27 September 2010

another post about grocery shopping

This weekend I was really looking forward to going to Costco and Winco and doing a price comparison on some items I commonly buy (and especially those I sometimes get in bulk from Costco). It was the most exciting weekend activity EVER. (Nerdy, I know.)

Since I know you're all as interested as me, I shall tell you the results. I was somewhat surprised by my findings, perhaps naively so. I really love Winco's bulk foods section and love that you can get however much you want or need of whatever it is you want or need. And I have noted that the prices of the bulk items per pound are cheaper than other places I've seen items sold by weight. I'm less impressed when I compare other areas of the store, though; however, the sales are often pretty good. Most of the items I compared were items you could find in the Winco bulk foods section.

Costco's worthiness was demonstrated in the comparison. (The comparisons are not all fair, I should say. Costco has better quality goods, generally speaking, but I tried to match the products as closely as possible.) Here are the results:


Costco

item

Winco

1.08/lb

whole wheat spaghetti

.98/lb

1.06/lb

penne

.76/lb

1.96/lb

egg noodles

1.10/lb

2.22/lb (organic)

peanut butter

1.48/lb (non-organic, self-churned)

3.57/lb

almond butter

3.96/lb

1.66/gallon

milk

1.88/gallon

6.29/lb

pure maple syrup

8.85/lb

1.76/lb

semi-sweet chocolate chips

2.21/lb

2.33/lb

dried cranberries

3.67/lb

2.21/lb (name-brand)

honey nut cheerios

1.79/lb

.75/lb (organic)

apple sauce

.54/lb

1.16/lb

short-grain brown rice

.74/lb

.28/lb (for 25 lb bag)

long-grain white rice

.45/lb

2.50/lb

quinoa

3.52/lb

2.00/lb

honey

2.24/lb

.69/lb (10 lbs)

oats

.51/lb

4.22/gallon

soy milk

5.12/gallon

4.60/lb

walnuts

3.30/lb

5.28/lb

pecans

8.50/lb

3.33/lb

almonds

3.78/lb

.24/lb (for 25 lb bag)

all purpose flour

.27/lb

.61/lb

sugar

.46/lb

.81/lb

brown sugar

.97/lb

18.62/gallon

olive oil

28.62/gallon

5.96/gallon

vegetable oil

6.27/gallon

6.32/gallon

canola oil

7.18/gallon

.62/lb

tomato sauce

.80/lb

1.32/lb

tomato paste

1.68/lb

1.06/lb

diced tomatoes

1.02/lb

Some of the results were interesting. For example, although pecans and almonds are cheaper at Costco, walnuts are not. Pecans are significantly cheaper at Costco. Granulated sugar is quite a bit cheaper at Winco, and flour is comparable (I probably will still buy from Winco to avoid dealing with the 25 lb bag, though). I did not realize that canola oil is more expensive than vegetable oil. Brown rice is cheaper at Winco. Peanut butter is too, but almond butter is cheaper at Costco. I compared S&W canned garbanzo beans and black beans as well, and it turned out they were the same at both Costco and Winco: .68/can.

I hope you appreciated the results of my experiment. I guess shopping at Costco does save money after all. Which makes me feel a little better about paying to shop there? Hmm, I didn't factor that into the prices . . .

8 comments:

M.C. Sommers said...

This makes me so happy.

divvd said...

informational! well-researched! reminiscent of everything Amanda I remember from high school...

though it's convinced me of the opposite from what it convinced you of.

it's good to know such good deals are available without a membership. since i can't afford a membership, i'll be stopping by winco to check it out.

Meredith said...

You lost me at "another post about grocery shopping"...

Jonathan said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jonathan said...

Yeah but is this a sale thing for Winco or every day low prices? I don't want to go there next week to buy slightly cheaper walnuts just to find they jacked up the price on me. Plus the free samples alone covers the Costco mebership for me. Free meal every time you shop? That's a deal.

Margaret said...

I didn't know Costco would be cheaper! I'm genuinely happy that you took the time to research and post this. It still doesn't convince me to buy oil by the gallon, though it does seem a ton more cost effective.

Home on the Grange said...

I have always wanted to do this and haven't been able to yet so I was super excited to see this post! Excellent work Amanda. Unfortunately, it seems like the cost of membership kind of cancels out the minor savings as far as grocery goods go. On the other hand, Costco offers some pretty sweet deals on clothing and nearly anything related to technology, which is why I'm still torn about whether to continue with my membership or not. Ugh.

LeMonte said...

Amanda! I finally found your blog :)
I, for one, just discovered Winco and I love it and it made me want to leave Costco bc I can buy a larger variety of food.
But good to know you researched it :)

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