Elfin wrote:The self check out lanes were mobbed and no one could work them without an error. It took way longer than it should.
leek wrote:I go to Strack, but to generalize, I like the self-checkout because usually I don't have to wait. Even if it takes me as long as it would have to wait and then go through the regular line. The only problem I have is when I purchase a fruit or veggie without a code - trying to figure out what it is in their naming scheme can be annoying. And they seem to have designed it like a computer, rather than a touch interface. You have to move through the list by dragging a scroll bar down, instead of flicking the list up like you would on a phone or tablet device.
riddlemay wrote:Joel and Nancy, your reasons (both rational and irrational) help me understand the appeal of the self checkout more than I did. That is, without changing my own preference, they've at least moved me from "why on earth would anyone in their right mind do this" to "OK, I can see why someone in their right mind might do this." So thanks.
NFriday wrote: Mariana's
sdbond wrote:I had a short shopping list of very basic items -- except for tahini, which is, I guess, exotic in Jewel parlance -- so off we went to the store last night, thinking we'd be in and out quickly. Ha!
After searching high and low with no luck, I saw enlightenment headed my way in the form of an employee. I asked him where I might find tahini. Upon explaining to him what it was, what type of container it would be found in, the usual brand, etc., he pointed me to the "Pasta/Tex-Mex" section of the store. With a sweeping gesture, he proudly proclaimed that "this here is what we generally consider to be our ethnic aisle."
Well, lo and behold, there indeed was the tahini -- on a shelf just underneath jars of pasta sauce made in the USA ...
Every time we go to the Park Ridge Jewel, we leave shaking our heads and muttering "we should have just gone to Tony's."
riddlemay wrote:sdbond wrote:I had a short shopping list of very basic items -- except for tahini, which is, I guess, exotic in Jewel parlance -- so off we went to the store last night, thinking we'd be in and out quickly. Ha!
After searching high and low with no luck, I saw enlightenment headed my way in the form of an employee. I asked him where I might find tahini. Upon explaining to him what it was, what type of container it would be found in, the usual brand, etc., he pointed me to the "Pasta/Tex-Mex" section of the store. With a sweeping gesture, he proudly proclaimed that "this here is what we generally consider to be our ethnic aisle."
Well, lo and behold, there indeed was the tahini -- on a shelf just underneath jars of pasta sauce made in the USA ...
Every time we go to the Park Ridge Jewel, we leave shaking our heads and muttering "we should have just gone to Tony's."
Thanks for validating my experience with the crazy, impossible-to-learn aisle-arrangement at Jewel, sdbond. I'm "old," so the possibility exists that it's just me. But it isn't. I consistently have a harder time finding things in the Jewel that I go to every week than in anybody else's supermarket that I'm visiting for the very first time. Something ain't right there.
Q: We've heard talk that price cuts are coming. What can you tell us?
A: We took over the business on Friday and immediately made a decision to adjust prices across all Jewel-Osco stores on many regularly purchased items, like milk and bread. We want to show customers, from day one, that Jewel-Osco is serious about winning their business — and that begins with offering fair and competitive prices. Because our company has a decentralized operating structure, each market is enabled to make its own decisions in the best interests of operating great stores.
NFriday wrote:Hi- The investment group that bought Jewel recently, already owns some Albertson's stores, and runs each store autonomously, and so each store is allowed to set their own policy, and I think each store has its own sales. People that use a lot of coupons are not looking forward to this, because right now all the Jewel stores have the same coupon policy, whereas they are concerned that the new owners are going to allow each individual store to set their own coupon policies, which will make it confusing for people that use a lot of coupons.
From what I understand a lot of Jewel employees hope that this group of investors eventually decides to sell the chain to Kroger or another such chain. Apparently Kroger has expressed an interest in purchasing Jewel.
sdbond wrote:After searching high and low with no luck, I saw enlightenment headed my way in the form of an employee. I asked him where I might find tahini. Upon explaining to him what it was, what type of container it would be found in, the usual brand, etc., he pointed me to the "Pasta/Tex-Mex" section of the store. With a sweeping gesture, he proudly proclaimed that "this here is what we generally consider to be our ethnic aisle."
Well, lo and behold, there indeed was the tahini -- on a shelf just underneath jars of pasta sauce made in the USA ...
LAZ wrote:I was at the kosher Jewel in Evanston and figured they'd be more likely to have a larger selection of Middle Eastern items than others, but I did not find the rosewater I was looking for.
LAZ wrote:sdbond wrote:After searching high and low with no luck, I saw enlightenment headed my way in the form of an employee. I asked him where I might find tahini. Upon explaining to him what it was, what type of container it would be found in, the usual brand, etc., he pointed me to the "Pasta/Tex-Mex" section of the store. With a sweeping gesture, he proudly proclaimed that "this here is what we generally consider to be our ethnic aisle."
Well, lo and behold, there indeed was the tahini -- on a shelf just underneath jars of pasta sauce made in the USA ...
I was at the kosher Jewel in Evanston and figured they'd be more likely to have a larger selection of Middle Eastern items than others, but I did not find the rosewater I was looking for.