Prices keep climbing, so I’m trying to pick my battles in the supermarket. Which items do you refuse to cheap out on, and why? Taste, health, longevity, peace of mind… I’d love to hear what’s worth the few extra dollars for you.

For me, it’s honey from local beekeepers—supermarket brands locally are known to sell fake or adulterated sugar syrup as honey.

  • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    From my shopping, there is just about none. Arguably sausages but then there are cheaper alternatives I go for instead usually. Pork shoulder is cheaper per kg than all but the lowest meat content sausages.

    Typically been spending £10-15 each per week on shopping at Aldi. But it also depends on how far you go. You could say everything is paying extra if you are spending more than £2 as that could get enough rice for the week. Got several herbs growing in the garden too so it wouldn’t even be completely plain.

  • VeryFrugal@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    Instant noodles. I live in South Korea and there are gazillion options, from little more than a quarter(USD for your convenience) to almost $1.5 a pack.

    Huge difference. I eat 2 packs per meal almost always and yes, it’s often 2x more expensive but I’d just not eat cheapest ones.

  • Ledericas@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    some people at WF, will only go after certain honeys, even if they are more expensive. i will still buy different flavor sparkling waters, from different brands. but the key is to know which ones are shrinkflationed, some will only sell 8packs, while others will sell 12cans per box. stevia, i specifically only look for the ones that dont have sugar in it, more often than not most brands of stevia has sugar in it, in the form dextrose/maltodextrin. its pricier but worth it for a brand that has pure stevia powder, also one thats not mixed with ethyrthiol.

    certain organic veggies are better , if you dont want to know which used the most chemicals, like org celeries.

  • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Real parm instead of the canned stuff.

    Chicken breasts - you can get massive pumped up chicken breast for the same price as “normal” chicken breasts. The problem is when you cook the big ones, they just leech out all their liquid.

    • PodPerson@lemmy.zip
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      15 hours ago

      150% on real parm.

      I’d also argue for getting whole chickens (and spring for the nicer ones too). Roast it, pull off the breasts and eat those, eat the drumsticks if you enjoy them, or use the entire rest of the carcass for making really good stock.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    Fresh corn tortillas.

    Tequila.

    Haircare stuff

    Husband bought “the good eggs” once and has not looked back since. I used to keep chickens and the bougie store eggs are much closer to those than they are to the factory farmed thin shelled light yolked ones.

    • PNW clouds@infosec.pub
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      14 hours ago

      I got a tortilla press and masa harina. I will not buy premade corn torillas again. Masa isn’t that expensive, add salt, water, mix, press, and cook on a dry pan (or super lightly oiled, i put a very light layer on mine since it’s cast iron)

      So much tastier than store bought and better texture.

      • Krudler@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        It’s the curse of discovering good food, once you make it from scratch, you never want to eat the store trash again lol

    • BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      The best eggs are eggs from a farm that are unwashed and you keep on the counter. They taste a zillion times better and last for a long time. I get 3 dozen for 15 dollars at the local farm. It’s honestly better than the store.

  • toomanypancakes@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    Honestly a lot of stuff I like to get the nice version. Most packaged products you can get away with cheaper, but paper products you wanna splurge on, and produce you wanna get from a local store with good stuff rather than your local megamart when possible. A farmer’s market or even just a neighborhood grocery store is usually gonna have fresher, tastier veggies in my experience. A little more expensive, but worth it.

    • turtlesareneat@discuss.online
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      16 hours ago

      The paper thing stopped being true in the past year around here. Name brand paper towels are now so thin, store brand is thicker at half the price. Q-Tips don’t have the same cardboard in the middle, less cotton Kroger brand is closer to the old q-tips (but still a step down from what I grew up with).

      Toilet paper is basically a toss-up, the nicer store brands are about comparable to the non-specialty name brands now. For the extra strong or extra soft, name brand still wins, but it’s changing.

    • PNW clouds@infosec.pub
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      14 hours ago

      Real butter for things where you can taste it. Store brand for things where the other flavors are more overpowering and don’t really notice the butter.

