Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$800/month for a family of 5. I shop there for the reasons PPs have mentioned -- quality of food, ethics of production, cheaper to get it there than at mainstream groceries.
The money goes to breakfast and dinner, mostly. My kids buy school lunch.
So you spend all that money at WF because you're worried about what's in your food and how it's grown, but you send your kids off to school to buy lunch there? Why bother (either doing that, or shopping at WF)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so glad I live in the 'boonies' and close to a Wegmans, so I don't have to shell out what you guys are to WF!!
Bonus points to us hillbillies!
Yeah, I would say Wegmans is more similar to a huge Giant/Safeway than Whole Foods. Not really comparable. But I'm glad you like living in the boonies.
I'm in Fairfax, right in between a WF and Wegmans. But I always end up at Wegmans.
I think its the bread department. Wegmans bread is just awesome... european standards.
WF breads look just as good... but something isn't quite the same.
For seafood or produce, I always end up at one of the korean supermarkets, Lotte or H-mart. There is so much more variety, its cheaper, and its fresher.
Anonymous wrote:So you spend all that money at WF because you're worried about what's in your food and how it's grown, but you send your kids off to school to buy lunch there? Why bother (either doing that, or shopping at WF)?
Because the perfect is the enemy of the good. My kids don't like the kind of food I can pack -- they like hot lunch -- and in my hierarchy, local/organic eaten is better than conventional/heavily processed eaten is better than anything uneaten.
I buy them Yoplait, too, even though I don't like the HFCS or the nonrecyclable containers. It's what they like, and I don't want to be a controlling asshole about yogurt.
So you spend all that money at WF because you're worried about what's in your food and how it's grown, but you send your kids off to school to buy lunch there? Why bother (either doing that, or shopping at WF)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are groceries significantly cheaper? We shop at Giant and Safeway and still spend a comparable amount. Groceries have gone up a ton during the past year.
Target. Lots of organic stuff, too. You can't shop there for everything, but it's vastly cheaper than regular grocery stores.
If you eat mostly processed cans & box mixes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are groceries significantly cheaper? We shop at Giant and Safeway and still spend a comparable amount. Groceries have gone up a ton during the past year.
Target. Lots of organic stuff, too. You can't shop there for everything, but it's vastly cheaper than regular grocery stores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$0
Why do you shop there? I ask honestly. We live just blocks from one and I have been in there maybe 10 times in the last 10 years. You can definitelly "eat well" for a heck of a lot cheaper.
For the kind of food I eat (i.e. soymilk), Whole Foods is comparable or sometimes cheaper than the regular grocery store. I think the produce (even non-organic) is of better quality (lasts longer) and is really not that much more expensive than produce at Giant or Safeway. Now, if you're buying organic raspberries for $5 a container, it is going to get expensive.
Their milk always goes bad before the expiration date (regular). It does tend to be cheaper but I only buy it if I know we are going to use it quickly. I don't find the produce any better (non-organic) just displayed nicer. I do like to buy fish there and the Horizon Chocolate milk boxes because they are cheaper than Safeway but really everything else is Safeway.