With UQUID, users can pay bills, shop online, and make every day real - world purchases
like buying groceries.
Instead, the higher - earning spouse should cover all the day - to - day family expenses,
like buying groceries and paying the heating bill, so the lower - income spouse can make the investments.
I know it doesn't feel quite
like buying groceries, but the moment you decide to get proactive and join an Internet Dating Site, dating agency or club and money is going to change hands... which now makes you a consumer; the fact that you're seeking to buy something that you can't put a price doesn't mean other people haven't.
The other factor that can adversely impact a restaurant's profits are alternative sources of supply (
like buying groceries and eating at home).
Today, Alfred is a startup that hires employees — Alfred Client Managers, or just «Alfreds» — to run weekly errands: things
like buying your groceries, sorting your mail, dropping off packages, and taking care of your laundry for you.
He perfectly mastered Graham's teaching that you must buy stocks
like you buy groceries (you want them cheap), not the way you buy perfumes (expensive is better).
A job gives you a paycheck to be able to do things
like buy groceries, pay bills, and support your child's activities.
Not exact matches
In addition to
groceries, you can also stock up on other household essentials on the cheap,
like bulk home basics, baby essentials, pet
buys, cleaning supplies, and office & school products.
This is by far, one of the best credit purchase rewards programs you will find for any rewards credit card since you can easily earn at least 2 percent back on every purchase except for your «everyday» purchases
like buying gas or
groceries.
The tech giant
bought Whole Foods last summer for $ 13.7 billion, and reduced the price of some of the high - end
grocery chain's products
like organic Fuji apples to appeal to a broader base of customers.
Instead of an all - purpose
grocery store, you'll find lower prices
buying notebooks and printer ink from a specialty store
like Staples or Office Depot.
Potential acquirers include grocers
like Kroger, which could seek to diversify or further consolidate the
grocery industry; Walmart, which has been building its coterie of digitally native brands; Target, which has been struggling to find its place; Nordstrom, which may need another route if its leveraged buyout falls through; and sit - down restaurant companies
like Dinequity or Bloomin Brands, who may look to
buy more on - trend, faster - serve concepts.
You don't have your «usuals» to fall back on for every decision,
like where to go for dinner,
buy groceries, pick up tampons, and every errand becomes an adventure.
They tell food manufacturers,
grocery stores, and restaurants to segregate GMOs, and ultimately not to sell them, because people
like you won't
buy them.
It's
like having a
grocery list to keep track of what to
buy and not having a
grocery list for a party.
They are
like the paper bag you get for free if you
buy the
groceries.
The village shop,
like most businesses in the country, was reserved for whites only: Swazi maids had to show the cashier a letter from a white «madam» if they were to be allowed to
buy groceries.
At least, not a lot that's explicitly Christian, unless you consider that things
like groceries are automatically baptized because you, the Christian, have
bought them.
I know someone who once went out to an all night
grocery to
buy chocolate and
bought toilet paper to look less
like an addict.
I
buy cranberries as long as I can find them at the
grocery store, mostly to make cranberry sauce for topping yogurt, oatmeal (or my noatmeal), and toast, but also because I
like to add fresh cranberries to baked goods to bump up the nutrition and for some seasonal flair.
Sure, you can
buy these all ready to go at an Indian
grocery store or Whole Foods or on Amazon, but there is nothing quite
like the aroma and freshness of a spice mix you've put together yourself to give your recipe that added zip.
But by the time I go to the
grocery store to
buy the acai, my kids all of the sudden act
like a pack of wild kangaroos raised them, I forgot my list at home, and the store feels
like it's 115 inside and I begin to sweat profusely.
Not
like those flat overly sweet cookie cakes you can
buy in the
grocery store.
When my husband tells me he wants me to
buy cookies at the
grocery store I'm
like, «Are you KIDDING me?!?!!».
Meal planning and
buying items
like quinoa, dried beans, and raw nuts from your local
groceries bulk aisle.
But as the winter moves on, I usually end up
buying just a few varieties from the
grocery store, Fuji, Pink Lady, and once in a while Honeycrisp (but I don't generally feel
like I should be spending $ 4 a pound on Honeycrisp when all the other apples cost half as much).
Here is an example of a can of coconut milk that separates well into cream / water: http://amzn.to/2sHNmwk I also
buy small cans of coconut cream only, in order to easily make whipped cream: http://amzn.to/2sHQcBq — I know that in some
grocery stores you can also
buy coconut cream in larger cans too, I
like the smaller ones since I often don't use a lot at once.
Some of his suggestions for saving money were helpful,
like you should
buy most of your
groceries from Trader Joe's instead of Whole Foods and the gourmet fruit market, but some of his suggestions were useless and mildly offensive,
like stop eating so much food.
I used to
like the Quaker granola bars you can
buy at the
grocery store, but I don't
buy them often because there's a lot of junk packed into such a small bar, and I usually write it off to just not being worth it.
Just
like us, they start the transition by heading to the
grocery store and
buying pre-made boxes of almond milk.
Most people
like this cake because you can
buy the (non-vegan) crust at bakeries and
grocery stores.
I had a hard time finding any eggplant that would do so I just
bought purple potatoes (which are found in most
grocery stores now), peeled them, and sliced them thin (just
like everything else).
I
like to
buy my chicken as late as possible so I usually get it at the local
grocery store.
I
buy those expensive artisan bread at the
grocery and honestly I
liked mine more!
My husband nagged me about it until one day I was
like FINE I»LL PUT IT IN THE CHILI now shut up about me
buying random stuff at the
grocery store and let's move on (the man has a point here though I must admit).
It's not available in
grocery stores, but you can
buy it online through a retailer
like King Arthur Flour.
I
like to make my own taco seasoning using chili powder, cumin, and salt but you can also
buy a packet of taco seasoning at the
grocery store.
I have tried many syrups from the
grocery store and haven't found any that I
like and would
buy again.
It's a chocolate - flavored popsicle, with a pudding -
like consistency, and I used to beg my parents to
buy them at the
grocery store when I was a kid.
I want to head over to the store and
buy my
groceries all over again this week so that I can enjoy something
like this.
My husband loves these store
bought brownies from our natural foods
grocery store because they are more
like a fudge brownie than a cake
like brownie.
Making dinner for myself often goes something
like this: Scout out the produce section of the
grocery store, throw at least three impulse
buys into my cart, and arrive home with absolutely no clue how to use it all.
And Sunday Chad worked so I just recouped,
grocery shopped,
bought a ton of flowers and did all those annoying weekly tasks (
like laundry).
My everyday bread is not anything
like the square shaped, soft sliced bread you might
buy in a bag at the
grocery store because I
like bread that you can sink your teeth into, that is healthy for you, but that tastes great too.
If you really
like crunchy chick peas, you can also
buy seasoned snack bags of chick peas at the
grocery store.
Not only are they cut properly for quick oats (many on the market that are called «quick» oats are cut finer and actually more
like «instant» oats), but as others here have mentioned, they also just taste better than the quick oats I have
bought from the
grocery store.
You know, the one where you go
grocery shopping with the purpose of
buying ingredients for cooking at home and then fill up a cardboard container with all the prepared food on the salad / hot bar because you don't feel
like cooking right now?
Do I need to
buy any specialty (non
grocery store) items,
like protein powders, etc?
It may seem
like a total «duh» moment, but make a meal plan and
grocery list before you go out and try to stick to it — the impulse
buys are what'll throw your budget out of whack.
I'm ridiculously excited to report that this cookie cake tastes exactly
like the cookie cake I
bought at the
grocery store as a teen!