Thanks so much for watching and reacting to my video! You are right... I spend summers in England and winter in Texas. I grew up in Illinois... so I know what your Indiana winters are like ;-) Now I get pretty good weather year round, which is a blessing! The biggest comment I got on this video was about taxes... British people often don't realise that Americans don't pay sales tax on groceries in most states, including Texas! The other big comment I got was about people disagreeing with me showing the "non-promoted" prices. That's because I wanted to do an equivalent comparison. Both Kroger and Tesco have a "high/low" strategy where their everyday prices are high but the price when you use their membership card is low. But those card prices aren't active every week at the same price... so that's why I chose to compare non-promoted prices.
Yeah, based off the comments I'm seeing so far, those are definitely good things to point out! Love your channel and it's really cool to get to see a perspective from someone who lives both places equally. :)
I would agree, except that the lower 'clubcard' and equivalent prices are our normal prices and they basically made up those higher prices following the lockdowns to increase profits. Tesco and the others don't take away those 'Clubcard' prices because they would lose to many customers and have loads of complaints. The only 'special' prices in Tesco are when they match the cheaper Aldi prices and those do get moved to products as Aldi change theirs. Even though Lidl is generally just as cheap as Aldi in the UK.
@@trevorbromidge2076 makes no difference, the price you see in the UK is the price you pay. So all those products are even cheaper than she is saying in the video.
What she calls 'sale' prices are actually 'loyalty card' prices. We pick out 'loyalty' prices whenever we can. She also picked out Tesco 'finest' which is the fancier version of the regular store brand.
Here in Cyprus pure honey(not mixed)one klo ia about 10Euros feeerange eggs are 3Euros predozen I am lucky becouse my nextdoor nabour gives me eggs chattergel cheese 13Euto per klo
The tomatoes we buy are usually in season in the summer months and are therefore UK grown as well as from the Netherlands, but out of season are more likely to come from places like Morocco.
15:45 It is unusual to see eggs in UK supermarkets that aren't free range. Following big public protests about caged chickens. The public here seem more interested in the welfare of the animals we eat. Than a lot of people in the USA.
Sorry to burst your bubble, but whilst caged hens are banned across Europe (incl. the UK), the regulations are loose and Barn Eggs are the equivalent of the 'No Cage Eggs' in the US, as was mentioned here. For 'Free Range' a small area outside of a 'Barn' can allowed for the chicken to 'roam', though a small door in the side of a building, whether they do or not is a moot point. Only 'Organic Free Range' can be assumed to be from a hen with a large space outside to 'free range' as we expect it to be. Last year (and probably this) all hens had to be brought inside due to a risk they may be contanimated by wild birds carrying Bird Flu so we haveto take that into account, probably not a US problem as most wild birds don't cross the Atlanic or Pacific oceans. Caged, Barn, Free Range, Organic Free Range, Pasture Fed: marketing guys are assholes.
Pretty sure farm foods eggs are caged hens, used to buy them and they were tiny! Remember reading on the packet. Edit just looked it up and they are caged hens
@@definitelynotatroll246 I have never heard of Farm Foods before. Had to look them up. They haven't any shops near where I live. They have agreed to fall into line with the other supermarkets. Will stop selling eggs from caged hens by 2025.
@@sueguyan8101 Also be warned about GMO's = Genetically Modified Organisms, invented in a petri dish in a lab and NOT natural. The main side effect as far as i know is ADHD/Hyperactivity, problems concentrating etc affecting kids but can also affect adults. I visited a friend in the US a while back and all FIVE of her kids were medicated for ADHD. The 1st thing they grabbed in the morning was a Twinkie ughhh!!!! Here in the UK Twinkies, well ALL Hostess cakes etc Reeces and Hershey products {{ actually, basically all American foods sold here }} have a WARNING on the boxes/wrappers that they can cause ADHD, Poor or Lack of Concentration, Hyperactivity etc. However, the FDA and companies like Hostess do not permit WARNINGS on the boxes/wrappers in the US. It's very scary btw..... While in the US I saw a guy in the garage 1 morning grab 4 Twinkie bars and say, "That should help me make it through the morning" 😵😵 So, the adults know the effect of what they eat, yet still allow their kids to eat it ughhh!!!! I found that shocking. Then the poor kids end up on some heavy duty meds, which have serious side effects. I took photos of the warnings and showed them to friends in the US, they were shocked that this was hidden from them. I thought i was letting my sons eat healthier foods by getting them cereals, HUGE mistake. When we got back home i researched and found that is where a lot of the GMOs get into foodstuffs, is via grains 😡. I have asked big companies like Kelloggs and Nestle about their use of GMO crops. I either got no reply or a response you would need a team of lawyers to unravel 🙈........ HEADS UP on the Honey, don't go spending huge sums on Manuka because experts have proven that LOCAL honey is just as good when it comes to it's health benefits. Mainly due to it not needing transported thousands of miles, losing it's potency. As you will know, it's also a fraction of the price of Manuka.
@@christiner302 I remember watching a programme on TV about the health benefits of honey. The experts on it said not to waste money on expensive Manuka honey as local honey was just as beneficial as Manuka for a fraction of the price.
As an Irish person who lived in the US for a period of time i was shocked at how expensive food was but mainly the quality difference was most notable.. i couldn't believe that the milk basically never goes off where as in Ireland it would be past best after only a few days and same with bread.. the amount of preservatives put in US food is scary
UK here, I agree, the crap that's allowed in US food is quite shocking, also I always thought/assumed US groceries were cheaper than our prices, etc. When I visited over there, it always seemed so odd not to have tax included within each retail price. It was always added on, afterwards at the checkout, when totalling your purchases? Bad additives & other substances/chemicals are allowed in their food that are banned in Europe & other countries, which is pretty shocking?
@@ritamarshall2644maybe a little more than just the price of carrots tbf😅 I mean seeing 12 large carrots cost all of 50p there wasn’t much to work wit lol
@@ritamarshall2644 An old friend in his eighties who had a lifetime as a fruit and vegetables wholesaler told me that at Christmas, Tesco were selling sprouts at a loss of around 50p a bag. He knew the source and the pricing.
One thing you should know about the beef,you legally can't sell American beef in the UK because it contains growth hormones and other medicines, plus you will also find all the food in the UK will have a lot less preservatives.
@@Coolcartingnot what I heard. I heard that all that hormones etc make the beef less tasty, but I hevent been to compare so I don’t know just what I’ve been told
@SmearCampaignUK Honestly I really didn't care if my food goes moo or neigh, since horse meat is edible and there are no laws against it in the UK. The issue was not that horse meat was used, the real scandal was that Tesco was claiming horse meat to be beef and calling it a "beef lasagne" and not "lasagne", mostly because horse meat is less fatty than beef and thus circumvent certain UK laws restricting the fat content in ready meal products.
Eggs are kept in the refrigerator in the US because of the different way they are treated in the EU/UK. About a couple of decades ago there were Salmonella outbreaks caused by eggs in the EU and US because of hygienic conditions in which the chickens were raised. In the US it was thought that the Salmonella contamination was caused by contamination of food by the outside of the shells, so the eggs were washed in chlorinated water. However it was later found in the EU that the Salmonella actually got into the egg, so the inside of the egg was contaminated as well. In the US the way of dealing with this was to keep the eggs refrigerated to reduce the multiplication rate of salmonella in the eggs, while in the EU it was dealt with by increasing hygiene in the farm and testing regularly for the presence of Salmonella. To allow hygiene testing, eggs i the UK/EU are required not to be chlorine washed so they can be tested at the farm. This is why UK/EU eggs can be kept for a long time without refrigeration.
Apparently chlorinating food doesn't remove salmonella. The salmonella curls up out of sight and will be reactivated when prepared for cooking/eating. This particularly applies to raw chicken.
In the UK baby chicks are vaccinated against salmonella , not sure about the EU though. Look for the Lion mark if you're pregnant and want to eat eggs.
'Clubcard price' is not a sale price, it's a 'loyalty price.' To qualify for the lower price you need to have a Tesco clubcard! This, however, is free to apply for and also earns you 'points' on every shop which can be converted into money off vouchers for future shops. I save mine to spend on my christmas shop which means I can indulge in lots of extras for christmas and usually still spend less than a regular shop.
I'm a checkout operator in Tesco. Last xmas I had a customer who was buying GBP90 of Alcohol he didn't have a club card so we "borrowed" the card of following customer which knocked GBP30 off his bill, which he was very happy about and the owner of the club card accrued an extra 60 points everyone's a winner@@AzuraeLyonheart
You have to remember that Britain is a small island and our climate is not conducive to growing a lot of fruit like oranges and bananas. So the produce in the first part of the video is very popular and is also imported from overseas and therefore the prices are a lot higher than prices in the USA. Some vegetables are also imported but others are home grown so these are priced accordingly.
As happened last year, importing fruit and veg from Southern Europe and Africa may become a thing of the past with Global Warming. We may end up looking like the Netherlands, acres and acres of glasshouses. As for crops that like frost such as Brassicas, forget it, Sprouts and Swede will never taste the same.
British and Irish milk is so good - remember that the majority of our cows are grass fed and grazed apart from winter. That's the norm rather than being some speciality plus point
@@georgebarnes8163 You are so lucky, you can tell the high quality milk, a day in the fridge and you have that lovely cream in the neck of the bottle.
@@pauldurkee4764 I would not go back to shop milk again, I use the Jersey milk for cheese and butter, saves me a small fortune over the year with the added bonus in the fun making the cheese and butter. I am very lucky to have a few farm shops around me that sell top quality produce for peanut prices.
@@pauldurkee4764 Tesco also do a premier Jersey Milk, it is in a traditional Bottle shape and it's absolutely delicious, more expensive of course but well worth it.
The advantage of Lamb is sheep will graze perfectly happily on quite steep rocky hills so you can farm lamb on land you couldn't use for any other agriculture, you tend to graze them on the hills in summer then take them down to the farms lower altitude fields over winter. They also reach maturity in less than 12 months vs around 18 months for beef.
