Supermarket Home Deliveries
Author
Discussion

Dashnine

Original Poster:

1,642 posts

71 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
In an attempt to reduce food costs I’ve had a delivery from Sainsburys in place of the usual Ocado weekly shop tonight.

I had read, and was aware that no carrier bags are provided, but grovelling at floor level at the front door to transfer from the totes into my own bags wasn’t exactly an enjoyable experience.

The other issue I have is the inability to setup a regular shop at Sainsburys, so for example at Ocado an order is created some 6 weeks in advance with your most regularly bought items at the chosen time each week. There are references of a Regular Shop being available at Sainsburys, but it’s a pilot scheme and by invitation (to whom?) only.

Whilst the Sainsbury’s delivery was some 20% cheaper than the Ocado equivalent (who supply their own brand and M&S groceries), the lack of carrier bags and a regular shop were negatives for me.

Anyone aware of another supermarket who offers the ‘regular shop’ facility, and delivers in carrier bags (preferably returnable as per Ocado)? Or is this one for Mumsnet?

Wacky Racer

40,402 posts

268 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
We just take the baskets into the house and empty the stuff onto the worktops.......easy.

Turn7

25,181 posts

242 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
We just take the baskets into the house and empty the stuff onto the worktops.......easy.
Indeed.

confused

MiniMan64

18,697 posts

211 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Turn7 said:
Wacky Racer said:
We just take the baskets into the house and empty the stuff onto the worktops.......easy.
Indeed.

confused
Agreed.

Why would you put it into bags at the door step? And why would you need carrier bags at all? More waste.

Morrisons ‘saves’ your shop from last time though for an easy if slightly boring re-order.

MitchT

17,079 posts

230 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
I transfer it from the crates to a couple of large "bag for life" things, then move said bags to the kitchen for unpacking at my leisure. Seems easy enough.

Dashnine

Original Poster:

1,642 posts

71 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
We just take the baskets into the house and empty the stuff onto the worktops.......easy.
Didn’t realise they were happy for you to do that as the instructions on the order email request that you have your own bags or containers ready. Would have assumed they didn’t want ones sticky covid fingers on their crates / baskets.


hyperblue

2,848 posts

201 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
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One for the weird things my neighbours do thread wink

grumbledoak

32,319 posts

254 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
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My Sainsbury's delivery comes in plastic crates. I carry them inside and unpack them.

You can add foods to a Favourites list - click the little red heart top right of each image. Next time, pick your order from the Favourites list.

marksx

5,168 posts

211 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Why unpack, to pack, to unpack to put away?

joestifff

868 posts

127 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
We just take the baskets into the house and empty the stuff onto the worktops.......easy.
This

Then forget to return one to the front door. They’re perfect for garage storage, or kindling storage etc.

tr7v8

7,513 posts

249 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
grumbledoak said:
My Sainsbury's delivery comes in plastic crates. I carry them inside and unpack them.

You can add foods to a Favourites list - click the little red heart top right of each image. Next time, pick your order from the Favourites list.
This. My wife has a 4 wheeled trolley thing she wheels to the door, loads that up then takes it to the kitchen & wipes it down (carry over from COVID stuff) and then loads up fridge & cupboards.

soupdragon1

4,741 posts

118 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
joestifff said:
This

Then forget to return one to the front door. They’re perfect for garage storage, or kindling storage etc.
One for the 'a bit council' thread

SDarks

192 posts

113 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
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Every week I think they should use a crate with a sliding bottom panel so you can place it on the worktop slide the panel out and leave the food on the work top. It would save at least 10 seconds of unpacking.. getmecoat

essayer

10,314 posts

215 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
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Amazon / Morrisons is the best service. All in paper bags, easy transfer to the kitchen, quite often same day delivery.

numtumfutunch

5,046 posts

159 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
grumbledoak said:
My Sainsbury's delivery comes in plastic crates. I carry them inside and unpack them.

You can add foods to a Favourites list - click the little red heart top right of each image. Next time, pick your order from the Favourites list.
This, and almost that

Ive never bothered ticking the favourites heart however when I click on the tab. which I always do at the start of a shop, it lists the stuff I usually buy and I simply and quickly scroll through it then go to individually picking stuff

And at checkout it asks if Ive forgotten all of the stuff I no longer buy since youngest son went to uni eg crisps, stellas, chocolate, etc

Cheers

visitinglondon

362 posts

210 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
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soupdragon1 said:
joestifff said:
This

Then forget to return one to the front door. They’re perfect for garage storage, or kindling storage etc.
One for the 'a bit council' thread
+1

Hardly something to boast about.

Mobile Chicane

21,733 posts

233 months

Tuesday 8th November 2022
quotequote all
Waitrose.

The delivery person takes the crates into the scullery, unloads them, then returns these and they to their van and on their way.

idea




paulguitar

33,101 posts

134 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
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Mobile Chicane said:
Waitrose.

The delivery person takes the crates into the scullery, unloads them, then returns these and they to their van and on their way.

idea
Let's hope the driver can compose a more coherent sentence. wink

s2kjock

1,811 posts

168 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
quotequote all
tr7v8 said:
This. My wife has a 4 wheeled trolley thing she wheels to the door, loads that up then takes it to the kitchen & wipes it down (carry over from COVID stuff) and then loads up fridge & cupboards.
I usually frantically load into a collection of my own boxes at the doorstep but the trolley idea is genius biggrin

Makes a lot of sense for my parents who are not as up to humphing boxes around the house as I am.

Dashnine

Original Poster:

1,642 posts

71 months

Wednesday 9th November 2022
quotequote all
marksx said:
Why unpack, to pack, to unpack to put away?
Quite - there's 'easy enough' and then there's 'easier still'.