    • Ledericas@lemm.ee
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      9 hours ago

      trash bags, was very difficult to find, that isnt thin, they shrinkflation/cheapflation most of thier brands. Target had excellent trashbags, before they switched to dealworthy, which is more expensive if you notice the bags are now superthin and they sell the “up and up” ones at a markup. i went to Grocery outlet and got the same quality as the old trash bags with none of the bs of the shrinkflaiton on it.

    • toomanypancakes@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Toilet paper too! As someone who needs to use it for peeing, it likes to stick if you get the cheap stuff. Not fun!

  • metallic_substance@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Coffee. It’s something that I refuse to compromise on. It may be especially important to me because I like to drink it black. If it doesn’t taste great without adding anything to it, it’s not with drinking at all in my opinion.

    • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 hours ago

      Coffee seems to be one of those things supermarkets regularly price cycle.

      If i buy 4x 1kg bags when it’s 30% off, i rarely have to buy any at full price.

      This doesn’t work for artisan’s coffee you buy direct from the roaster obviously.

    • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I’m two ways about this.

      In recent years I’ve become quite a coffee lover. I’ve experimented with a lot of brewing methods, and got into small batch beans from independent roasters, with interesting qualities like being aged in whisky barrels (that one tastes and smells sooo good)

      At the same time though I grew up in a family where the only coffee my parents ever drank was instant - a teaspoon of granules with some hot water and milk and maybe sugar. When I go over there to visit that’s what I’ll get, and I’m not going to turn my nose up at it. In some ways it’s got that taste of nostalgia lol.

      • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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        19 hours ago

        As a fellow up the arse coffee lover - I moved away from drinking fancy coffee every day. Not just because 250 grams are, at best, at 16€ and I drink about 35 grams a day on an average day, but also because it takes away the “specialty” if you drink it daily, regularly, ordinarily. I now have a go to coffee (pre ground even) that I enjoy drinking as my “normal” coffee and treat myself to a cup of specialty every now and then, and a bag now lasts me a month. I enjoy it much more and I save a lot of money - although my go to coffee is also not the cheapest crap.

        I also started out with instant coffee btw - took some with me with milk and sugar to school in a small water bottle when I was a young teenager (and girlmore girls was on so I had to get into coffee). Just reading your comment gave me a flashback to being 14 and my mom giving me the “good instant coffee”. Memories and vibes.

      • anon6789@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I didn’t drink coffee for half my life because I was usually always around burnt, bottom tier coffee.

        After moving largely away from whiskies and runs due to medicine I was on, I wanted a complex beverage to fill that void and gave some decent coffee a shot. It was of course worlds beyond most of what I’ve had anywhere else, and now I try different single origins every month.

        But the real wild thing, is now I apply that tasting ability I’ve developed to diner coffee, and now the particular funk of a Waffle House cup gives me the memories of old road trips. The coffee from the local diner reminds me I’m home. Now that I can pick out one cup of low grade from another, it lets me appreciate the times I do go low on coffee.

        Your comment made me think of the semi-famous Tom Petty coffee story from Rolling Stone. In searching for the article, I saw something claiming his daughters refuted the claims of his brand of choice, though still others claimed Mr Petty had personally verified it with them, so who’s to say for sure at this point. But anyone who likes coffee, Tom Petty, or some food storytelling should like this tale of a man and his quest for the perfect cup. For anyone that hasn’t read the story, I really enjoy it and think it’s a fun read and a reminder of simple joys in life.

        • tiramichu@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          The coffee story is quite a long way in, but it was an interesting read, thanks.

          I guess the message is, things aren’t always good because they are objectively good. Sometimes things are good because of when we had them, and who we enjoyed them with. And that’s definitely true.

          • anon6789@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            It does meander a bit, as it’s more a reflection of the author’s history with Petty on the one year anniversary of his passing that just happens to eventually settle on a tale about coffee perfection.

            I like it overall as a tale about simple pleasures and what will people remember most about us after we’re gone rather than a guide on how to achieve the perfect cup. I have reservations about if I’d agree that was the best cup ever if I had been there with them, but that was what reminded me of the story while I was reading about you having a mug of instant coffee with your family. 😊

  • CobblerScholar@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Butter, life is too damn short to cook with and eat shitty butter.

    Also anything that goes between me and the ground, my bed, my shoes, and my tires.

