Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
I don't care if it's for the lower class demographic. Even with a $285k HHI, I like places where I can shop for cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
That is the appeal here, that it is really really cheap. Not that the food is great, just that the food is cheap. Cheaper than Food Lion, even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
That is the appeal here, that it is really really cheap. Not that the food is great, just that the food is cheap. Cheaper than Food Lion, even.
Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
Anonymous wrote:Per the grocery budget suggestions on the finance board, I did some grocery shopping at Aldi this month. We were not impressed. The price was AWESOME and I left the store on cloud nine...so much food for $50! Hooray!
The cereal was fine, but it's cheaper at Trader Joes. I did like the price of organic apples!
Disappointed items include:
Cheese sticks: no flavor
Pineapple: went rotten within a couple days (before it even turned yellow)
Frozen fish fillets: very breaded and gummy
Kiwi: 1/4 was totally rotten
There's more but I can't remember.
Where did I go wrong?!?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Im German and really laugh at how Americans have been so excited for Aldi. It is absolutely THE crappiest grocery store in Germany. It's like getting excited over getting a local Save-a-Lot. Aldi to me is like a rung below Shoppers. In Germany Aldi caters to the lower class demographic.
Anonymous wrote:Aldi has wonderful baking supplies and anything with a German name or label is generally top drawer. They have an outstanding supply of cheese and sausages for the holidays. Their chocolate bars are top quality. My favorite: dark chocolate with hazelnuts. I even find their eggs superior to what I find at regular supermarkets. I'm usually a food snob and buy all my meat at a butcher shop, but I've been known to buy the herb-crusted salmon at Aldi. Wonderful!
Anonymous wrote:Produce there is highly variable. I've always had good luck with pineapples, potatoes, onions, and the four packs of "gourmet" lettuce.
The cheese sticks are flavorless, but I find most string cheese to be flavorless. The other cheese is always good quality. (Maybe not the American singles.)
Remember that Aldi has a "double guarantee" where they will replace the item and refund your money if you are dissatisfied. Maybe it's not worth it to you to retain the package and the unused food-- the only time I did that was with a package of prosciutto that I didn't notice had been partially opened and was all dried out.