I've recently shopped in both the US & UK, and grocery prices in the UK are easily 30% cheaper overall. In addition, quite a lot of US foods tend to be full of all sorts of crappy chemicals. 🙁
@@mdcclxxviepluribusunum1066 Biden has brought inflation down in the US better than most other developed countries, so THAT is Bidenomics. We have all had inflation so please do not say that is Biden's fault. Covid hangover.
My cousin recently returned to England from a decade of living in the states. Whilst we are moaning at how expensive everything is in our supermarkets, he keeps going on about how cheap everything is 😂 According to him, everything in the states is about twice to two and a half times more expensive than in England for an Average weekly shop. That's Cornwall England to Florida US, prices. Just to add, the quality is vastly superior in England too, according to him.
@archwombat9250 Exactly what comes to my mind when I see these types of videos. I'm a software engineer, so get a decent salary by British standards, but whenever I see the potential salary in America for a comparable role, I have a small heart attack 😂
@@Draiscor yup. I’m an Architect and my mate also an Architect recently moved to Atlanta with his American wife. His salary puts my (also decent) salary to shame. But his cost of living swallows up most of that increase.
@@archwombat9250 All of that extra wage goes on paying for exhobinant Healthcare insurance, that Brits have already paid for in taxes. So when comparing the two, you must look at all factors, not just how much is paid.
All UK eggs have A red Lion Passant printed on them, with a use by date, a farming method code,(ie: organic to barn) and a farm ID, so the egg can be traced back to the actual place of beginnings.
Eggs and salmonella The British Lion mark on eggs means that they have been laid by hens vaccinated against salmonella and they have been produced to the highest standards of food safety. Find out more about the story of the British Lion scheme.
@@dougbrowning82 All of the eggs in the UK with the lion mark come from hens that are vaccinated against salmonella and flocks of hens are routinely tested.This has drastically reduced instances of this infection to very low levels. In the US the FDA states that there are around 142,000 reported instances of salmonella per year. Because eggs in the UK are not cleaned to protect the membrane this has driven higher hygiene & welfare standards to naturally produce a clean egg. In the US, chemical detergents and sanitizers are used which removes the dirt as well as the membrane. The downsides are that the cleaning water must be changed before it loses efficacy and when the refrigerated eggs are transported home they can get wet through condensation which may lead to bacterial growth. There is also a practice in 10% of production that coats the eggs with protective mineral oil, although it is in decline due to cost. The US producers state that inoculation against salmonella for laying hens would add 14 cents per egg to costs. Either process achieves a similar result. I personally prefer the UK/EU method as it avoids chemicals and results in better treatment of the hens. Common practice is when cracking raw eggs always wash your hands even though the eggs are usually very clean. Then again I would do the same in the US due to the chance of moisture allowing bacterial growth.
@@dougbrowning82 Yes the chickens are vaccinated as chicks but we also keep a check on the production facilities. As a person who was a cleaner in a chicken factory I know the standard of hygiene is high. I worked on the Truss Line which is where the prepared whole chicken is then "Tidied up" (the legs banded together and the wings tucked beneath the body so that they fit onto the food tray and are wrapped) which I had to wash and dry the dual stainless steel work counters ( total length 120 feet)and the central conveyor belt (total length135 feet) that ran down the length of the work area three times a day in a normal shift (usually when the girls were on break 15,30 and 10) The lab tech would take swab samples of the cleaned area on a regular basic which was then checked in the in house laboratory. This factory (1 of 7 owned by our boss) processed 110,000 chickens a day and it did not smell nor was any part dirty as even the exterior area was regularly swept by a road sweeper style machine. Great Job, smashing work mates (22 gals and 2 other blokes on my line) and a wonderful boss who came to the factory floor every day to check everything was ok. 5 years which were some of best in my working life. sorry for the length but only way I could explain.😃😃🧡
I’m a US expat who’s been living in the UK for nearly 18 years. The thing to also bear in mind is that on average, US salaries are roughly double what you’d earn for the equivalent job in the UK but we do have a “free” national healthcare system that is very good so there’s that to consider as well. We also mostly have employment contracts for full-time workers and better employment protections. We have a better appreciation for work-life balance in the UK because it actually leads to higher productivity and lower sick leave. I don’t think that I could ever move back to the US after experiencing living abroad.
Interesting, it's true though half of what you said we do take for granted in the UK, without ever working anywhere else we have nothing to compare it too. The NHS has been a life saver for me, its true wages are low compared to other countries but my lad has been a type 1 diabetic since 5 years old and insulin/needles/dexcom is astronomical in price all paid for by the NHS, so definitely don't complain about being on lower wages
@@Brandon_letsgouk NHS system is expensive via national insurance and is terrible. USA pay less for insurance and get a much better speed of service and the highest quality in the world
@@Brandon_letsgo no, it’s not! I lived the majority of my life in a private run health care system and the only winners are insurance companies and their shareholders! If you think that because you have private health insurance in the UK then you are comparing apples and oranges. The only reason why private insurance is very cheap here is because everyone has free access to NHS. Privatisation will lead to massive increases in costs while not solving waiting times. We are seeing NHS doctors who run side businesses that would come to a grinding halt if the service was privatised.
@@timothyshanks6799uhh...tou really think that? I've had American healthcare, it was... Shit, and expencive, and people with no medical knowledge tried to block my treatments when doctors requested it. I have a friend who is now disabled because an insurance company refused for years to allow her treatment that multipul doctors said was necessary, now its untreatable. The doctors I had frankly weren't good, a couple were nice but the rest had given up by the looks of it and genuinely didn't care about people anymore, it was the most depressing third world piece of shit I've seen
It's the nicest of the meats but I personally can't eat much of it, mind you in a kebab I can finish the lot but as with beef and pig different parts of the animal taste different to other parts.
Due to the strict labelling laws in the UK around food, Tesco would not be able to say it was honey if it was mixed with other things. It would probably have to say ‘honey style syrup’ or ‘honey flavoured syrup’.
indeed, but there are a whole load of shenanigans going on worldwide with honey, to the point where it is getting almost impossible for even scientists to determine if what they are looking at is honey or a fake!
You're putting too much trust into these retailers. Tesco isn't collecting the honey themselves, their suppliers could being doing anything. The vast majority of honey in the UK has been found to be fake
@peonyblossominmay you can taste and feel the difference in real honey, also if you put real honey in the fridge it will become yellowish white, if it has syrup or any other thing it will not ... I don't know which study this is the results from m ... But what I know is, if a super market (grocery store) says that what your buying is real honey 100% and is not the consequences are so heavy and so bad for your business that no one will risk it to earn a little more money It's not that it can't happen bad not a lot will risk geting caught. ..... Real honey a jar 1L or 1kgr flower honey (that blonde) will be 15/25€ and wild honey (much darker colour) will be 20/30€ That's how you know it's real Farmermarket is even more expensive than that But last for a long time (even if you use it every day) aslo you can't rat as much bcs is heavy One last thing (I don't know if is a choice in the U.S.A ) in the ingredients list here it will say only thr tape of honey nothing else + info if you want to visit the bee(farm)
We're so lucky in the UK compared to America in that it's CRAAAAZY what chemicals are allowed on food & meat in the USA, its really different here in the UK!
What do you honestly believe that the UK put more chemicals in the water the only reason you don't see it is UK use numbers I grow all my veg in the UK I've had some apples from Tesco they have been in my fridge for 3 weeks and what about the 6500 sewerage leaks into the sea in a year
Really? Aspartame in drinks, that is highly toxic, packs of oranges, limes, lemons in ALL SUPERMARKETS including Home Bargins, and Iceland all have been treated with a cocktail of poisonous toxins for a longer shelf life. Its in small writing on all the labels. The loose fruit have no taste, no seeds, and no juice! Hexafluorasilic acid in our tap drinking water, toxic. Chlorine highly toxic, kills all bacteria including the good. Our food and air as being polluted, by heavy metals.
@@johnwaller4033”chemicals” the one they tend to add is flouride but even then its not all counties just some. Most people live near reservoirs/in the country as well so thats fresh fresh. All you need to do it look online and uoud see we have some of the best water in the word
I am British, but am on holiday in the US just now. The cost of food over here is so high. Baby milk formula if $54 a tin the same product in the UK is £ 9-13 for 800g that’s about £$17.
Hey! Tesco shelf worker here, I actually stock the fresh fish section at my local store at weekends and although I can't speak to the legal side of things I can say that we have both wild caught and farmed salmon on the shelves. The wild salmon in Tesco's own brand (depending on what kind you pick up) can range anywhere between £11/kg - £38.35/kg. The one shown in the video is not listed as wild caught so it's safe to assume it is farmed. Wild seems to always be stated on packaging, similarly to free range on eggs.
An important note on the eggs, you may have noticed the UK ones had a particular label "British Lion Quality", these eggs are considered safe to be eaten raw even by vulnerable groups as they are meeting an extremely high food standard designed to eliminate salmonella from eggs. Also the RSPCA (The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) is an organization famous in the UK.
Also, not sure why she compared 6 eggs UK to 12 eggs US. 2x6 eggs are always more expensive than 1x12 so she should have done a straight comparison using a 12 box in each country.
@@silverfireUK if this was a recent video, a lot of Tesco shops don’t currently stock a dozen eggs (supply issues I think). She could have done half a dozen in the US though.
The lady has picked the expensive grocery’s from tescos you can actually go a lot cheaper than what she has purchased her grocery’s for. Thank you for a great video again it was really interesting to see the difference ❤
@@exeterman2 I mean in terms of quality standards maybe but this was also about price and that can drastically fluctuate when you go to organic massively that’s if she can even get hold of organic not to mention pasteurised
Where I live we have a farm with a milk machine that dispatches milk into glass bottles 24 hours a day. It's pasteurised. Also machines with cakes and cookies for sale. I buy coloured cheddar because it looks nicer. We have mild, medium and strong. Various County and French cheese are readily available in stores. All our cows are grass fed in summer and silage fed in winter. It is pasteurised and homogenised and most of ours here in Scotland is from fairly local farms.
