Tinned food in bulk
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Discussion

Puggit

Original Poster:

49,406 posts

269 months

Thursday 4th November 2021
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Wife is vegan, kids are veggie - as such we eat our way through a lot of tinned tomatoes, lentils, chickpeas etc.

Any idea where we can get them in bulk? We are Costco members but that's no good.

21TonyK

12,830 posts

230 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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When you say "bulk" do you mean cases of 24 domestic sized tins or willing to fill the garage with a few pallets?

devnull

3,846 posts

178 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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Can you get a bookers membership?

Blackpuddin

18,788 posts

226 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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Don't let anybody see you buy in bulk or you'll kick off panic buying.

prand

6,229 posts

217 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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If you really want to go bulk I suggest getting sacks of dried pulses, fraction of the cost of tins and saves on recycling. You can reconstitute them for cooking with a 15 minute blast in a pressure cooker.

I'd also speak to the owner of your local larger sized Asian supermarket and agree bulk prices too. The one near me does wholesale to smaller shops and restaurants, (and large families too!) so usually has plenty of bulk packs of pulses, rice, flours, tinned tomatoes etc.

I'd look up Italian (bulk pasta, rice, flour, pulses) or Asian wholesalers online - you might find some good deals.

Otherwise Costco may be an option, though I usually find on the whole they sell trays of premium brand products at a decent price, but it's still more expensive than budget labels that you might find in mainstream supermarkets.

NorthDave

2,525 posts

253 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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prand said:
If you really want to go bulk I suggest getting sacks of dried pulses, fraction of the cost of tins and saves on recycling. You can reconstitute them for cooking with a 15 minute blast in a pressure cooker.

I'd also speak to the owner of your local larger sized Asian supermarket and agree bulk prices too. The one near me does wholesale to smaller shops and restaurants, (and large families too!) so usually has plenty of bulk packs of pulses, rice, flours, tinned tomatoes etc.

I'd look up Italian (bulk pasta, rice, flour, pulses) or Asian wholesalers online - you might find some good deals.

Otherwise Costco may be an option, though I usually find on the whole they sell trays of premium brand products at a decent price, but it's still more expensive than budget labels that you might find in mainstream supermarkets.
I'd agree with this - the asian supermarket I go to is much cheaper than anywhere else I have found and has a better range too.

21TonyK

12,830 posts

230 months

Friday 5th November 2021
quotequote all
devnull said:
Can you get a bookers membership?
I have a feeling Booker and Costco memberships are interchangeable, ie. got one you have the other (same company?)

dapprman

2,688 posts

288 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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21TonyK said:
I have a feeling Booker and Costco memberships are interchangeable, ie. got one you have the other (same company?)
Booker is part of the Tesco group, Costco is Costco. Both have membership requirements though year ago Costco bent those sideways for me to get membership. With both you need to know your prices in advance as they are not cheap for everything,

Puggit

Original Poster:

49,406 posts

269 months

Friday 5th November 2021
quotequote all
Booker/Macro is one company. Membership isn't as open as Costco hehe

Asian supermarket is good idea - plenty of them in Reading!

Ham_and_Jam

3,291 posts

118 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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Puggit said:
Booker/Macro is one company. Membership isn't as open as Costco hehe

Asian supermarket is good idea - plenty of them in Reading!
Booker / Makro is owned by Tesco.

Membership of Makro and Booker is separate, even though they quite often share the same building.

Makro membership is usually very simple and is often just a case of filling in a form, showing proof of employment.

Booker requires proof of business ownership.

Not ever been a member of Costco.

devnull

3,846 posts

178 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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Without detailing the thread, Costco often seemed to me as somewhere you had to pay to have a membership to keep it feeling special, but the bulk buy aspect of it is inconsistent and sporadic.

Booker seems to be more “lots of stuff on a pallet”. Costco seems to be more bigger bags of nuggets, 4l bottles of olive oil and the weirdo domestic / brown goods offers.

21TonyK

12,830 posts

230 months

Friday 5th November 2021
quotequote all
Ham_and_Jam said:
Puggit said:
Booker/Macro is one company. Membership isn't as open as Costco hehe

Asian supermarket is good idea - plenty of them in Reading!
Booker / Makro is owned by Tesco.

Membership of Makro and Booker is separate, even though they quite often share the same building.

Makro membership is usually very simple and is often just a case of filling in a form, showing proof of employment.

Booker requires proof of business ownership.

Not ever been a member of Costco.
Or using your employers details to register with a cash account... which is what some people do.

Ways and means and all that.

KungFuPanda

4,576 posts

191 months

Friday 5th November 2021
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Large Asian supermarkets will beat the cash and carries hands down on cheap tinned goods.

Camelot1971

2,822 posts

187 months

Saturday 6th November 2021
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Costco are definitely not the cheapest out there (even compared to normal supermarkets) but the quality of their meat, fruit and bakery products is second to none. Their single bottle wine and spirit prices are pretty good too, and they tend to sell products that are hard to get from mainstream supermarkets (a lot of US products, which is to be expected).

I still think they have a magic ray that makes you spend a minimum of £100 even if you just wanted to pop in for a hotdog! biggrin

Truckosaurus

12,839 posts

305 months

Saturday 6th November 2021
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Camelot1971 said:
...
I still think they have a magic ray that makes you spend a minimum of £100 even if you just wanted to pop in for a hotdog! biggrin
Indeed. Probably unwise for the OP to try to save money by visiting there.

57Ford

5,608 posts

155 months

Sunday 7th November 2021
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Truckosaurus said:
Camelot1971 said:
...
I still think they have a magic ray that makes you spend a minimum of £100 even if you just wanted to pop in for a hotdog! biggrin
Indeed. Probably unwise for the OP to try to save money by visiting there.
I can confirm that they definitely do. I think think they stole the idea from the Trafford Centre where they have vents above the entrance doors blowing Millionaire Gas at you so that you convince yourself to spend £250 on a pair of jeans or trainers etc…

jabloko99

43 posts

99 months

Sunday 7th November 2021
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Buy organic?
Buywholefoods online.co.uk
Biona.co.uk

Edited by jabloko99 on Sunday 7th November 10:04

TellYaWhatItIs

534 posts

111 months

Monday 8th November 2021
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Was reading down this thread and paused to link to my local Makro, filled in an account form and got a customer number and a card in the post.

Apparently I have some sort of business to do with Pizza lol.

nebpor

3,753 posts

256 months

Monday 8th November 2021
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Amazon

I buy 24 cases of chopped / crushed tomatoes, pizza sauce etc from there, as I can get high quality stuff at a decent price.