An Aldi opened up near me 2 months ago and I’m exclusively shopping there now because it’s cheaper than the other local grocery stores. Just wanted to share the news with others who may be looking to save some money on groceries.
Growing up in a small town in the South it was kind of crazy when Aldi and Lidl set up nearby. Not only are the prices so much better on nearly everything but in general the quality of the products was much better than at existing local grocery stores.
The only thing is they’re (especially Aldi) missing a few things that either someone in my household is fussy about the brand or sometimes some regional things. Like you’re not going to find some of the particular ingredients you might want when cooking soul food.
While I’m absolutely stoked that I can finally buy gruyere in Kansas thanks to Aldi, I do agree that sometimes they just don’t have the specific things. Fortunately there’s a Thai grocery and a tortillaria down the road from mine, between the 3 I haven’t needed to even consider Walmart for food.
My dude, their seasonal coffees and every chocolate product in that building, you gotta try them! Those little burnt caramel chocolate bars at the checkout are more decadent than any premium chocolate I’ve ever bought!
I thought, from the tone in the beginning and what you’re responding to, that you were gonna say something bad - now I’m even more excited to start shopping there again.
Lol I totally see that now, but nah they’re amazing! They had a blueberry one a while ago that taste like a blueberry muffin dipped in coffee. I don’t mean similar, I mean so very close that I expected to find soggy crumbs at the bottom of the cup.
No, it’s the framing. Consider this sentence from the story. Does it sound like it was written by a journalist reporting facts or a public relations specialist?
“There’s no frills — just high-quality products at affordable prices which is what customers have grown to love and rely on.”
That’s all opinion. Certainly you can find some products at Aldi that are not high quality, and speaking for what “all consumers have grown to love” is backed by any evidence.
No, that’s simply what discounters, especially Aldi, are known for. Their whole concept relies on this principle and the US is sort of discovering this for themselves nowadays as well. The fact that German grocery stores with this concept are spreading throughout the US is very much evidence of that already.
This is an advertisement packaged as “news”
If higher prices are news, so are lower prices.
On the one hand, I agree with you. On the other hand, paying less for groceries in this climate kind of is news.
Oh absolutely. I remember when rent prices dropped in the deep pandemic- absolutely newsworthy.
“Accept certain inalienable truths; Prices will rise, politicians will philander, you too, will get old” -Baz Luhrmann
An Aldi opened up near me 2 months ago and I’m exclusively shopping there now because it’s cheaper than the other local grocery stores. Just wanted to share the news with others who may be looking to save some money on groceries.
Growing up in a small town in the South it was kind of crazy when Aldi and Lidl set up nearby. Not only are the prices so much better on nearly everything but in general the quality of the products was much better than at existing local grocery stores.
The only thing is they’re (especially Aldi) missing a few things that either someone in my household is fussy about the brand or sometimes some regional things. Like you’re not going to find some of the particular ingredients you might want when cooking soul food.
While I’m absolutely stoked that I can finally buy gruyere in Kansas thanks to Aldi, I do agree that sometimes they just don’t have the specific things. Fortunately there’s a Thai grocery and a tortillaria down the road from mine, between the 3 I haven’t needed to even consider Walmart for food.
It’s also often better groceries, especially the fruit and veggies.
The apples there taste a lot sweeter than the Ralph’s (Kroger) I used to go to.
My dude, their seasonal coffees and every chocolate product in that building, you gotta try them! Those little burnt caramel chocolate bars at the checkout are more decadent than any premium chocolate I’ve ever bought!
I thought, from the tone in the beginning and what you’re responding to, that you were gonna say something bad - now I’m even more excited to start shopping there again.
Lol I totally see that now, but nah they’re amazing! They had a blueberry one a while ago that taste like a blueberry muffin dipped in coffee. I don’t mean similar, I mean so very close that I expected to find soggy crumbs at the bottom of the cup.
By that logic, all positive corporate news are advertisement, and thus worthy to be shunned?
No, it’s the framing. Consider this sentence from the story. Does it sound like it was written by a journalist reporting facts or a public relations specialist?
“There’s no frills — just high-quality products at affordable prices which is what customers have grown to love and rely on.”
That’s all opinion. Certainly you can find some products at Aldi that are not high quality, and speaking for what “all consumers have grown to love” is backed by any evidence.
It’s a lightly repackaged press release.
No, that’s simply what discounters, especially Aldi, are known for. Their whole concept relies on this principle and the US is sort of discovering this for themselves nowadays as well. The fact that German grocery stores with this concept are spreading throughout the US is very much evidence of that already.
And all negative ones are ads for the competition.
Yes.