One thing to note about the strawberries, she was likely shopping at the Tesco when the strawberries were not "in season". When strawberry season starts in the UK (aka when the UK grown ones become available) the prices plummet. Commonly they will sell at 2x400g punnets for around £3 (£1.50 per 400g) When they're in season you'll even find 1kg big punnets of them being sold for £3.50. :) Edited to add: Once the strawberry season moves towards it's end at the back end of summer, the prices will creep upwards again to around the £2 for 400g mark.
They also compared a UK butter around half the size of their US version. So of course it's going to be around half the price. From a UK perspective most US produce is cheaper. Because the US $ is currently 27% cheaper than the UK £. They don't seem to factor that in. UK produce also tends to be inferior quality, with far more spoilage. In general UK grocery stores don't sell fresh quality produce. And farmers markets that sell good stuff are expensive. Greengrocers vanished long ago where I live.
Free range or barn eggs are basically the standard offering in the UK, even in the cheaper supermarkets like Aldi. Many supermarkets don't sell eggs from caged hens at all, and those that do pitch it as a budget option usually tucked away on the bottom shelf.
The crazy thing with egg prices is apparently in the US you will pay a much higher price for eggs direct from a local farm, whereas in the UK they are usually cheaper than supermarket eggs. I've just bought half-a-dozen eggs from a wayside farm stall in Derbyshire and paid just £1 - and they were huge eggs!
UK here. It's the same down here in the "home counties" = fresh farm, free range eggs are cheaper than the supermarkets, whatever the size, which is great & we re-use/recycle our egg boxes, trays, etc, which helps the environment too
I have to admit I was very surprised, as having lived in NYC for 18 years I never spent as much money on food shopping in NY as I do in England! But then I thought about how I mostly ate out in NY, therefore I didn’t grocery shop very often.
The relative cost of bananas is due to the US being closer to where they are grown, Dominica is right on your doorstep. Out of season, most of our tomatoes come from Spain or North Africa. When it comes to bread and dairy products, we have a fantastic choice of high quality products here in the UK. I buy my wholemeal seeded bread from a small independent bakery, and its not too expensive to buy organic here. Free range organically certified products are widely available in the UK.
Watching this makes me realise how lucky I am to live in the UK in terms of fresh food. The fruit is more expensive because we have to import most of it. Strawberries are cheap here in June and July, but expensive otherwise. As other people have commented, food prices have risen here recently, but the quality is generally better and I thank God for that. To answer your milk question, most of our milk is pasteurised, but not homogenised. We have a lot of lamb in the UK, but it is expensive because it is all free-range and grass fed on our green hills. It's worth trying some Welsh spring lamb if you've never had it.
While it is true that virtually all milk pasteurised (unpasteurised 'raw' milk can only be sold direct from the farm that produced it) it is also the case that the vast majority of milk is also homogenised. This is why, unlike in my childhood, the cream doesn't rise to the top of the bottle (which is the point of homogenisation--to spread the fat evenly through the milk). Channel Island (Jersey and Guernsey) milk tends to be both higher in fat content and unhomogenised. Back in the day of doorstep deliveries, this was denoted by the gold coloured foil caps.
@@MrPaulMorris Us old farts remember the days before homogenisation. The pints the milk man left on the door step had a thick glob of cream on the top which was delicious to us kids. Only problem was we had to get the pints in before the birds got to peck the bottle tops and slurp up all that creamy goodness.
I've seen a few of Ur videos and watched your video on Scottish new year earlier and commented. Now find myself commenting again to tell you that the cost of living in Scotland is cheaper in comparison to living in England.
You mentioned at the end about the NHS. Feb 2023 I had a stroke and within 40 mins, my family got me to the Hospital and straight through A+E. The Doctors and Nurses were great and found that I had Arterial Fibrillation (Irregular Heart Beat), an enlarged heart and a Tumour on a nerve going to my right ear. I entered the Hospital on the Friday night and left the next Monday. Very fortuitous I had the stroke as I would have never known...now I'm on 5 tablets a day to thin my Blood and other stuff. Having paid all my life for National Insurance, this service and the medication is 'free'... I know this isn't the case in the US.
National Insurance does not pay for the NHS. It's just another income tax, but the gov uses it to determine your entitlement to certain benefits and the State Pension.
if you are working and earn over a certain amount you pay National Insurance. But all you need for free healthcare is to be a resident in the UK with an NI number - all UK Citizens have that. So if you have never worked in your life you can still access the NHS - for free. @@BobBroon-k2t
Lamb is a huge thing in places where the landscape isn't suitable for crops or larger animals like cows. Like in the Scottish Highlands, Wales, Cumbria, etc. Fun fact: we couldn't export it for ages because of Chernobyl, some of the bans from specific UK regions weren't lifted until ~10 years ago.
I'm an English man who lived in California and Texas for decades. I returned to England late, 2023. I was pleasantly surprised at the overall cheaper, yet higher quality grocery products. Think freshly baked bread, for example. About 30% cheaper for a basket of goods, seems about right. There is no doubt that both California and Texas have outstanding artisanal products: beef, cheeses, bread, etc, but generally speaking, they are not easily accessible. Unless there is a local farmers market, but that's not everywhere and time-limited to Saturdays. And steep prices! Of course, we all want to support local, but a budget is a budget, after all. Somehow, US consumers are being cheated on price, quality, and accessibility. Enjoyed the show. Thanks, guys.
Coming out of the EU has already affected the variety and quality of food available in the supermarkets. 5 years ago, it was excellent. Now its slowly getting worse. No more EU market & food quality regulations.
Bread was the most shocking thing in an American shop to me, when I was in Maine there were no loafs under $2. The cheapest loafs in the UK are like 20p.
British strawberries are so much better though - I imagine Texas is one of the cheaper places to shop in the US with fewer taxes. She did seem to be be picking out Tesco's Finest items which are the high end ones
British Strawberries are superior in taste, they develop naturally and get that lovely flavour, I never buy those forced Strawberries you see out of season, pale in colour and no taste.
The price of strawberries in the U.K. are dependent on the time of year. In the mid summer (during Wimbledon) and in the winter they’re more expensive than the rest of the year.
Scottland grows alot of strawberries and berries, suprising but in the summer we have alot of light 3.30am to 10pm but iv come out of a nightclub at 3am total day light odd eating a kebab in daylight.
UK here. Can’t really compare produce as the seasons are different in both places. Strawberries are cheap when they’re in season. Oranges are cheapest around Christmas. Costco produce is expensive in the UK. Imported from US. Anyway. Shop in Lidl! I pay 0.95 for good seeded bread in Lidl.
The clubcard prices aren't sale prices as such, they are lower for people who have tesco's loyalty card - the "clubcard". You don't pay for club card membership but it allows tesco to track your shopping habits for marketing and research purposes etc. It's also one of the more expensive shops even with a club card, especially for brands.
My daughter only really shops at Tesco (& Tesco Express), The Co-op, and other local shops such as Costcutter or our nearest "Deli" ...we use the Tesco Clubcard, and the Co-op Membership* card - but since becoming disabled, I don't go out to shop these days so I forget what that card* is called!!🤔) 😊❤🏴🖖
Our supermarket milk is usually homogenised. Interestingly, to us, milk just looks white. I guess we don't have anything to compare it to. The big difference is that even our cheapest butters are yellow because of the grass-fed cows. The salmon said it was farmed in Norway.
@@kathleenchilcote9127 aaah someone a little bitter… unlike you I can afford to travel and live everywhere… It’s know that Us milk has lower standards, even Canada won’t let it in… so enjoy your water bitter Kathleen 😂😂
What?!?! I live here and I am grateful to have access to fairly affordable food, but good food?? Struggle to find that here (or where I live, anyway). I go to other European countries for good food.
I also live "here" but in a country of 67million "here" is subjective. We have the highest food standards in the world and also top 1/2 country's in the world for food affordability. @@sg-vp2qg
As an American in the UK, the food here is also a lot more fresh, with less preservatives, and less GMOs, which can be frustrating if you're used to an item lasting 123 amount of time. So, while a lot of things may be cheaper, they also have a shorter shelf life, which means you may have to visit the shops twice or more a week. Sliced bread shelf life was the hardest thing for me to get used to.
Stick your bread in the freezer. Pull out 2 slices for toast for breakfast and /or 2 for a sandwich for lunch. Put the frozen bread sandwich in a freezer bag and by the time lunch comes your sandwich will taste like you bought the bread that day (and not be frozen i promise). A bread bin really does help but is not as good as the freezer. Two day old bread left on the side is crap compared to properly handled bread. I hate it when i see open bread bags at other peoples houses. I want to seal them. I converted my friend to freezering his bread but only after i stopped living with him during which time he staunchly refused to credit the notion or be happy that i put a load of bread in his freeer. Cheeky git is now freezing his bread and saying how much better that is.
She's in Tesco. Go to Lidl and things like meat, cheese, and fruit get 1/4 cheaper. Regular veg, canned foods, sauces, and all other boxes/bagged foods get about 1/3 cheaper. Cleaning products and toiletries are a 1/3 cheaper too.
I find most standard grocery items are pretty much exactly the same price at Lidl & Aldi as Tesco and Sainsburys. For the generic stuff like milk, bread, fruit, veg, mince, chicken breast, tinned goods etc etc The brands can vary but usually cheaper whoever is currently offering the special price and often that means even Waitrose is the cheapest! There are some things that are cheaper in the german discount stores sure, but not loads, alot if just price matched by the other supermarkets now.
When it comes to fruit like bananas and clementines, you have to bear in mind that we can’t grow them in the U.K. so they have to be imported, usually from far away. You can grow them in the U.S. and in the case of bananas they are particularly grown in numerous very nearby countries.
I know this is not mass production but i have seen oranges grown in a garden near Corsham, Wilts. I couldn't believe it but they looked great. They also had grapes and other fruits but i can't remember what, maybe peaches loll It was weird to see.
