Posts Tagged coupons

The Decade of Food and Wine

We’ve made lists and talked trends of what 2010 will look like, but what about a look at the decade we’re getting ready to close? It’s been an interesting 10!

We’ve gone from being super flush to barely scraping by. Restaurants that once announced no reservations with the egregious term “fully committed” are now more than eager to assist with alternate dates and suggested times. Wine lists got a big workout in the middle of the decade as many top labels, aka big prices, were happily consumed. Consumers were making money; restaurants were thriving, and then BOOM. Life as we know it changed.

This was also the decade that:

The farmer became a major player in dining out and shopping at markets. We threw the words “locavore,” food miles,” “farm fresh,” and “CSA” around as important, everyday expressions. They became part of the food vocabulary; they became used and overused.

The term “foodie” became the preferred nomenclature for someone who was interested in all food talk all the time. It became as overused and redundant as locavore.

The chef became a rock star. We became familiar with them and knew them by their 1st names like Tom, Mario, and Bobby. Sure Bravo’s ”Top Chef “and the proliferation of shows on gourmetThe Food Network did not hurt the trend, but chefs started to spread their wings and strut the full peacock walk of master authoritarian. Guests liked dining at chef’s tables, taking cooking lessons from chefs, and just chatting away with the guy, or occasional gal, walking the room and beaming with the guests.

Restaurant rents forced many old standbys to give it up and new restaurants opened out of food carts and food trucks. What was once a phenomena limited in its universality spawned concepts throughout the country for food on the go.

–As for foods, this was the cupcake, frozen yogurt, and burger decade.

–We devoured cookbooks and brought Julia Child back into our homes about the same time as we started stockpiling old issues of Gourmet Magazine which didn’t finish the decade as a magazine but added a hefty weight to the cookbook aisles with its latest 1,000 recipe tome.

-Grocers were no longer hiding behind a few private labels but rushing to show us they could compete with well-known national brands and wow us with better pricing from their much-improved house brands.

Grocers were fighting over terms to indicate how low their prices had gone. We had deals and super deals, coupons that were doubled and eventually tripled, and benefited from a much improved, warmer, hospitable shopping environment.

Wine merchants took consumers from Pauillac to Mendoza. We started drinking our cellars and started paying attention to the many good buys under $10 and under $20. The fancy wine world shifted continents and diners and shoppers were paying attention to smart buys from countries that seldom made wine magazine discussion groups years ago. Wine bars became commonplace.

Coffee became an even bigger buzz than that from its mere caffeine potential. Neighborhood shops faced stiff competition from national players that proliferated multiple corners in major cities. We learned terms like grande and venti and started to request our own specialty lattes. Price was no object; it was a treat, and then…boom. We started to favor a tall fresh-brewed.

It was a decade that stamped its mark in the food world as food became elevated into more than just a meal.

Now we are older and wiser and ready to return to the basics that many say will signify the year ahead.

Time to reflect and watch.

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More Ways to Save

It’s official: The Holiday Countdown Clock Has Begun. As it ticks away, the loud heartbeat panic starts to set in. Questions, questions, questions. What to buy? How much money to spend? The now what am I gonna do ultimate stomach churner.

Here are some obvious, but yet often forgotten, strategies to use at this time of the year:

-Do not pay for shipping. Find the product from one of the myriad offers that still include free shipping. If you wait much longer, some of those offers will disappear and shipping costs will exceed the product’s individual cost! Be careful.

Watch out for super saver shipping headlines–read that info carefully unless you don’t care if it arrives the 28th!

Buy the local paper. Yes, I know no one reads the paper anymore, but it is still a great way to find coupons and insert deals. Newspapers stay in business at this time of the year from these types of single-day promos, and you benefit from a very limited outpouring of cash!

Watch the big box retailers who have their prices set well in advance of the holiday season. Many of their great small electronic buys, for example, do not hold up at this time of the year. Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, and similar department stores have special one-day houseware and home sales and offer coupons for those special events. That type of shopping often brings the price of the coveted KitchenAid mixer, for example, down below the everyday great super warehouse price.

Check out the grocers. Not only have they moved into more branded items, but they’ve also expanded their holiday wares in the toy aisle and the handy last-minute grab-it gift sections. They are more than happy to make fruit baskets, coffee/tea combo sets–you name it; they want to make it happen.

Make your own food baskets–we’re not talking robotics here but sensible solutions for great gift-giving. Coffee shops are more than happy to help out if you become completely flummoxed.foodbasket

–Buy a basket; get brightly colored tissue paper, and fill it up. Your choice. Personalized food items are especially popular. Make your house-brand of specialized cookies. There’ll be few complaints.

Get your blood pressure in line, and you’ll have time to wrap!

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Good Gluten Info

When you make the rounds looking for tasty, not cardboardy, gluten-free products, you are assured of one common theme: High Prices. No matter where you shop, a bag of pretzels, gluten-free, is almost the equivalent of two or three regular wheat-laden bags. There are always deals and coupons for the latter category to ease you into snack nirvana.