    • toomanypancakes@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I can say from personal experience this applies to vegan butter too. Get Miyoko’s, or Violife if you absolutely have to, but for all that’s good don’t get shitty butter.

    • doc@fedia.io
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      2 days ago

      What grocery items are always worth the extra

      butter … my bed, my shoes, and my tires

      Hello, fellow Costco shopper.

      • pikmeir@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Costco has sub par service at their tire center, but good prices. Recommend using their prices to price match at a regular store with better service to get the best of both worlds.

        • Sanguine@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 day ago

          Maybe your warehouse has issues but Costco tire center is top tier

          Edit: also forgot to mention their tires come with warranties, free rotations, tps sensors are super cheap compares to the dealership, and they often have other incentives on top of all that.

    • tyrant@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Not grocery but my opinion is anything that interacts with the world around you. Glasses, shoes, gloves, headphones should all be top quality for comfort and their respective task

    • BertramDitore@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      I agree with every part of this.

      A while back I was standing in the butter section, waiting for a couple to move so I could grab my pricey-but-worth-it butter, and overheard them talking about how butter is a scam and it all tastes the same no matter what. I had to hold back a chuckle. They of course grabbed the cheapest option and went about their lives in complete ignorance of the glory of high quality butter.

      I still wonder if I should have said something to encourage them to try a better butter, but they talked about it with such blind confidence that I didn’t feel right about it at the time.

      • parody@lemmings.world
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        1 day ago

        Ever double blinded yourself with Kerrygold (or w/e) vs. regular stuff? Always try to do this and surprise myself with some products

  • Tudsamfa@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    For purely economic reasons, the less often I need to buy it, the more I allow myself to splurge.

    So vegetables and my go to drink I consume everyday are bought the absolute cheapest, but that spice blend for those veggies lasts me months so I really don’t care if there’s a cheaper alternative.

    Of course, expensiveness is measured per kg/litre, paying a bit more up front is always worth it if it means a lower price per kg (if you can consume it before it goes bad).

    • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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      23 hours ago

      If I’m going to skin or peel the vegetable, I go with the cheap stuff. If I’m eating the skin then I go organic. I never buy the prewashed lettuce and salads when they are on sale because those have already started to go bad usually. And when it comes to things like berries, strawberries, tomatoes, and peppers I go with whatever looks like it will taste the best. Cheap blueberries for instance, absolutely do not hold up against the good stuff; life is too short for tart blueberries.

  • something_random_tho@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Farmer’s market tomatoes. I went through my whole life thinking I hated tomatoes. Turns out, I hate grainy tomatoes that taste like nothing, and real tomatoes grown nearby and picked ripe are wonderful.

    • PNW clouds@infosec.pub
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      14 hours ago

      I grew up eating garden tomatoes. Went to college, for the first time bought a grocery store tomato. Cut into it, tasted it… turned to my friend, what the fuck is this shit?

    • Nindelofocho@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Absolutely. I was the same way then my mom make a margherita pizza mostly from scratch with tomatoes she grew herself and it was life changing

    • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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      1 day ago

      Tomatoes are also quite easy to grow in the summer and are very prolific.

      Also in season are strawberries. The ones I’ve got are small and don’t look good, but the taste is superb.

      Both can be grown potted, and the strawberries are quite hardy.

      • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        strawberries are quite hardy.

        They’re insane. We didn’t weatherize our beds for winter but the strawbees didn’t care. They took over nearly the entirety of both beds. They also try to escape the beds occasionally.

    • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, this, but all the things, especially veggies.

      The same plant can basically feel like an entirely different species.

      Most of the time it just grew up properly (not maximising growth rate to lower the costs).

    • volvoxvsmarla @lemm.ee
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      19 hours ago

      Ever since I tried bronze pasta I cannot look at regular pasta the same way. I cannot buy that yellow stuff anymore.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Whole Foods, oddly enough, is the place I find the cheapest good pasta. Their store brand is less than most places and really good.

      • Ledericas@lemm.ee
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        8 hours ago

        it is, even thier pasta sauce cheap, and at least your getting organic as well. thier more bougie ones are usually what people buy, Raos. i also have discounts for wf. i buy the egg wraps they sell now, but there are other places that sells it for somewhat cheaper, but its out of the way and inconvient to get to those other stores.