Lamb is farmed in the Highlands of Britain where grass doesn't grow as well due to altitude and sheep can eat the plants that does grow up there and can digests it fine.
@@HardcoreHokageerm lambs are literally in the field next to my house and I’m miles from any highlands. My friend lamb is breed everywhere where this notion it’s only in the Highlands is absurd.
@@invisiblekid99 plus I never said sheep are only in Highlands. By the way I'm not talking about just 'the highlands' of Scotland. There are high altitude places all over. Wales, the pennines(where I'm from) etc.
One thing to remember when looking at these prices is in the UK what you see is what you are charged. In US your prices are all advertised before tax and you are charged more at the counter. When we get to the counter the tax is included and we pay exactly what it said on the shelf/item.
I remember asking a member of staff in Safeways, on Market Street SF, where I could find some double cream I needed to make a meal. He was a British expat, and his answer was 'around 8,000 miles away' as a similar product doesn't seem to exist in US. We both found it hilarious!
Regarding your questions about toothpaste and fluoride they don't put fluoride in the water here however they do put it in the toothpaste, but not all of them, so you have a choice. Plus there are people who still pointlessly buy filtered water, even though all the water in the UK is drinkable water like literally ALL water out of a tap (that's not 100 years old).
Some parts of the UK does have fluoride in our water. The decision about whether to add fluoride to the water supply is made by individual local authorities.
She is selecting higher end products for many items , the Clubcard price is a discount for having a Tesco Clubcard which is free , many stores have similar loyalty cards . Prices have increased here a lot with inflation and stores own brands are now becoming more popular than big brands .
We're going through a horrendous cost of living crisis in the UK. Our family weekly shop has jumped from around £80 to over £100. Prices are ridiculous now.
Ye things are tougher in uk now. However compared to America uk prices are still cheeper. TH-camr Evan Edinger did a video on food prices in USA vs uk and near at the end of 2023 did a follow up & still prices in USA are more expensive than uk overall when you take the whole shop into account (rather than individual items).
@@EmilyCheethamTrue, but that video also showed the % change of the shop, which was much higher in the UK. So if you already struggling, a 10-15% increase will feel like it affects you alot more then a couple percent would.
Things have got considerable better over the last couple of months in the U.K. our big monthly shop went from around £90 to around £160 at the night and is back down to about £120 now.
As a Brit living in the USA who travels backwards and forwards between the countries, this comes as little surprise to me. The biggest surprise was the bananas in USA. Wish we could get them as cheap in Nevada as Texas!! The quality of products in the UK is much higher (especially butter and bread) and that is without going into the health issues (pesticides, chemicals, etc). Eating at home or at restaurants in the UK is both a more pleasant and a tastier experience as well as much cheaper. So looking forward to my next visit to the UK in the Spring. Most of this, of course, is down to government regulation of food production. The price of American ‘freedom’(that’s another joke) is higher prices and lower quality.
Just a note the flat bottomed boats in Cambridge are punts. We just take the towns, villages, castles and churches as being there. Just back from Penrith and realised there were 3 castles plus pillars, monument within 10 miles radius.
I live in Cheshire, England we have a lot of cattle farms. It’s an every day sight to drive past fields and see cows grazing on pasture fields. In the fields around the town I live. They’re bred for both milk and beef.
Fluoride is added to water in the UK, but whether it is or not depends on local authorities, and from what I read, in England that amounts to about 10% of them. It's worth noting that it is *naturally occurring in water,* and is generally only added where the natural mineral content falls below a certain level (1mg per L). It is certainly added to toothpaste.
The UK has a long history of sheep farming, so lamb has always been popular here. In fact a traditional Easter dinner is usually a leg of lamb, and some mint sauce to go with it
Hi guys! Out of season, a lot of our 'salad' vegetables, etc. come from Spain, The Netherlands or farther afield - but a lot of the veg (carrots, potatoes, etc.) will be British-grown, so a lot cheaper! When in season, British-grown items will be cheaper! Almost all of our milk is 'homogenised', apart from Jersey milk which has the rich cream on top! Having said that, I tend to shop around, and get a lot of the essentials (milk, eggs, etc.) from Aldi/Lidl as they are generally cheaper than Tesco.
Toothpaste does contain flouride in the UK and flouride is added to water supplies if the natural content is below 1.5mg per litre, We can also get flouride from our favourite tipple because a cup of tea can contain around 2mg
According to the Scottish Water website, no public drinking water supply is currently fluoridated in Scotland. The initiative for fluoridation of any water supply lies with local NHS health boards. They have to undertake a full public consultation exercise before applying to Scottish Water to add fluoride to the water supply. The onus is on the NHS health boards to demonstrate that a significant majority are in favour of the proposal. In addition, there are significant practical and logistical issues which would need to be considered carefully by all parties involved,
Yeah we do have similar issues with honey in the uk. A lot of it is imported and been found to be mixed with things like sugar syrup. For the salmon I believe most of ours is from sustainable farming, usually from Scotland or Norway, but it will say somewhere on the packaging whether it is farmed or wild
fluoride is added in tap water in uk, except for wales where its not allowed (atleast to an extremely low 00.01%) most of the toothpaste contains fluoride in uk but you can buy it without, like charcoal toothpaste or sodium bicarbonate ones.
Bought yesterday in Tesco’s a 600 g bag of clementines easy peelers for £1. Their own brand butter was £1.69 yesterday. Our milk tends to be pasteurised, it is rare to see most brands raw. That is not to say they don’t provide it, it is usually kept on the shelves above the more common pasteurised type of milk. Popular at the moment is filtered milk which makes for a very creamy taste. Our colour coding system tends to be red for minimal, green for 1/2 fat and blue full fat. The container is transparent so the handle also has milk in. Costs fluctuate dependent on what time of the year they are and where they are coming from. The major shops in the UK tend to be Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrison’s, Asda, Waitrose Marks & Spencer‘s et cetera. The cheaper lines tend to come from Aldi or Neto. I don’t think this price comparison is as accurate as it could be. Especially if the person you are comparing to on your video is doing their shopping nearer Christmas time when prices escalate because of demand. By the way, if you buy a green pepper just leave it in the window and it will soon turn yellow and orange then red on its own. It only needs sunlight to create the various ranges of colour. So if your green peppers are cheaper, buy them and stick them in the window! 😊😊😊
Peppers don't magically just change colour in the window. 😂😂😂 They're different kinds of peppers, some might not be fully ripe, but they're not going to magically change variety sitting in a window. That's the dumbest fucking thing I've heard in a long time.
@@thrgost Different coloured peppers are not different varieties, just picked at different stages of ripening. I suggest you check your facts before you insult someone else.
So with Tesco there are two prices. Its cheaper if you have a loyalty card and a bit more expensive if you haven't got one. This is a permanent feature with Tesco ( we do these loyalty cards in quite a few other stores also)
It's important to know that some produce is season sensitive, which means that buying out of season is often more expensive because its imported. We do grow a lot of our own fruit and vegetables which, when in season, are plentiful, therefore making them cheaper. Tomatoes, strawberries, celery, cucumbers etc.
You've never had Roast Lamb....Oh dear, you really are missing out. Slow Roasted Lamb (Leg or Shoulder) is an ideal Sunday Lunch, served with Mint Sauce (Lamb & Mint go together so well). We're actually having Roast Lamb for lunch today. With Mint Sauce, Yorkshire Puddings, Roast Potatoes, Cauliflower Cheese, Brussels Sprouts, and a Red Wine Gravy.
Leg is better cooked so it's still pink. Our local farm shop does lovely lamb and leave the fillet on. I sometimes buy the shoulder and take the fillet off, then I slow roast the shoulder so it can pull apart. I then quick cook the fillet leaving it pink so you get lamb cooked two ways.
red wine gravy? please can i have the recipe. cauliflower cheese though, I dunno.lamb is fatty and cheese with it might send the bloodclot ...sorry just had a stroke.
We have a lot of lamb in the UK partly because in the past, the wool was really important for the textile industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries. I live on the edge of the Cotswolds in the south of England, and the last cloth mill closed only about 30 years ago. By then, though, the wool was mostly imported from Australia as breeds which do well in the UK are better for meat than for wool. The other reason is that a lot of our land is unsuitable for crops or for cattle and as a small densely populated island, we have to make the most of what we have. Sheep do well on marginal land, so we have lots. Lamb is my favourite meat.
I would add that Harris Tweed (primarily woven in Lewis and which has the recognised Orb trademark) made from Scottish wools is an ongoing industry based on the islands although other tweeds have been added in the past 20 years. Also, Lewis lamb is spectacular in taste. They are basically free-range animals due to the type of husbandry applied in the islands. A diet of heather on the moors combined with hay from the crofts. It's taste is unique and differs from mainland scottish lamb and mutton. I know because I was born and raised there and had our own croft. I do remember NZ lamb flooding the country in the time period prior to the UK joining the EC (as it was known then). That import trade ended after EC membership.
Lol you're wrong there, 25% of UK land area is used as cropped land already, and we produce 60% of our domestic food consumption, the rest is used as livestock areas but we are among the most fertile countries on earth, for our soil.
The salmon are generally farmed in giant nets in scotland so they get all the fresh sea water and can swin free and all our meats are not battery farmed and the chickens are not injected with chemicals thats why we dont inport meats from the US and the sale prices are on all the time if you sign up to the Tesco club card it give you points and that give cash coupons
As food is zero rated for VAT, most prices would be unchanged if we followed the US practice of not including sales tax on the advertised prices. I think only the toothpaste and toothbrush in this video actually attract VAT. I don't know if sales tax is charged on food in the US (or rather by the individual states as sales tax is not federally levied) or whether the original content creator took this into account.
We had friends visit from North Carolina to travel around Northern Ireland for a week and when they walked around Asda they were blown away by the price difference. And it's only gotten worse over the past year for them..