Not for gluten-free products: The mark-up is significant. Finding the tasty ones (Glutino) and other snacks (Lundberg) make shopping a little less of a challenge. Interesting that Glutino just adjusted its product packaging, giving more prominence to its label. If grocers would just figure out where to place the G-F line (does it go in a section of an aisle by itself or does it comingle with similar products?), we could shop without so much interweaving among the aisles.

As for new packaging and heightened awareness, General Mills boldly showcases the term “Gluten-Free” on many of its familiar products. The big news is the introduction of its new website to help us broaden our G-F knowledge base: Live Gluten Freely. They have taken the guesswork out of a lot of label reading.list_logo_fruit

One can only hope that other large manufacturers will follow suit and do a product listing of G-F items and help us shorten shopping time.

Now if one of them would only do something about the pricing, more people might feel comfortable about making the healthier switch!

Hello, can you hear me?

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Coupon Universe

With the economic rebound still at slo-mo, coupon usage continues to rise. Sometimes the Sunday newspaper inserts are actually lacking in the coupon department. Maybe manufacturers have figured out that another tree does not have to be cut down to meet the print requirements. Let the consumer find the coupon he wants!CartLL

That’s the world of coupons and the Internet. There are no shortage of approaches to ease the shopping burden. Name a category and there’s a site or a way to access a coupon. Look at a few examples. Google an item and follow the item with the word coupon, and you are in business. Let’s play the game: Look what happens, for example, when you type Cuisinart coupon. It’s that simple. The onus is on you to check out the validity of all sources and always look at the expiration date.

If it’s a food product, then the exercise is identical as there are no shortage of options. Companies want you to buy the cereal, the yogurt, the whatever and if it’s coupon enticement you need; no problem.

As for dining out, there are numerous opportunities to reduce the overall tab. Restaurants do not want to be ignored and are willing to help get you in the door.

It’s crazy to think you have been shopping without the deductions that are so readily available. Easier than clipping; figure out what you want and google the coupon possibilities.

Live a little; save a lot.

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Let the Gifts Begin

Black Friday has become a weekend sporting event followed by Cyber Monday which will probably last all week, but there is more to life than the short-term deals. Let’s look at the big picture and make the master list. For the next several weeks, I’ll visit the food, beverage, and life gift guide: My own personal attempt at finding the right presents to address some of the big conundrums of the year.

With all the hamburger anxiety and food recalls associated with the burger, it’s time to consider adding an attachment to the food processor or the mixer that will take the worry out of food preparation and bring back a secure feeling to a popular food. Grinding chuck roasts, for example, for hamburger is not that difficult if you have the right piece of equipment. Then you can again enjoy a burger without fear of what filler has been added to the basics. You are in charge of safety.

Green teas have been popular for years for all their antioxidant benefits and their soothing refreshment. Overall tea sales continue to impact the beverage category both in hot and cold selections. Why not enjoy tea service with your own leaves gently seeped in the cup with a tea infuser? Lots of design choices from the classic at the Museum of Modern Art to the more moderately priced variation. Great present; fun gadget.

Look for coupons to help a little with the purchase price. Sur la Table has numerous coupon offers and major kitchen shops such as Williams-Sonoma offer regular specials to entice you during these upcoming weeks. Don’t forget Amazon!

Don’t worry if the Internet posed its holiday difficulties, tea infuserand you feared the crowds at the stores, you have time.

More to come.

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Coupons Keep On Comin’

couponorganizerIt wasn’t that long ago that newspaper inserts were thin and anemic; they had no meat, nothing for enticement. I’m not talking about ads for electronics or drugs, but those for foods and general merchandise. These reduced-price enticements literally disappeared into a wall of complacency. Then, all of a sudden, the coupon books of ads started multiplying as weekly and sometimes semi-weekly deductions for a broad range of products. Just this past weekend, the newspaper had three different insert booklets for food and non-food general merchandise.

Take that savings concept and add to it the sizable number of grocery stores that, at a minimum, are doubling coupons, and you have a good deal. Several continue to triple coupons up to a dollar! Now we’re talking real money.

Why coupons are back now as some reports indicate more positive economic news, remains somewhat a conundrum. Where were they when we started this decline? The irony is that the coupon barrage is occurring when we are very different shoppers, more focused on price and more willing to go with house brands than we were a year ago. The well-known industry brands are aware that coupon usage is up and recognize that the only way to get the consumer’s attention is with great cents-off promos.

So the big guys wave sizable discounts in front of the consumer and watch them do the math and acknowledge that a true shopping experience is one with significant savings. With coupons in hand, more shoppers are willing to cross over a little into the impulse purchase than they are without the enticement.

The study also found that consumers who use coupons spend a little more per trip and buy more products. In order to save with coupons, you first have to remember to take the coupons into the store!

The obvious deduction: Keep the coupons coming.

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There Are Recalls, And Then…Check Your Bottles

Food recalls are always a problem for me, especially with the year we have had with the abundance of recalls. Yet to escalate the scary news up a notch, there are the health recalls–products that could be suspect. Once again Tylenol is garnering those headlines.

