b3ta.com qotw
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Question of the Week » Money-saving tips » Post 1428883 | Search
This is a question Money-saving tips

I'm broke, you're broke, we're all broke. Even the smug guy on the balcony with the croissant hasn't got two AmEx gold cards to rub together these days. Tell everybody your schemes to save cash.

(, Thu 10 Nov 2011, 18:09)
Pages: Latest, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, ... 1

« Go Back | See The Full Thread

Nearly everything

(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 20:34, 1 reply)
birds eye chilies
supermarket - toddy little packet with about 8 of them in for 79p. Chinese wholesale grocers, a bag the size of my head for a couple of quid.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 20:40, closed)
Yeh but I can't eat a bag the size of my head full of chillis before they go off
and so far you've saved me pennies. Most stuff is still cheaper in a supermarket, they have the buying power.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 20:46, closed)
well don't get a bag the size of your head then,
they charge by weight.

In my experience most veg is cheaper in the grocers. But you're obviously some kind of supermarket fanboy so I might as well speak to a brick wall.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 20:52, closed)
No, I just don't live anywhere near one of these magical places where veg is cheaper at the grocers

(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 21:00, closed)
Prices vary from place to place I guess,
it's just that you seemed to get massively offended at the suggestion that people could perhaps try shopping elsewhere. So much so that you had to start a counter-thread.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 21:07, closed)
Not offended
Just realistic, supermarkets are cheaper because they have greater buying power. Overall if you stick to your list and ignore all the shit they tempt you with it will be cheaper. That's why they make millions and local shops suffer.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 21:10, closed)
It sounds like you're trying to use reason to arrive at facts, here.
The problem with reason is that a lot of it is assumptions. What you say makes sense, but the conclusion isn't necessarily true.

You're right about the special offers and deals and whatnot, I'll be honest I'm a sucker for them. But we shop at a farmers' market every week and won't baulk at paying a tenner for a chicken. My Dad might spit his tea out when I tell him how much I spend on the roast, but his weekly shopping bill comes to £60-£90 whereas ours is usually around the £30 mark.
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 21:17, closed)
Can i just jump in here and say
POUNDSHOPS or if you are realy in to saving the pennys the 99p shop.
We now get all or shampoo, conditioner, dishwasher tabs etc from one.
Before some says it isnt the same stuff, yes it is a bottle of shampoo and a bottle of conditioner from asda cost £5.98 exactly the same bottles with exactly the same packaging and contents cost £2 thats a saving right there that is, yes you may not get fruit and veg but you can get all your cleaning stuff there, also pepsi cola 2lt £1 asda 1.79 and this from londis that well known pervayour of dried pasty things in the tepid cabinate
so the moral is use different shops for different things dont be fooled in to doing it all in one shop
(, Fri 11 Nov 2011, 22:09, closed)
Steve Jobs called
he asked "Paper or plastic?"
(, Sat 12 Nov 2011, 11:44, closed)

« Go Back | See The Full Thread

Pages: Latest, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, ... 1