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Community => Coffee Lounge => Topic started by: cleopatra on January 03, 2013, 12:59:45 am

Title: Buying in bulk
Post by: cleopatra on January 03, 2013, 12:59:45 am
does anyone know where you can buy food staples like flour, pasta , rice etc in bulk at a reasonable cost, please?
25kg sacks would be ideal.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Plantoid on January 03, 2013, 01:40:46 am
See how near you are to the big Tesco superstores  or Costco
 
 Most of the really big Tesco superstores have a section where you can get supersize . so do the likes of Costco and Brookers wholesalers .
 
If your ex HMF you can get a discount Costco card .
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: tizaala on January 03, 2013, 06:51:20 am
Macro used to be good for that sort of stuff, and they give temporary cards out .
Rice you can get from Indian and Chineese wholesalers in bigger towns.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Bionic on January 03, 2013, 08:01:20 am
I have never used Costco and prefer Makro to Bookers but sometimes it isn't easy getting a card.
We now have a Bookers card because if you keep bees the BBKA (British Bee Keepers Association) made some arrangements with them a couple of years ago that if you showed your BBKA membership card you could get a Bookers card. Reasoning behind it is that bee keeprs use a large amount of sugar.
Sally
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: HappyHippy on January 03, 2013, 09:02:28 am
Costco are fantastic  ;D :thumbsup:

I worked there for years as their optical section supervisor (yes, they do spex too  ;)) and still have a membership card - they sell everything ! They're possibly not the cheapest, but the quality they sell is great as is their refund/guarentee policy.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: MAK on January 03, 2013, 09:09:15 am
I guess that on line purchases come with high delievery costs so I would suggest a trip to a large city/town and the small ethnic shops. Asian, Chinese and Turkish communities have local corner shops and they all sell a large range of bulk produce. The Turkish shops in north London sell massive bags of rice,pulses,dried fruit and stuff that may be more familiar to those with a longer UK heritage. ( hope this is PC enough for everyone).
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: lachlanandmarcus on January 03, 2013, 09:28:50 am
Altho Im not a fan of Tesco their larger (retail park) type stores do sell  sacks of rice etc - at ours they have basmati, long grain and thai fragrant rice in 10kg mini sacks.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Fowgill Farm on January 03, 2013, 10:10:48 am
With Makro and Bookers i believe you need to be a business and have to produce either a compliment slip or headed paper, we have a Makro card and they are good for bulk purchases but expensive, its often better to buy smaller quantities in the supermarket equating to the same weight but works out cheaper so six and 2 threes. Smaller sealed packets store better too than opened big packs so unless you have secure bins to store stuff in watch out for invading critters.
mandy :pig:
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Sylvia on January 03, 2013, 12:03:36 pm
I used to get mine through a health food shop. You could always ask a local one.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Anke on January 03, 2013, 02:20:06 pm
We buy 25kgs sacks of potatoes - available from one of the local petrol stations of all places! But cost has gone from 6 pounds per bag to 9!  :o :o :o  But it is still a lot cheaper than Supermarket!
 
Some agri merchants do potatoes too, and of course over winter we also always have bags of (pony) carrots in the house....
 
I am not sure we would go through 25kgs of rice in less than a couple of years? :-\
 
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Bionic on January 03, 2013, 03:56:22 pm
Anke, do you find that your potatoes store ok and if so how do you store them?
thanks
Sally
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Anke on January 03, 2013, 05:28:44 pm
Anke, do you find that your potatoes store ok and if so how do you store them?
thanks
Sally

Sally I make sure the bag gets properly closed every time I take some out and it lives in our vestibule - quite a cool part of the house (and no mice in there!). Sometimes the last few meals I have to discard a few more, but for a family of four the sack lasts about a months and a half - a lot of shepherd's pies and other mash recipes in our house...
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: darkbrowneggs on January 03, 2013, 05:37:48 pm
Goodness Foods used to be good for that, but I think they now have miniumum order which is quite high, it depends how much you would be using I suppose.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: cleopatra on January 03, 2013, 05:57:01 pm
thanks guys
we used to get the paper sacks of tatties from the super market, about 7kg.. but the price went up from £2 to £7 in last 2 years.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: darkbrowneggs on January 03, 2013, 08:03:45 pm
Lidl have some vegetables at a good price, the quality used to be very poor, but in mine they now stock locally grown potatoes which are both good and cheap  :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: deepinthewoods on January 03, 2013, 08:34:29 pm
i buy 25kg sacks of spuds off the roadside for 7.50/9 dependent on variety.
put the sack into an old wooden fruit box then cut a hole in the bottom of the bag and take from the bottom first. its worth going thro them occasionally to make sure of no bad ones.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: in the hills on January 03, 2013, 09:10:55 pm
Bionic, we buy sacks of potatoes, nets of swedes, carrots and onions from Coed-Y-Dinas (Charlies) .... not sure where they have shops or whether they all sell as much as the Welshpool branch. We are a family of four so they all tend to get used but if for some reason I think they won't last I give some to my parents and neighbours ..... still worth buying and giving some away.


Make a lot of veg. soups too and freeze in pots.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: renee on January 06, 2013, 10:29:32 am
does anyone know where you can buy food staples like flour, pasta , rice etc in bulk at a reasonable cost, please?
25kg sacks would be ideal.
This link looks interesting.http://www.suma.coop/ (http://www.suma.coop/) :)
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: SallyintNorth on January 06, 2013, 11:30:54 am
Suma are good, yes.  Our local Organic Veg Box scheme can get and deliver Suma stuff for you, and I know of others offer the same.  Our local Health Food shop stocks Suma, too, so I expect I could get them to get sacks of things for me if I wanted.
Title: Re: Buying in bulk
Post by: Ina on January 06, 2013, 01:30:29 pm
Start your own little coop with SUMA - that way it's cheaper still.