Plenty of people will say there is no such thing as bad press–that all press is good. I am in a different camp. this is especially true when we discuss medicine and dosing. In a voluntary recall–note the word voluntary, the makers of Children’s and Infants’ Liquid Tylenol have recalled some specific lot numbers for possible bacteria.

My problem with such a recall is that the topic is not being discussed enough; that the specific lot numbers could still be on shelves in 1000′s of locations. How does the manufacturer,  the FDA or the whatever plan to notify every little store owner that they may have a product that should be pulled from the shelves? If we need to buy liquid Tylenol for young ones during the flu season, are we supposed to walk around with a lot number printout? Seriously.

In a case of supreme irony, or sick humor, depending on your viewpoint, to the right of the listed recalled items are 5 coupons for future Tylenol purchases! This what we call “thechildrentylenol hand-that-feeds you” marketing approach: We want your love.

Coupons aside: Voluntary recalls have some value. We are supposed to feel all fuzzy about such a positive action. Somehow I’m not there. The public deserves full disclosure and a more widespread, acknowledged approach.

Am I right, FDA? Are you going to move forward on this? Time to notify consumers and retailers is NOW.

How is everyone to know?

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Survival of the Fittest: Restaurant Edition

There are very few chefs who want to brag about how well their restaurant is doing. More likely you’ll here the word “fine.” That’s right up there with describing an individual by saying “nice.” Not much information, but nothing inflammatory, either.

Yes, no matter how many steps we move forward from the economic mess, we are still left with the reality that this has been a difficult year and much has changed. Maybe not at the very high end that appeals to individuals who are still quite comfortable and have little idea what I am referencing. They are a small percentage of overall dining patrons. They will continue to dine where they dine and support high-end establishments.

The rest of the dining out universe looks for opportunities to make dining out an ongoing affair, but a more affordable one. Look at casual restaurant chains such as TGI Friday’sclick for the buddy coupon, Applebee’s, and Chili’s. Even Bonefish Grill wants to play. They all say: Come inside; have we got a deal for you!

Restaurants that hosted Restaurant Week promotions report strong results with many continuing them into multiple week promos. Diners love the 3-course prix-fixe concept. We’ll probably see more of those promotions as they help both the diner and the establishment.

At a much higher end is a popular annual summer promotion, the multi-pound lobster special at The Palm. These dinners for two cost significantly more than many people are spending for dining out, and one wonders if the reduced price in lobster should not have convinced the restaurant chain to lower prices this year. After all, lobstermen have been complaining about how little they are getting for a lobster. Maybe they should just befriend The Palm!

So many restaurants have not adjusted or understood that the diner is more cautious. Results often mean a closed spot such as the once popular Olives Restaurant (as in chef Todd English’s outpost) in Washington, DC. No more. Shuttered. A week seldom goes by without such an event. It’s tough out there.

696.thmAdjust. Listen to your guests. Find a direction.

You set that table. We’ll come.

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Coffee Jam: Use the Coupon

If you’re looking for the action tomorrow, Tuesday, July 21st from opening until 10:30 AM, then head over to your local Starbucks.

Take the above coupon, which they are also honoring if it shows up on your handheld. Show them this post. It’s all about saving paper!

All you have to do is buy a beverage, any beverage, and for free you get a sugar rush, a free pastry, These new sweets have the best of all ingredients: No High Fructose Corn Syrup. They also are without artificial flavors, dyes, and trans-fats.

If you haven’t tried the new breakfast treats (also good at other times of the day), then here’s your chance to critique the recent rollout. The company tested and tweaked and came up with recipes they wanted everyone to try.

If you want to duplicate the banana walnut bread, save your bananas: Here’s the recipe.

Gprint_couponet in line.

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Win Me Over–Meet Me in Aisle 4

wegmanswineNo matter how hard we try to work magic and make the fallout from the recession go away and hide forever, we are still deep in its throes. Sure there are some hopeful flickers, but the general feeling is that the depth of the problem needs more than a few band-aids.

Take grocery shopping. Everywhere you turn, at every price point, grocers are saying we hear you; we have adjusted and continue to make adjustments so that you will stay with us. What does this mean: more store brands, fewer items on the shelf, less impulsive shopping, and greater attention to coupons and specials. Sure we want to support everything local and take advantage of organic, but at this time some of those choices may be too costly to maintain.

If you were a regular at a grocery store, you might find yourself getting coupons to encourage you to return. That was my Harris Teeter experience. Whole Foods Market decided to put all its recipes on a free app . Target has expanded its Archer Farms food lineup as it relaunches its store brand with the new title “up & up”. Not sure how I relate to that terminology–a little confusing, sounds like two CB’ers chatting on the open road! Wegmans has always sought out customer feedback in the form of surveys and is in the midst of one called “Shopping Differently in this Difficult Economy?” Let me guess the answers.

We are not talking rocket science here: We are shopping differently. Stores are making adjustments as they champion their ability to make changes, to be good listeners. We are more careful about what we buy, in every aisle; in every store. Paying attention to the consumer should not be a novel approach, but a sign of teamwork that may help put the oomph back into shopping.

We say, Bring on the offers.

The economy needs this two-way arrangement.

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