Saint Pizza wrote:Has anyone checked out the $19 ice cream makers yet that use gel instead of salt? Wondering how well they work, etc. So has anyone taken one for the team and bought one.
Food Nut wrote:I went to the grand opening yesterday of the store at Belmont and Kimball. They were handing out free reusable grocery bags...
They also had some nice specialty items you don't always see: marinated mushrooms and roasted and marinated peppers in jars, frozen stuffed shells, manicotti and cheese and meat tortellini. I also picked up some delicious maple leaf/maple cream filled cookies: delicious.
Maple Leaf wrote:Nice to know about those Maple Leaf cookies. Such cookies are very common supermarket staples in my native Quebec under brand names like David (now part of Kraft, I think) and Christie. My parents usually bring some (along with still steaming Montreal bagels of course) whenever they fly in.
Maple Leaf wrote:Nice to know about those Maple Leaf cookies. Such cookies are very common supermarket staples in my native Quebec under brand names like David (now part of Kraft, I think) and Christie. My parents usually bring some (along with still steaming Montreal bagels of course) whenever they fly in.
jlawrence01 wrote:Maple Leaf wrote:Nice to know about those Maple Leaf cookies. Such cookies are very common supermarket staples in my native Quebec under brand names like David (now part of Kraft, I think) and Christie. My parents usually bring some (along with still steaming Montreal bagels of course) whenever they fly in.
Personally, I think that the best maple creme cookies are produced by Dare in Omtario. And Dare does a lot of the private labelled products for Loblaws' Presidents Choice brand.
Personall, I have not seen the maple cookies in Aldi yet as that is not a category that we buy.
Geo wrote:Joe, do you know that Dare makes the maple leaf cookies for Loblaw's President's Choice? If so, I'll make sure to pick some up next time I go to their big store over on r. Jean-Talon.
Geo
Cogito wrote:I saw about 2.5 cases of maple leaf cookies yesterday at the Melrose Park Aldi store. It's on North Ave. across the street from Winston Plaza. They also had some Holiday Season leftover packages of what looked like Oreos, but with peppermint filling, for 50 cents a package.
AaronSinger wrote:Sounds to me like the Peppermint Joe-Joe's from Trader Joe's. Aldi and TJ's do share the same owner...
Khaopaat wrote:
Anyhoo, finally got to taste those Trader Joe's maple cookies...wow. If the Canadian ones are better as some have claimed, I'm not sure I want to try them due to what I can only imagine to be opiate-like addictiveness. It's hard enough not to snarf down the entire TJ's box in one sitting as it is.
jimswside wrote:is Aldi any good for general grocery buying, Im not talking about private labeled niche items like you find @ Trader Joes, but everday items like produce, meat, deli, etc.?
I have always assumed not, but am curious.
Cogito wrote:jimswside wrote:is Aldi any good for general grocery buying, Im not talking about private labeled niche items like you find @ Trader Joes, but everday items like produce, meat, deli, etc.?
I have always assumed not, but am curious.
Deli is all precut and packaged, not much selection. What they do have isn't bad if you can use it. Prices are low.
Meat is all prepackaged. No personal service at all. Not much selection. I doubt you'd like it.
Produce is hit and miss.
If you can find something you need, you should try it. But the odds of finding what you need, if you are used to TJ, Caputo's, Tony's, etc., is low.
MBK wrote:jim, i think aldi is good for dairy. their milk/butter/eggs/cheese are inexpensive. their cereals are pretty good knock-offs of the main brands as well. i think their french onion dip is the best store bought version i've had... you're bound to find a few items they do that taste better than main brands... aldi's not a bad store in my opinion.
Geo wrote:You can buy German ground coffee there, and they've recently begun selling single-country fair traded beans which are quite good. Plus, if you like any sort of chocolate, they're the best grocery in existence. Austrian, Swiss, German... and for excellent prices. And they've got bagged almonds, salted or smoked, for an incredible price—great product.
Geo