I don't buy in Tesco. Not happy with the price or quality but mozzarella cheese can be as little as 50p and you can buy a loaf of bread for as little as 47p. Our milk is generally homogenised
Lamb is quite common in Britain as a lot of Britain's grazing land isn't suitable for cattle, so sheep are very popular, and you will see some pretty large flocks in the Welsh and Scottish hills, and in quite a few areas in England too.
9:16 when she says sale, she isn't correct. It's clubcard price. It's a loyalty card that you just sign up for, free of charge and scan it at the till to get reduced prices on a lot of items in the shop which tend to always be the same products too mostly. You also gain 1 point per pound you spend and can turn the points into vouchers to use to pay towards your total.
one thing about the milk is that a high percentage of dairy cows in the UK are predominantly grass fed, with grains only used to supplement their diet. whereas in the USA grass fed cattle is a rarity.
I live in Norfolk, England and we're very rural, there is a farm nearby thay sells trays of free range eggs 24 to a tray but they also sell trays of double yolkers and yes every egg has 2 yolks. Cant beat that for a fry up or bacon/egg baps.
Can second this, Norfolk is very rural and there are a lot of farms you can directly buy produce from. There are also some shops around that tie in with local farmers, so sometimes you can even find them in local shops ands stores.
Slow-cooked lamb is absolutely delicious. We regularly put a leg of lamb in our slow cooker for 7 hours and have it with roast veg and potatoes etc. And mint sauce of course.
That’s what I did for Christmas lunch. I had about 15 coming so I did two legs in the slow cooker the day before- one was traditional the other was a curry. Delicious !
It says this on the salmon packaging: Farmed in waters off the coast of Norway or Scotland. Responsibly sourcing our seafood is important to us which is why Tesco fish experts work with responsibly managed farms and fisheries to continually improve their high standards of quality, welfare and sustainability.
Several supermarkets have an instore bakery . They can get products in either partly baked or unbaked and then finish them in the ovens. Some things are frozen and thawed out first before preparing for serving, by adding cream/jam etc
The other thing to mention is that at UK supermarkets we normally have a butchers, fishmonger, fresh bakery and deli counter (which contains the cheeses) at the back of most stores as well as your usual product aisles. So you can get even nicer quality produce if you wish.
Not in our supermarkets in my town . We have a large Tesco extra supermarket. No butcher, bakery (separate nice bread area ) fishmongers or deli . We did have them but no longer.
Do you still have those departments in your Supermarkets? We don't in my area. Busy suburban area but all our big mega store versions of Tesco, Sainsburys, Waitrose and Asda have all closed their counters now. I thought that was across the board in uk but obviously not if you still have them. Lucky you!
Sushi takeaway has recently replaced the massive deli counter in my local big tescos. What your saying is a thing morrisons tried to make their unique selling point a little while back (Market street which i dont think has been/is/was super super successful) but the trend has certainly been away from the separate areas your talking about.
Supermarkets or grocery shops pricing varies a heck of a lot in the UK. If, like me, you get certain items at one outlet and other items at other shops you can *usually* save a few pennies per shop. I tend to use three different places and more often than not stick to them. I do save money but not every month sadly.
No! …for the fruit produce she’s only looking at the Tesco Finest range! Also on the same shelf we sells packs of just green, red or black grapes without being mixed…. And we sell eggs in packs of 12 as well as 6. 😝
Another underrated perk of UK groceries is every major supermarket offers home delivery. Just book a 1hr time slot for next day and pay somewhere around £3 - £7 for delivery.
Here in the UK food ingredients must be as advertised in the label so the honey will be 100% Also any free range eggs have a stamp on to guarantee free range. Also this is the same for organic foods. All our foods have to display the sugars, fats etc on the cover!
actually most supermarket honey's in the UK are honey flavoured syrups, only way to increase your chances of buying real honey is if it specifies it is from bees of a single country as apposed to something like 'a blend of EU honeys'
'Free range' means a chicken must be housed in a defined space. This space means it should be with no more than 13 birds per square metre. It must have access to outside area for at least part of the day. But there are no fixed rules about what this period of time has to be. People need to stop trusting government 'labels', it nothing to do with animal welfare, its only a way to charge you more and therefore farmers will be less reliant on government subsidies
Clubcard prices are not a sale, the clubcard price is the normal competitive price, they have an inflated price if you don't have their store card. A lot of our stores are running this dual pricing model to get your information.
Hi Steve & Lyndsey, my dad's a beekeeper here in the UK and he's looked into supermarket honey, the runny honey isn't honey it's usually mostly corn syrup and has other additives in it to stop it going solid. All honey will be filtered to some degree because you don't want to find bits of bee etc in your honey. Proper runny honey will have been heated to a certain temperature otherwise it would be solid or my dad also sells soft set which is the consistency of cream so more for spreading. He sells his honey in local independent stores and from home to local villagers. The strawberries the lady in the video bought were probably out of season so would have been imported, proper british strawberries are delicious also our raspberries. Quite a bit of our food is imported. We also have farm shops here but supermarkets are more convenient, we also have fresh food markets where you can buy fresh veg etc, usually better quality and a lot less packaging. The salmon was probably farmed usually in Scotland, there have been investigations into the farmed salmon in recent years and I think the RSPCA are overseaing the welfare now.
Lamb is versatile and unbelievably delicious! You have to try it when you get over here! I don't know where other commenters shop but yes, we do have sale prices, price drop and price matching (where the price is dropped to match other big supermarkets' prices) here in the UK! (NOT just loyalty card schemes)
I think the majority of comments have been to explain that the 'Clubcard' discounted prices noted in the video aren't, strictly speaking, 'sale' prices (as they are not available to all shoppers) but instead preferential prices for holders of the (free) loyalty cards. There are, of course, also items run on promotions of various sorts--straightforward markdowns, bulk pricing (Buy One Get One Free or 'BOGOF') and combination offers ('Meal Deals'). Not a big fan of lamb myself as I find it rather too greasy for my tastes--others may disagree!
@@MrPaulMorris I've noticed the few "lamb haters" I have met have always explained they first tried it when it was cold. It is extremely fatty and when cold does not taste good. Not as bad as eating raw lard or dripping, but up there. When it is nice and hot it is divine.
@@Drew-Dastardly Roast lamb and lambs chops were staple parts of the dinner rotation at home when I was growing up and my mother was always a stickler for food being hot but lamb was never my favourite. I did, however, always like mint sauce--made freshly every time by my father from mint grown in the garden, the only culinary contribution he made other than mixing the Colman's mustard powder with water! I much prefer pork, both for taste and texture, rating it even above beef.
Bonne Maman jam, when I was a kid (about 25 years ago) used to be sold exclusively in France.. and we'd stock up a tonne of it when doing day trips to Calais, France on the booze cruise
They used to - but then we left the European Union ... anything goes now While travelling to Scotland a couple of weeks ago, I stopped at a KFC ... I've done it many times for years .. But this time, I could tell it wasn't chicken I was eating - it was another animal done in batter and spices (and they were stingy on the spices this time, I noticed - which is how I could tell something was wrong)
@@jazzx251 that sounds horrible. I've only experienced dodgy diet Pepsi that was inported from outside the EU and had Arabic writing on the ingredients
Our British lamb, is brought up on very green pastures, so it's quite abundant. Near the early spring, March April spring lamb is out, which is quite expensive, but tends to be some of the best in the world!
Some of the items like the easy peeler satsumas were from Tesco's finest range eg their premium range, you can get them for less from their normal range. Also things like strawberries vary in price depending on season, if this was in winter they would be more, lot cheaper in summer
Strawberries ate much cheaper in the UK in the summer and much nicer. British strawberries from April to July August at a push. But outside these times we have to import more expensive versions. Lots of people choose to only eat Strawberries in season, like Pumpkins etc.... better to eat them local. Strawberries are less than half the price of the ones in this video in the summer. Grapes are also seasonally priced due to either importing from Europe or further away. Great video though guys. You need to come to the UK and try all of the British and European Cheeses. The list of available cheeses is huge.
I was shocked to see lamb is hard to find in the US. Its a very fatty and now very expensive meat over here, but it is really delicious, a much different taste to beef or pork.
As a kid my mam used to do a lamb roast dinner for us every sunday. It was cheap new zealand lamb then the EU interfered n we had to stop getting it n the price rose rapidly !!! To this day a leg if lamb is a luxury compared to even the best cut of steak !!!
There is a bee keeper who is a regular in our pub. He sells pure raw honey in 500g jars for £2 and a larger jar for £5. Absolutely NO additives. We also sell it in the pub for him.
also cost of living is higher by around 12% at the moment and i remember a time when milk in uk or 98p for 2 pints. i still go local farm for eggs and pay £2.50 for a tray of 30
Hi guys, there is a video from a young woman in London shopping at Aldi, it’s a good comparison for you as you have Aldi in the US. It depends where you shop in the uk. We have ours delivered weekly from the the grocery store, it’s convenient for us.we use Ocado, as they sell marks and Spencer’s food, which we like. We have noticed such a rise on our weekly bills.
I've seen it (assuming it's the same one) and because it's a metro style aldi and London I don't think it's representative of just how cheap Aldi and LIDL are elsewherr.
30:22 I live in a hard water area (UK). Not sure exactly what is in there, but apparently the minerals calcium and magnesium are commonly found in it. It's safe to drink, I tend to joke when drinking tap water that it's limescale flavoured.
The majority of UK foods do not have any VAT on them. Food items defined as 'Luxuries' are the only ones with VAT in the UK. In some US states, you have to pay a State and/or Country tax on top of the price seen for some/all foods, so there is an added cost after the price tag, in some places.
@gordonmahamat7687 Actually, I am disabled and have conditions like Autism, anxiety, Severe Depression and Diabetes and am seen as in need of support, have carers, and am seen as not capable for work. So no, I can't get a job that 'pays more'. Thank you.
