Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spring has sprung, and rotten produce is back at Aldi.
I strongly suspect they use an unrefrigerated supply chain, so food rots in warm weather.
Not sure why people are surprised. You get what you get with cheap produce. They're cheap for a reason! Aldis buys their produce from different suppliers (cheaper suppliers, cheaper origins, lower quality grades, closer to sell-by dates) than Whole Foods. If you are careful and smart about it, you can make it work, especially if you eat the produce quickly. But on the whole I've been burnt too often trying to safe a few pennies getting cheap produce.
I've never had an issue with Aldi's produce and often it's the same brands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spring has sprung, and rotten produce is back at Aldi.
I strongly suspect they use an unrefrigerated supply chain, so food rots in warm weather.
Not sure why people are surprised. You get what you get with cheap produce. They're cheap for a reason! Aldis buys their produce from different suppliers (cheaper suppliers, cheaper origins, lower quality grades, closer to sell-by dates) than Whole Foods. If you are careful and smart about it, you can make it work, especially if you eat the produce quickly. But on the whole I've been burnt too often trying to safe a few pennies getting cheap produce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just filled up a Whole Foods Amazon cart with the following for $93.11:
Bag of gala apples (48 oz)
6 bananas
1 lb onion
1 lb carrot
3 heads broccoli
3 sweet potatoes
block of cheddar, 8 oz
gallon skim milk
32 oz plain yogurt
2 packages spaghetti
2 marinara sauces
2 cans black beans
8 tortillas
3 lbs chicken breast
1 loaf multigrain bread
1 container peanut butter
12 eggs
box of cereal
1 lb ground beef
1 frozen bag stirfry veggies
80 ox bag of white rice
I mean, this is not enough to make tasty meals for me (I'd want sauces and herbs for sure and am guilty of buying berries and chili crisp and micro-cilantro) but it's certainly much more than what's represented in many shock articles about groceries. I do not shop like this. But it is possible.
No way this is $93.11. try 193.11
Anonymous wrote:
I just filled up a Whole Foods Amazon cart with the following for $93.11:
Bag of gala apples (48 oz) $6.00
6 bananas. $3.00
1 lb onion. $2.50
1 lb carrot. $1.50
3 heads broccoli. $3.00
3 sweet potatoes $3.80
block of cheddar, 8 oz. $3.50
gallon skim milk. $4.60
32 oz plain yogurt $4.50
2 packages spaghetti. $2.60
2 marinara sauces $5.40
2 cans black beans $3.00
8 tortillas $2.50
3 lbs chicken breast. $15.00
1 loaf multigrain bread. $3.20
1 container peanut butter. $3.19
12 eggs. $4.50
box of cereal. $1.88
1 lb ground beef. $6.00
1 frozen bag stirfry veggies. $3.70
80 ox bag of white rice. $4.50
Anonymous wrote:I just filled up a Whole Foods Amazon cart with the following for $93.11:
Bag of gala apples (48 oz)
6 bananas
1 lb onion
1 lb carrot
3 heads broccoli
3 sweet potatoes
block of cheddar, 8 oz
gallon skim milk
32 oz plain yogurt
2 packages spaghetti
2 marinara sauces
2 cans black beans
8 tortillas
3 lbs chicken breast
1 loaf multigrain bread
1 container peanut butter
12 eggs
box of cereal
1 lb ground beef
1 frozen bag stirfry veggies
80 ox bag of white rice
I mean, this is not enough to make tasty meals for me (I'd want sauces and herbs for sure and am guilty of buying berries and chili crisp and micro-cilantro) but it's certainly much more than what's represented in many shock articles about groceries. I do not shop like this. But it is possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just filled up a Whole Foods Amazon cart with the following for $93.11:
Bag of gala apples (48 oz)
6 bananas
1 lb onion
1 lb carrot
3 heads broccoli
3 sweet potatoes
block of cheddar, 8 oz
gallon skim milk
32 oz plain yogurt
2 packages spaghetti
2 marinara sauces
2 cans black beans
8 tortillas
3 lbs chicken breast
1 loaf multigrain bread
1 container peanut butter
12 eggs
box of cereal
1 lb ground beef
1 frozen bag stirfry veggies
80 ox bag of white rice
I mean, this is not enough to make tasty meals for me (I'd want sauces and herbs for sure and am guilty of buying berries and chili crisp and micro-cilantro) but it's certainly much more than what's represented in many shock articles about groceries. I do not shop like this. But it is possible.
But you clearly cook from scratch and with better ingredients. The picture on the tweet thread shows me someone who prefers using more processed food to cooking.
Anonymous wrote:I just filled up a Whole Foods Amazon cart with the following for $93.11:
Bag of gala apples (48 oz)
6 bananas
1 lb onion
1 lb carrot
3 heads broccoli
3 sweet potatoes
block of cheddar, 8 oz
gallon skim milk
32 oz plain yogurt
2 packages spaghetti
2 marinara sauces
2 cans black beans
8 tortillas
3 lbs chicken breast
1 loaf multigrain bread
1 container peanut butter
12 eggs
box of cereal
1 lb ground beef
1 frozen bag stirfry veggies
80 ox bag of white rice
I mean, this is not enough to make tasty meals for me (I'd want sauces and herbs for sure and am guilty of buying berries and chili crisp and micro-cilantro) but it's certainly much more than what's represented in many shock articles about groceries. I do not shop like this. But it is possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spring has sprung, and rotten produce is back at Aldi.
I strongly suspect they use an unrefrigerated supply chain, so food rots in warm weather.
Not sure why people are surprised. You get what you get with cheap produce. They're cheap for a reason! Aldis buys their produce from different suppliers (cheaper suppliers, cheaper origins, lower quality grades, closer to sell-by dates) than Whole Foods. If you are careful and smart about it, you can make it work, especially if you eat the produce quickly. But on the whole I've been burnt too often trying to safe a few pennies getting cheap produce.
Anonymous wrote:Spring has sprung, and rotten produce is back at Aldi.
I strongly suspect they use an unrefrigerated supply chain, so food rots in warm weather.