So I feel like it’s a good value for me. Unlike the burgers at 5 guys which I could make easily in 10 minutes for half the price. Fast food that has a lot of elements in it is labor intensive and makes sense to do at scale by a fast food restaurant. |
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Don’t use WF guacamole it’s super overpriced. That’s $20% of your expense.
Ripen avocados on the counter and put in fridge, they will stay at the perfect ripeness for a long time, ready to use. |
| Qdoba is so much better than Chipotle. Chipotle is trash. |
| When we were in Asia, it was cheaper to have food delivered to us than going to the grocery store and doing it ourselves, so no one cooked. That would be really cool to happen in the USA and make our lives easier. |
| This thread is so weird. I make “Chipotle” bowls at home so we can have the variety and higher quality, and I can control the sodium. If I simply wanted to save money we’d be eating rice and beans. |
WF guac is perfect. I've tried to make my own, it just doesn't seem worth it and doesn't save anything. Store avos are rarely perfectly ripe or the guac just tastes slightly mediocre in the end. And again, it's really not saving money: Regular priced avocados, fresh cilantro, 1 or 2 limes is right around $10 or 11. All to run the risk of wasting time and it coming out inferior to the perfect guac WF has aced. |
| OP: what you are missing is salt and oil. My kid worked at cava and all the meats and sauces are prepared with an oily marinade and plenty of salt. Yours was healthier. |