As a Brit living in the US a long time now I so miss shopping for food back home. Overall the quality is far superior in UK but quantity is larger in US. As for bread most bread in the US is horrible and never fresh but 3 x the price and after 20 years here I still miss it so much. They make the bread in the supermarkets in the UK so you can smell it in the store which goes straight to shelves still hot. I used to nibble on it before the check out and it's just no contest to compare and much cheaper. Don't get me wrong there is good food in the US but you really pay to eat well here and way too many chemicals because US regulations are less strict. Liked this video a lot.
Thanks so much for watching and reacting to my video! You are right... I spend summers in England and winter in Texas. I grew up in Illinois... so I know what your Indiana winters are like ;-) Now I get pretty good weather year round, which is a blessing! The biggest comment I got on this video was about taxes... British people often don't realise that Americans don't pay sales tax on groceries in most states, including Texas! The other big comment I got was about people disagreeing with me showing the "non-promoted" prices. That's because I wanted to do an equivalent comparison. Both Kroger and Tesco have a "high/low" strategy where their everyday prices are high but the price when you use their membership card is low. But those card prices aren't active every week at the same price... so that's why I chose to compare non-promoted prices.
Yeah, based off the comments I'm seeing so far, those are definitely good things to point out! Love your channel and it's really cool to get to see a perspective from someone who lives both places equally. :)
@@reactingtomyroots thanks so much!
Hi.
I would agree, except that the lower 'clubcard' and equivalent prices are our normal prices and they basically made up those higher prices following the lockdowns to increase profits. Tesco and the others don't take away those 'Clubcard' prices because they would lose to many customers and have loads of complaints. The only 'special' prices in Tesco are when they match the cheaper Aldi prices and those do get moved to products as Aldi change theirs. Even though Lidl is generally just as cheap as Aldi in the UK.
I'm so glad they reacted to you because you are so right. Hugs 🤗
Remember that VAT is already included in the UK prices, so it will be even cheaper again once you add tax to the US prices.
You don't pay VAT on unprocessed food.
Luxury food has VAT added on
@@trevorbromidge2076 makes no difference, the price you see in the UK is the price you pay. So all those products are even cheaper than she is saying in the video.
@@IIChristisKingII I agree, but do the Americans pay tax on the final trolley load or are some foods tax free?
@@lindakirk698 define luxury!!
What she calls 'sale' prices are actually 'loyalty card' prices. We pick out 'loyalty' prices whenever we can. She also picked out Tesco 'finest' which is the fancier version of the regular store brand.
Just to add the loyalty cards for any store are free, these are not sale prices
Here in Cyprus pure honey(not mixed)one klo ia about 10Euros feeerange eggs are 3Euros predozen
I am lucky becouse my nextdoor nabour gives me eggs chattergel cheese 13Euto per klo
@@xarisstylianouthat's some expensive cheese wow 😯
That's expensive? @@madyottoyotto3055 That's dirt-cheap. Try some Ossau-Irraty @ 35 euro per kilo. Even Tesco Mature Cheddar is 20 euro per kilo.
The tomatoes we buy are usually in season in the summer months and are therefore UK grown as well as from the Netherlands, but out of season are more likely to come from places like Morocco.
15:45 It is unusual to see eggs in UK supermarkets that aren't free range. Following big public protests about caged chickens. The public here seem more interested in the welfare of the animals we eat. Than a lot of people in the USA.
Definitely!!
Sorry to burst your bubble, but whilst caged hens are banned across Europe (incl. the UK), the regulations are loose and Barn Eggs are the equivalent of the 'No Cage Eggs' in the US, as was mentioned here. For 'Free Range' a small area outside of a 'Barn' can allowed for the chicken to 'roam', though a small door in the side of a building, whether they do or not is a moot point.
Only 'Organic Free Range' can be assumed to be from a hen with a large space outside to 'free range' as we expect it to be.
Last year (and probably this) all hens had to be brought inside due to a risk they may be contanimated by wild birds carrying Bird Flu so we haveto take that into account, probably not a US problem as most wild birds don't cross the Atlanic or Pacific oceans.
Caged, Barn, Free Range, Organic Free Range, Pasture Fed: marketing guys are assholes.
Pretty sure farm foods eggs are caged hens, used to buy them and they were tiny! Remember reading on the packet. Edit just looked it up and they are caged hens
@@definitelynotatroll246 I have never heard of Farm Foods before. Had to look them up. They haven't any shops near where I live.
They have agreed to fall into line with the other supermarkets. Will stop selling eggs from caged hens by 2025.
@@grahamsmith9541 interesting I thought farm foods were nation wide. It’s kinda like another Iceland just mainly budget foods
Our food laws in the UK are pretty strict, so generally what you see on the label is what you get, thank goodness 😊
Lindsey mentioned honey, which the US allows to contain so many pieces of bees or other products which have a maximum quantity of rodent faeces etc.
@TheGarryq ugh! How can that happen? I must remember to never buy American food, let alone eat it! Thanks for the warning ⚠️ 🙂
@@sueguyan8101 Cheaper Supermarket honey in Britain is usually a blend of EU honey. There are a lot of British local honeys freely available.
@@sueguyan8101 Also be warned about GMO's = Genetically Modified Organisms, invented in a petri dish in a lab and NOT natural. The main side effect as far as i know is ADHD/Hyperactivity, problems concentrating etc affecting kids but can also affect adults. I visited a friend in the US a while back and all FIVE of her kids were medicated for ADHD. The 1st thing they grabbed in the morning was a Twinkie ughhh!!!! Here in the UK Twinkies, well ALL Hostess cakes etc Reeces and Hershey products {{ actually, basically all American foods sold here }} have a WARNING on the boxes/wrappers that they can cause ADHD, Poor or Lack of Concentration, Hyperactivity etc. However, the FDA and companies like Hostess do not permit WARNINGS on the boxes/wrappers in the US. It's very scary btw..... While in the US I saw a guy in the garage 1 morning grab 4 Twinkie bars and say, "That should help me make it through the morning" 😵😵 So, the adults know the effect of what they eat, yet still allow their kids to eat it ughhh!!!! I found that shocking. Then the poor kids end up on some heavy duty meds, which have serious side effects. I took photos of the warnings and showed them to friends in the US, they were shocked that this was hidden from them. I thought i was letting my sons eat healthier foods by getting them cereals, HUGE mistake. When we got back home i researched and found that is where a lot of the GMOs get into foodstuffs, is via grains 😡. I have asked big companies like Kelloggs and Nestle about their use of GMO crops. I either got no reply or a response you would need a team of lawyers to unravel 🙈........ HEADS UP on the Honey, don't go spending huge sums on Manuka because experts have proven that LOCAL honey is just as good when it comes to it's health benefits. Mainly due to it not needing transported thousands of miles, losing it's potency. As you will know, it's also a fraction of the price of Manuka.
@@christiner302 I remember watching a programme on TV about the health benefits of honey. The experts on it said not to waste money on expensive Manuka honey as local honey was just as beneficial as Manuka for a fraction of the price.
As an Irish person who lived in the US for a period of time i was shocked at how expensive food was but mainly the quality difference was most notable.. i couldn't believe that the milk basically never goes off where as in Ireland it would be past best after only a few days and same with bread.. the amount of preservatives put in US food is scary
What I found was the homogeneised milk went rotten, not off when timed out. We went to a farm to get our milk fresh .
UK here, I agree, the crap that's allowed in US food is quite shocking, also I always thought/assumed US groceries were cheaper than our prices, etc. When I visited over there, it always seemed so odd not to have tax included within each retail price. It was always added on, afterwards at the checkout, when totalling your purchases? Bad additives & other substances/chemicals are allowed in their food that are banned in Europe & other countries, which is pretty shocking?
These days in the UK, the success of Lidl and Aldi have forced other supermarkets to ‘match’ prices on popular vegetables, like carrots.
@@ritamarshall2644maybe a little more than just the price of carrots tbf😅 I mean seeing 12 large carrots cost all of 50p there wasn’t much to work wit lol
@@ritamarshall2644 An old friend in his eighties who had a lifetime as a fruit and vegetables wholesaler told me that at Christmas, Tesco were selling sprouts at a loss of around 50p a bag. He knew the source and the pricing.
One thing you should know about the beef,you legally can't sell American beef in the UK because it contains growth hormones and other medicines, plus you will also find all the food in the UK will have a lot less preservatives.
Which makes British beef far less tasty. American beef is way better by far.
@@Coolcartingnot what I heard. I heard that all that hormones etc make the beef less tasty, but I hevent been to compare so I don’t know just what I’ve been told
@@CoolcartingAmerican beef is dreadful, as is all their meat/poultry.
Artificial tasting rubbish.
@@kevinstewart1805you're correct. It really is flavourless.
@@kevinstewart1805 I lived in Florida for 25 years. Trust me.
In the UK the price you see at the shelf is the price you pay at the checkout, there is no tax to add on.
Because English can't add. They spend too much time in the dole queue and Wetherspoons.
don't forget to tip at your local Tesco before you leave
@SmearCampaignUK Horse? You mean tall cow. Don't go blaming Tesco for their French meat wholesalers fraudulently labelling their produce.
@SmearCampaignUK Honestly I really didn't care if my food goes moo or neigh, since horse meat is edible and there are no laws against it in the UK. The issue was not that horse meat was used, the real scandal was that Tesco was claiming horse meat to be beef and calling it a "beef lasagne" and not "lasagne", mostly because horse meat is less fatty than beef and thus circumvent certain UK laws restricting the fat content in ready meal products.
Shopped several times in the U.S, and taxes was added after the fact. Europe and the tax baked in. This woman is a dumbass.
Eggs are kept in the refrigerator in the US because of the different way they are treated in the EU/UK. About a couple of decades ago there were Salmonella outbreaks caused by eggs in the EU and US because of hygienic conditions in which the chickens were raised. In the US it was thought that the Salmonella contamination was caused by contamination of food by the outside of the shells, so the eggs were washed in chlorinated water. However it was later found in the EU that the Salmonella actually got into the egg, so the inside of the egg was contaminated as well. In the US the way of dealing with this was to keep the eggs refrigerated to reduce the multiplication rate of salmonella in the eggs, while in the EU it was dealt with by increasing hygiene in the farm and testing regularly for the presence of Salmonella. To allow hygiene testing, eggs i the UK/EU are required not to be chlorine washed so they can be tested at the farm. This is why UK/EU eggs can be kept for a long time without refrigeration.
