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Most Expensive Grocery Item You've Bought
Reading busty2's thread about $39/4.4 oz of mustard made me curious if others spend crazy amounts on food items. I shopped at The Gourmet Outlet and did it often before I became ill. $6.95/loaf Foccacia bread, $60/lb blue cheese (a gift) and $39.95/lb Spanish almonds. I can think of those offhand. The olive oil at $100/pint is just like eating fresh olives. The smell and taste is orgasmic!
A friend from Louisiana visits me yearly. He spent $100 on three items but I forget what he bought. He was shocked but said it was worth it. I've seen people spend four figures on one grocery cart, the small ones. Their imported selection is amazing. He has about 50 acres of land (the owner, Sid) one town over where he grows unique veggies. He's been a family friend since grade school with my dad. His land is perfect; straight rows of veggies as if done with a ruler. Underground sprinklers, above ground too. Guys on their hands and knees planting and harvesting. No machinery so nothing isn't perfect and nothing bruised or rotten. Prices are high but fresh tomatoes , organic, picked that morning are nothing like supermarket tomatoes. I'd rather pay $3.99/lb for high-quality produce than 99 cents for tasteless soft tomatoes. You only live once, and if you have it, spend it and spoil yourself. Chemical-laden, E-coli-tainted and unripe produce can kill you. Buy the best; you deserve it. (Now I have the urge to shop there and eat. Did I mention they cook daily and offer free samples of gourmet ingredients? Jumbo shrimp with lychee nuts (a fruit that is $9.99/lb) was so good I had to buy some and make it. Probably the best food I ever prepared with shrimp. The sauce for it was plate-licking good Now I'll go to sleep hungry and dream of huge shrimp and fresh lobster........ Remember you're worth it. Treat yourself now because you'll be happier and work harder to do it again. Success ... |
poptarts! :pimp
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I purchased like this super expensive squid for my dogs birthday he did not even want to approach it :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh
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I bought a tin of baked beans once... Cost about 35 pence...
I saved up for those... |
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Chickens love a fresh olive though. |
They sell 1000 dollar watermelons here but I'm not about to buy one.
I've spent 18 for one before |
Beluga caviar about $300/50g years ago ... :stoned
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abalone in a can cost about $60
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Imported beer and cheeses ...
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We make our own olive oil and only real way to actually taste real olive oil is to pick olives when they're extra ripe, then you need to salinize them in sea water for week or more, and then you press them. Also, remove as many branches as possible since they add bitterness as well. You will not buy this kind of olive oil anywhere because, well, its not EXTRA VIRGIN, and only thing that means its unripe olives. Unripe fruit doesn't taste like fruit is supposed to taste. It's easy. |
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I didn't know the price before tasting it. It was richer and had taste rather than regular olive oil tastes plain to me. I always bought California olive oil and not blends of various cheap oils. |
My wife handles all of our shopping. She doesn't go crazy. She does most of her shopping at Wal Mart.
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About once every 6 months I treat myself to a nice wagu steak not much change out of a 100 for them, and of course I have to indulge in our local truffle season, Normally I just buy one and then have a truffle dinner party. Wify goes to markets on Sundays for Fresh seafood and meats, vegs I just get what's in season at supermarket with the exception of tomatoes where I will source out good beefsteak ones, there expensive here but worth it. |
Yo mamma!
:1orglaugh |
i like to buy gourmet ingredients, spices, condiments for food and various other stuff like ice cream etc.
don't remember exactly what was the most expensive what i bought. |
I paid a hot grocery bagger $200 to jerk off for me. But I guess that's more of a rental than it is a purchase right?
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Likely rib-eye. Nothing too crazy really.
Restaurants are a different story. Next thread? |
its not food but I bought a box of nicorette gum for like $120. I remember saying to myself its gota be the most expensive thing in the store.
