Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Costco has been 2.99/lb for chicken breast about as long as I can remember now here in Chicago. It’s only sometimes better priced than the local supermarket, but the quality is consistent and price stable.

If I have spare time on a weekend it can be picked up far cheaper in bulk from a food services supply store. 2 weeks ago when I last walked through the cooler section it was sitting at $1.29/lb in 40lb cases. Costs maybe 10 cents per food saver vacuum bag or so to freeze them in packs of 2-4 each.

A lot of folks are price takers and have forgotten how to comparison shop or buy on sale and stock up. These were skills lost over the past few generations - likely since stores thought they were competing on price far more than they actually are. Covid taught them the average consumer simply isn’t as price sensitive as the business classes teach you, and have engaged in aggressive price segmentation.

I don’t bother buying most shelf stable or freezable products these days unless it’s on a very large sale - which I’ve found tends to happen roughly quarterly for most things. Beef is the current exception, but we buy a half cow from a local farm and eat off that for a year or more.



Not everyone lives near a Costco. Not everyone is a fan of the environmental cost of their cheap chickens, or whatever. When I lived in San Francisco there was a Costco but it was more inconvenient to get to via Muni than most of the alternatives. Their parking garage is an absolute zoo.

  If I have spare time on a weekend it can be picked up far cheaper in bulk
  from a food services supply store.
Not everyone has the luxury of being able to store perishable items in bulk. Personally I struggle a bit to store a whole chicken in my fridge. Six and a half pounds (what you'd have to buy to get Costco's $3/lb price) is quite a lot. And if you want to cook that chicken first and then freeze it, you run a high risk of it just tasting weird.

I just checked around and for boneless, skinless chicken breasts:

  Sprouts $7/lb.
  Safeway $7/lb (more if you don't want the chlorine treated stuff).
  Trader Joe's $7.50/lb (but they've gained a reputation for nasty, woody chicken).
  Whole Foods out of stock.
  Lucky's $8.50/lb.
  Mollie Stone's $8.89/lb.
  Berkeley Bowl $9.59/lb.
  US Foods Chef Store $3.75/lb for *twelve pounds*.
At least out here there's a lot less variability than you're claiming, unless you're buying enough to fill your entire fridge/freezer.


Maybe people don't want 40 pounds of chicken at a time?




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: