Not exact matches
If you're a big spender, that can become a weighty consideration, says Gavlak, but even those that spend frugally can feel a pinch at the
grocery store when
sales taxes
eat into a fixed income.
The store's numbers haven't been pretty either: Same - store
sales growth last quarter was at its lowest level since 2009, a fact blamed in part on the New York City investigation and on the longer - term concern that it is facing stiff competition in the healthy -
eating ethos up and down the
grocery food chain — from Kroger (KR) and Walmart (WMT) to Trader Joe's and Sprouts (SFM).
We
eat lots of Greek yogurt in my family (one son goes through 3 large containers a week), but recently we began to add up our
grocery receipts and we realized that the price has been creeping up to a point where a 32 ounce container of Chobani or Fage Low Fat Greek Yogurt costs between $ 5.59 and $ 7.49, depending on the store, and it doesn't go on
sale all that often.
When they are on
sale at the
grocery store, I buy a couple of bags and then just
eat them whenever I feel like.
Usually, the latter, because I'm already there getting
groceries, I can frequently scan the
sale racks, they have a Starbucks, don't frown upon kids
eating in the carts and I don't have to go to the mall.
I'm off to a pretty good start on my personal goals (I don't really do «resolutions»)-- 3
grocery stores and a lot of produce later, I have plenty of healthy things to
eat and I got my minimum 1 - workout - a-week in (pathetic, I know) so here's to the second week of the year and my favorite new top -LCB- that I somehow scored on
sale... go me -RCB-.
Just like I enjoy a good
sale at the
grocery store on new food that I need to buy to
eat today, I enjoy cheaper shares on high quality businesses that I'm looking to buy today so that I can build more wealth tomorrow.
We
eat high - quality meats, fish, fruits, and vegetables because we shop at farmer's markets and watch for the rotating
grocery sales to purchase when prices are attractive.
Ripe Near Me, which is currently in beta, is a self - funded labor of love from developers Alistair Martin and Helena Martin, of Adelaide, Australia, and it was born from the realization that while there were plenty of citrus trees full of fruit scattered around their suburbs (which nobody was harvesting or
eating), the
grocery stores were full of not - so - local fruit for
sale.