Apparently chlorinating food doesn't remove salmonella. The salmonella curls up out of sight and will be reactivated when prepared for cooking/eating. This particularly applies to raw chicken.
Either way we put it in the fridge anyways 😂
@@Drzealos
In Europe eggs are kept unrefrigerated in stores and typically at home. That is the difference.
In the UK baby chicks are vaccinated against salmonella , not sure about the EU though. Look for the Lion mark if you're pregnant and want to eat eggs.
@@nurtureyourchild
I think it is the same with the EU. These rules came out while UK was in EU.
'Clubcard price' is not a sale price, it's a 'loyalty price.' To qualify for the lower price you need to have a Tesco clubcard! This, however, is free to apply for and also earns you 'points' on every shop which can be converted into money off vouchers for future shops. I save mine to spend on my christmas shop which means I can indulge in lots of extras for christmas and usually still spend less than a regular shop.
It is a sale price if you have a club price as it’s not that the discounted price is permanent . It changes about every 3 weeks.
Anyone can get a clubcard. It has nothing to do with loyalty.
And targets you based on the data they harvest from it! 😢
I'm a checkout operator in Tesco. Last xmas I had a customer who was buying GBP90 of Alcohol he didn't have a club card so we "borrowed" the card of following customer which knocked GBP30 off his bill, which he was very happy about and the owner of the club card accrued an extra 60 points everyone's a winner@@AzuraeLyonheart
It's intended to promote loyalty (although there is nothing to stop you joining a similar scheme for other supermarkets) @@Coolcarting
You have to remember that Britain is a small island and our climate is not conducive to growing a lot of fruit like oranges and bananas. So the produce in the first part of the video is very popular and is also imported from overseas and therefore the prices are a lot higher than prices in the USA. Some vegetables are also imported but others are home grown so these are priced accordingly.
Though, getting them from Spain, is actually less distance than New York to Texas
@@pesmerga182 Bananas are imported from South America, so they definitely have a longer way to the UK.
Chatsworth House in Derbyshire. Most bananas in the UK are Cavendish bananas originally developed there. Interesting fact!
New York to Texas is still domestic, so no import costs
As happened last year, importing fruit and veg from Southern Europe and Africa may become a thing of the past with Global Warming. We may end up looking like the Netherlands, acres and acres of glasshouses. As for crops that like frost such as Brassicas, forget it, Sprouts and Swede will never taste the same.
British and Irish milk is so good - remember that the majority of our cows are grass fed and grazed apart from winter. That's the norm rather than being some speciality plus point
I only use Jersey milk, straight from the cow, buy it from a local famer @ £1 per 2 litres
@@georgebarnes8163
You are so lucky, you can tell the high quality milk, a day in the fridge and you have that lovely cream in the neck of the bottle.
@@pauldurkee4764 I would not go back to shop milk again, I use the Jersey milk for cheese and butter, saves me a small fortune over the year with the added bonus in the fun making the cheese and butter. I am very lucky to have a few farm shops around me that sell top quality produce for peanut prices.
@@pauldurkee4764 Tesco also do a premier Jersey Milk, it is in a traditional Bottle shape and it's absolutely delicious, more expensive of course but well worth it.
@@stephensmith4480
I think they do their own brand, but also stock Graham's Channel Islands milk.
The advantage of Lamb is sheep will graze perfectly happily on quite steep rocky hills so you can farm lamb on land you couldn't use for any other agriculture, you tend to graze them on the hills in summer then take them down to the farms lower altitude fields over winter. They also reach maturity in less than 12 months vs around 18 months for beef.
I've recently shopped in both the US & UK, and grocery prices in the UK are easily 30% cheaper overall. In addition, quite a lot of US foods tend to be full of all sorts of crappy chemicals. 🙁
Bidenomics
@@mdcclxxviepluribusunum1066Bullshit. That ratio has been the same since before Obama. After COVID, prices are up 25% around the world.
Almost all foods.
To be fair, we are told that Americans earn at least 30% more than Brits so that may account for it.
@@mdcclxxviepluribusunum1066 Biden has brought inflation down in the US better than most other developed countries, so THAT is Bidenomics. We have all had inflation so please do not say that is Biden's fault. Covid hangover.
My cousin recently returned to England from a decade of living in the states.
Whilst we are moaning at how expensive everything is in our supermarkets, he keeps going on about how cheap everything is 😂
According to him, everything in the states is about twice to two and a half times more expensive than in England for an Average weekly shop.
That's Cornwall England to Florida US, prices.
Just to add, the quality is vastly superior in England too, according to him.
When my cousin from Michigan visits us in NE Scotland she's out for real fish and chips also she says our mince is vastly better!
I think what is missing from this is US wages. Outside of the service sector US salaries are significantly higher than UK salaries.
@archwombat9250 Exactly what comes to my mind when I see these types of videos. I'm a software engineer, so get a decent salary by British standards, but whenever I see the potential salary in America for a comparable role, I have a small heart attack 😂
@@Draiscor yup. I’m an Architect and my mate also an Architect recently moved to Atlanta with his American wife. His salary puts my (also decent) salary to shame. But his cost of living swallows up most of that increase.
@@archwombat9250 All of that extra wage goes on paying for exhobinant Healthcare insurance, that Brits have already paid for in taxes. So when comparing the two, you must look at all factors, not just how much is paid.
All UK eggs have A red Lion Passant printed on them, with a use by date, a farming method code,(ie: organic to barn) and a farm ID, so the egg can be traced back to the actual place of beginnings.
Don't forget we don't wash our eggs. As that removes the protective layer from the shell. So american eggs would be illegal to sell over here.
Eggs and salmonella
The British Lion mark on eggs means that they have been laid by hens vaccinated against salmonella and they have been produced to the highest standards of food safety. Find out more about the story of the British Lion scheme.
@@THJahar Aren't UK laying hens vaccinated against salmonella, making washing un-neccesary?
@@dougbrowning82
All of the eggs in the UK with the lion mark come from hens that are vaccinated against salmonella and flocks of hens are routinely tested.This has drastically reduced instances of this infection to very low levels.
In the US the FDA states that there are around 142,000 reported instances of salmonella per year.
Because eggs in the UK are not cleaned to protect the membrane this has driven higher hygiene & welfare standards to naturally produce a clean egg.
In the US, chemical detergents and sanitizers are used which removes the dirt as well as the membrane. The downsides are that the cleaning water must be changed before it loses efficacy and when the refrigerated eggs are transported home they can get wet through condensation which may lead to bacterial growth. There is also a practice in 10% of production that coats the eggs with protective mineral oil, although it is in decline due to cost.
The US producers state that inoculation against salmonella for laying hens would add 14 cents per egg to costs.
Either process achieves a similar result.
I personally prefer the UK/EU method as it avoids chemicals and results in better treatment of the hens. Common practice is when cracking raw eggs always wash your hands even though the eggs are usually very clean. Then again I would do the same in the US due to the chance of moisture allowing bacterial growth.
@@dougbrowning82 Yes the chickens are vaccinated as chicks but we also keep a check on the production facilities. As a person who was a cleaner in a chicken factory I know the standard of hygiene is high. I worked on the Truss Line which is where the prepared whole chicken is then "Tidied up" (the legs banded together and the wings tucked beneath the body so that they fit onto the food tray and are wrapped) which I had to wash and dry the dual stainless steel work counters ( total length 120 feet)and the central conveyor belt (total length135 feet) that ran down the length of the work area three times a day in a normal shift (usually when the girls were on break 15,30 and 10) The lab tech would take swab samples of the cleaned area on a regular basic which was then checked in the in house laboratory. This factory (1 of 7 owned by our boss) processed 110,000 chickens a day and it did not smell nor was any part dirty as even the exterior area was regularly swept by a road sweeper style machine. Great Job, smashing work mates (22 gals and 2 other blokes on my line) and a wonderful boss who came to the factory floor every day to check everything was ok. 5 years which were some of best in my working life. sorry for the length but only way I could explain.😃😃🧡
I’m a US expat who’s been living in the UK for nearly 18 years. The thing to also bear in mind is that on average, US salaries are roughly double what you’d earn for the equivalent job in the UK but we do have a “free” national healthcare system that is very good so there’s that to consider as well. We also mostly have employment contracts for full-time workers and better employment protections. We have a better appreciation for work-life balance in the UK because it actually leads to higher productivity and lower sick leave. I don’t think that I could ever move back to the US after experiencing living abroad.
Interesting, it's true though half of what you said we do take for granted in the UK, without ever working anywhere else we have nothing to compare it too. The NHS has been a life saver for me, its true wages are low compared to other countries but my lad has been a type 1 diabetic since 5 years old and insulin/needles/dexcom is astronomical in price all paid for by the NHS, so definitely don't complain about being on lower wages
Private health insurance is way better.
@@Brandon_letsgouk NHS system is expensive via national insurance and is terrible. USA pay less for insurance and get a much better speed of service and the highest quality in the world
@@Brandon_letsgo no, it’s not! I lived the majority of my life in a private run health care system and the only winners are insurance companies and their shareholders! If you think that because you have private health insurance in the UK then you are comparing apples and oranges. The only reason why private insurance is very cheap here is because everyone has free access to NHS. Privatisation will lead to massive increases in costs while not solving waiting times. We are seeing NHS doctors who run side businesses that would come to a grinding halt if the service was privatised.
@@timothyshanks6799uhh...tou really think that? I've had American healthcare, it was... Shit, and expencive, and people with no medical knowledge tried to block my treatments when doctors requested it. I have a friend who is now disabled because an insurance company refused for years to allow her treatment that multipul doctors said was necessary, now its untreatable. The doctors I had frankly weren't good, a couple were nice but the rest had given up by the looks of it and genuinely didn't care about people anymore, it was the most depressing third world piece of shit I've seen
I laughed when you said you think they grow a lot of lamb in the UK. I live in Wales, there are three times as many sheep as there are people.