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wagyu tenderloin roast
utterly divine and worth every penny. And very easy to cook. Sear it quickly on the induction stove then put it in a 400 d oven in the pan you sear it on. whip u some fresh creamed spinach. Panty dropper. |
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It’s good to see people spoiling themselves. Some items cost more but the cheaper is better. I’ve been brought up to know brand names aren’t always better, just better marketing. I bought macadamia nut cookies on Friday. $4.99 for a small box. I also bought a smaller package of the store brand for $3.39. Today I did a taste test and the store brand was better. More nuts, less greasy cookies. Nutritionally the store brand had less sugar, less fat, less sodium and less cholesterol. When buying them, the person with me asked why I wasn’t buying the better brand. I told her about wanting to try both and she explained she only buys the “big name” items because cheaper brands have shitty ingredients. On the way home I tried to explain about marketing and colorful packaging but she’s convinced her way is right. I’ve bought store brands that were horrible. Sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. |
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Target had groceries now, too, and the prices were good the one time I went in. They have two supermarkets they call Welfare Grocery a few towns over. Sav-A-Lot and PriceRite. I’ve never been but a friend shops at both and says produce is horrible, meat is horrible but canned and frozen goods are alright. They refer to both as welfare grocery because you only see food stamps there. The government needs to give more food stamps rather than have people eat unhealthy fat-laden and salty cheap food. The government will pay for it in the end by doctor bills and hospital stays. |
Soon, No more Real Vanilla in your ice cream or bakery....
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life...ticle38268619/ |
In 1994 just before moving to San Diego i purchased a bottle of Château Mouton Rothschild 1945 from Fortnum & Mason. I think i paid around £10,000 or $14,000. Still have it in a cellar in London. I see Aabacat in CA has a bottle up for sale at $23,222.89 so its increased in value by about $9300 in 24 years. Not too shabby !
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Take the steak out of fridge at least an hour before you cook it Pat it well dry with paper towels. Cut off some fat from it, like a thumbnail sized blob Put a flat thick bottomed skillet pan on the heat, once its starts getting warm take that knob of fat and rub it all around it to grease, Rub some salt into the steak, drop the steak into the pan and let it sear on one side, its ready to flip when its nice and brown and crispy, turn the heat down, flip the steak, use a spoon to keep washing that melting fat in the bottom of the pan over the top of the steak cook it past rare but not quiet medium rare, remove from pan place on paper towels or brown paper and let it rest for 5 minutes, then hit it with a few grinds of black pepper and enjoy. Its all about that crispy crust :) Ribeye/ scotch fillet is the best cut for steak, tenderloins/fillets are best cooked other ways or served raw, like sliced thinly and cooked in some sort of broth, eg: hot wagu noodles. |
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I buy real vanilla bean extract at $16 for a small bottle but a drop is enough since it’s so strong I love it in iced coffee |
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I also highly recommend Chimay Blue Ale with the Roast and creamed spinach.
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I've bought some higher ticket items when traveling at either specialty producers or markets. I think I paid 250 euros for 3 small truffles in Tuscany a few years ago, and also 100 euros on a 25 year balsamic in Modena.
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Considering the price of a t-bone steak or a fillet of sockeye salmon. either can run 20 bucks plus.that would be the most
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Foie gras easily over $150 at several places
Real caviar (Sevruga, Beluga, Ossetra) $1400+ Petrossian boutique in Bellagio and on 7th Tenderloin whole $200+ at Whole Foods Fresh Tuna $150 at Eataly on 23rd I guess in Manhattan it is pretty common |
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Russ & Daughters I haven't been to in years or the Carnegie Deli. All were on my bucket list ..l |
anything from whole foods
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Price per weight wise, it would be saffron. We used it in a special cupcake we made in our shop.
I don’t know who came up with the combo it went in, but we made these and sold that at a premium even to our already premium prices. |
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It's about $130 here: ikramart.ru ...and this price is considered as a very expensive one. |
everything we buy is at amazing prices since living in Spain...
meat, wine, beer, cigs, loving to buy huge lumps of steak, good cuts, prime cuts for like $8kg and stuff :thumbsup |
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wasabi would destroy the taste of the roast by overwhelming it. |
Saffron always seems to cost a fortune. a lot easier to get these days though.
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whole fresh foie gras
whole ribs dry aged anywhere from 45-100 days red wine |
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