Anonymous wrote:The food is good. Some of y’all are weird. Well, I guess you’re keeping the economy going so thanks?
Anonymous wrote:Some of you are such snobs! Do you shop at World Market?
Anyway, I buy: tea, k pods for coffee (Starbucks, white mountain, dunkin), spices, vinegar, candy, and sometimes chips. Never ever had a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their items are actually good. I was a little scared at first. You can find items from other countries that don't have all of the bad ingredients in it. Their spices are great and fresh! I bought ground cinnamon one year and it was fresher than any cinnamon I've ever bought at the grocery store.
That cinnamon was probably from China and had all kinds of artificial additives in it to make you think it was so “fresh”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never! I was told years ago not to get food at 'non-food' places! But I saw some caramels at TJM that looked darn good, but I resisted!
Who told you?
Common sense.
Anonymous wrote:I was thinking of buying manuka honey and they had some great, fancy teas and pasta. Just wondering how HOmegoods can sell them so cheap. I thought I saw a post on this once but couldn't find it.
Anonymous wrote:Some of you are such snobs! Do you shop at World Market?
Anyway, I buy: tea, k pods for coffee (Starbucks, white mountain, dunkin), spices, vinegar, candy, and sometimes chips. Never ever had a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. I'm not buying food from a discount clothing chain. No telling where this food came from or how long it's been there. And I generally will eat anything-even stuff past it's expiration date as long as it passes the smell test.
So why won't you just check the expiration date on those items? seems like an easy fix if you'll "eat anything".
Because I shop for food at a grocery store not a bargain basement clothing store. Like a normal person.
One day you'll learn that normal people aren't rich.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know how the food comes to be on a TJMaxx or HomeGoods shelf? That might help people understand just how cautious (or not) they need to be. I myself don’t get how a random box of chocolates shows up for sale at HomeGoods.