Anonymous wrote:I've always thought of pistachios as expensive and only for an occasional treat; same with almonds and cashews. I think the giant bags of nuts and giant sizes of things like jars of marinated artichoke hearts at Costco have made us think these are everyday purchases. They used to be luxury items. Maybe it's time to rethink what we think of as everyday purchases? I'm doing this now. My parents woukd have never bought these on a regular basis. Same with soft drinks, wine and alcohol, avocados, muffins and all the other stuff that is now part of people's daily fare.
Anonymous wrote:The key is to buy the right quantities there and have a shopping list - don’t deviate from it.
Costco is still better than all named stores for the long lasting items: juices, organic frozen fish, coffee, olive oil, toilet paper, laundry detergent etc.
The packages of pistachio are huge relative TJ
I buy only organic and organic at Costco is same quality as WF and still cheaper
Anonymous wrote:Costco is a publicly traded company beholden to a Board of Directors and major shareholders. Costco, therefore, must squeeze out every dime it can, so if they have to charge $50 for a bag of pistachios and up the membership fee to $200 they will do so because the shareholders demand it to be so.Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I get this thread. Costco makes its money on the membership fees and sells most items at a very low gross margin particularly compared to WalMart or Target. That's not to say that every single thing is cheaper at Costco or that you cannot find a lower quality alternative elsewhere that will meet your needs but generally Costco delivers value.
Anonymous wrote:Like breakfast cereal, I do not buy pistachios anymore. Although I can afford to pay their price, I refuse to do so.
I also do not eat out at restaurants requiring a tip, and rarely eat out at all because almost $20 for a burger, fries, and a drink is not what I want to pay. Also, burgers have shrunk almost to the size of large biscuits so I am done eating out unless I have to.
Costco is a publicly traded company beholden to a Board of Directors and major shareholders. Costco, therefore, must squeeze out every dime it can, so if they have to charge $50 for a bag of pistachios and up the membership fee to $200 they will do so because the shareholders demand it to be so.Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure I get this thread. Costco makes its money on the membership fees and sells most items at a very low gross margin particularly compared to WalMart or Target. That's not to say that every single thing is cheaper at Costco or that you cannot find a lower quality alternative elsewhere that will meet your needs but generally Costco delivers value.