Same in the north of Scotland
Most of Northern England too. The Pennines and North Yorkshire are sheep central@@pamelaadam9207
Yes, sheep thrive on marshland too soft for cattle and rugged hilly terrain with little pasture as they will graze on bushes too.
@@pamelaadam9207 And the North of England, in fact, any where it is hilly and craggy and gnarly
It's the nicest of the meats but I personally can't eat much of it, mind you in a kebab I can finish the lot but as with beef and pig different parts of the animal taste different to other parts.
Due to the strict labelling laws in the UK around food, Tesco would not be able to say it was honey if it was mixed with other things. It would probably have to say ‘honey style syrup’ or ‘honey flavoured syrup’.
indeed, but there are a whole load of shenanigans going on worldwide with honey, to the point where it is getting almost impossible for even scientists to determine if what they are looking at is honey or a fake!
If you're talking items like Greek Yoghurt vs "Greek Style Yoghurt", then yes but honey isn't the best example.
Adulterated in many cases.
A study found 90% of the honey in uk was supposedly fake, but I might be wrong. Good video though!😊
You're putting too much trust into these retailers. Tesco isn't collecting the honey themselves, their suppliers could being doing anything. The vast majority of honey in the UK has been found to be fake
@peonyblossominmay you can taste and feel the difference in real honey, also if you put real honey in the fridge it will become yellowish white, if it has syrup or any other thing it will not ...
I don't know which study this is the results from m ...
But what I know is, if a super market (grocery store) says that what your buying is real honey 100% and is not the consequences are so heavy and so bad for your business that no one will risk it to earn a little more money
It's not that it can't happen bad not a lot will risk geting caught. .....
Real honey a jar 1L or 1kgr flower honey (that blonde) will be 15/25€ and wild honey (much darker colour) will be 20/30€
That's how you know it's real
Farmermarket is even more expensive than that
But last for a long time (even if you use it every day) aslo you can't rat as much bcs is heavy
One last thing (I don't know if is a choice in the U.S.A ) in the ingredients list here it will say only thr tape of honey nothing else
+ info if you want to visit the bee(farm)
We're so lucky in the UK compared to America in that it's CRAAAAZY what chemicals are allowed on food & meat in the USA, its really different here in the UK!
American meat would be allowed to be sold in the UK. The "additives" that are added to cattle feed are mostly not allowed in the UK or EU.
What do you honestly believe that the UK put more chemicals in the water the only reason you don't see it is UK use numbers I grow all my veg in the UK I've had some apples from Tesco they have been in my fridge for 3 weeks and what about the 6500 sewerage leaks into the sea in a year
Really? Aspartame in drinks, that is highly toxic, packs of oranges, limes, lemons in ALL SUPERMARKETS including Home Bargins, and Iceland all have been treated with a cocktail of poisonous toxins for a longer shelf life.
Its in small writing on all the labels.
The loose fruit have no taste, no seeds, and no juice!
Hexafluorasilic acid in our tap drinking water, toxic.
Chlorine highly toxic, kills all bacteria including the good.
Our food and air as being polluted, by heavy metals.
Better of buying straight from organic farms, better for us all to support the organic farmers
@@johnwaller4033”chemicals” the one they tend to add is flouride but even then its not all counties just some. Most people live near reservoirs/in the country as well so thats fresh fresh. All you need to do it look online and uoud see we have some of the best water in the word
I am British, but am on holiday in the US just now. The cost of food over here is so high. Baby milk formula if $54 a tin the same product in the UK is £ 9-13 for 800g that’s about £$17.
Hey! Tesco shelf worker here, I actually stock the fresh fish section at my local store at weekends and although I can't speak to the legal side of things I can say that we have both wild caught and farmed salmon on the shelves. The wild salmon in Tesco's own brand (depending on what kind you pick up) can range anywhere between £11/kg - £38.35/kg. The one shown in the video is not listed as wild caught so it's safe to assume it is farmed. Wild seems to always be stated on packaging, similarly to free range on eggs.
Yeh I think our farmed salmon is Scottish, but the wild stuff comes from Norway.
I don’t think baby potatoes are the same as new potatoes they are just small potatoes not the same thing at all 👍🤓🇬🇧
It says farmed in Norway if you zoom in
An important note on the eggs, you may have noticed the UK ones had a particular label "British Lion Quality", these eggs are considered safe to be eaten raw even by vulnerable groups as they are meeting an extremely high food standard designed to eliminate salmonella from eggs. Also the RSPCA (The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) is an organization famous in the UK.
Yep. Super safe, even when it’s rotten when cracked open😏
Also, not sure why she compared 6 eggs UK to 12 eggs US. 2x6 eggs are always more expensive than 1x12 so she should have done a straight comparison using a 12 box in each country.
@silverfireUK I agree I was like she could've of compared 12 eggs from each country
@@silverfireUK if this was a recent video, a lot of Tesco shops don’t currently stock a dozen eggs (supply issues I think). She could have done half a dozen in the US though.
@@saieladythat's not salmonella
The lady has picked the expensive grocery’s from tescos you can actually go a lot cheaper than what she has purchased her grocery’s for. Thank you for a great video again it was really interesting to see the difference ❤
You can also go a lot more expensive . She also compared standard chicken and beef to Americans organic versions. Not like for like
@@simonpe3trie102 given the differences in food standards, comparing to American organic products is probably the fairest comparison.
Tesco is a good middle of the road choice though. She could have gone more expensive OR cheaper, that's the point.
I mean, if we really wanted to go middle of the road, Sainsbury’s would’ve been the best bet and they do actually have an organic range
@@exeterman2 I mean in terms of quality standards maybe but this was also about price and that can drastically fluctuate when you go to organic massively that’s if she can even get hold of organic not to mention pasteurised
Where I live we have a farm with a milk machine that dispatches milk into glass bottles 24 hours a day. It's pasteurised. Also machines with cakes and cookies for sale. I buy coloured cheddar because it looks nicer. We have mild, medium and strong. Various County and French cheese are readily available in stores. All our cows are grass fed in summer and silage fed in winter. It is pasteurised and homogenised and most of ours here in Scotland is from fairly local farms.
One thing to note about the strawberries, she was likely shopping at the Tesco when the strawberries were not "in season". When strawberry season starts in the UK (aka when the UK grown ones become available) the prices plummet. Commonly they will sell at 2x400g punnets for around £3 (£1.50 per 400g) When they're in season you'll even find 1kg big punnets of them being sold for £3.50. :)
Edited to add: Once the strawberry season moves towards it's end at the back end of summer, the prices will creep upwards again to around the £2 for 400g mark.
That’s why we buy fruits in season.
The strawberries are much better quality during the summer months .
And even cheaper if you go out to the strawberry farm and pick your own, I live in Kent and we have the best strawberries.
yeah and the easy peelers werent the cheap oranges.
They also compared a UK butter around half the size of their US version. So of course it's going to be around half the price. From a UK perspective most US produce is cheaper. Because the US $ is currently 27% cheaper than the UK £. They don't seem to factor that in. UK produce also tends to be inferior quality, with far more spoilage. In general UK grocery stores don't sell fresh quality produce. And farmers markets that sell good stuff are expensive. Greengrocers vanished long ago where I live.
Free range or barn eggs are basically the standard offering in the UK, even in the cheaper supermarkets like Aldi. Many supermarkets don't sell eggs from caged hens at all, and those that do pitch it as a budget option usually tucked away on the bottom shelf.
The crazy thing with egg prices is apparently in the US you will pay a much higher price for eggs direct from a local farm, whereas in the UK they are usually cheaper than supermarket eggs. I've just bought half-a-dozen eggs from a wayside farm stall in Derbyshire and paid just £1 - and they were huge eggs!
Agree with this, my local farm does lovely double yolk eggs free range for 2 quid a half dozen.
If you have a local source it's the only sensible way to get your eggs.
Seriously!
I HOPE AND I BET THAT YOUR EGGS TASTED GREAT TOO 👍!
UK here. It's the same down here in the "home counties" = fresh farm, free range eggs are cheaper than the supermarkets, whatever the size, which is great & we re-use/recycle our egg boxes, trays, etc, which helps the environment too
I have to admit I was very surprised, as having lived in NYC for 18 years I never spent as much money on food shopping in NY as I do in England! But then I thought about how I mostly ate out in NY, therefore I didn’t grocery shop very often.
One thing to mention is that the cost of fresh produce can vary depending on season. So strawberries in summer are a lot cheaper than in winter
The relative cost of bananas is due to the US being closer to where they are grown, Dominica is right on your doorstep.
Out of season, most of our tomatoes come from Spain or North Africa.
When it comes to bread and dairy products, we have a fantastic choice of high quality products here in the UK. I buy my wholemeal seeded bread from a small independent bakery, and its not too expensive to buy organic here.
Free range organically certified products are widely available in the UK.
Watching this makes me realise how lucky I am to live in the UK in terms of fresh food. The fruit is more expensive because we have to import most of it. Strawberries are cheap here in June and July, but expensive otherwise. As other people have commented, food prices have risen here recently, but the quality is generally better and I thank God for that. To answer your milk question, most of our milk is pasteurised, but not homogenised. We have a lot of lamb in the UK, but it is expensive because it is all free-range and grass fed on our green hills. It's worth trying some Welsh spring lamb if you've never had it.
While it is true that virtually all milk pasteurised (unpasteurised 'raw' milk can only be sold direct from the farm that produced it) it is also the case that the vast majority of milk is also homogenised. This is why, unlike in my childhood, the cream doesn't rise to the top of the bottle (which is the point of homogenisation--to spread the fat evenly through the milk).
Channel Island (Jersey and Guernsey) milk tends to be both higher in fat content and unhomogenised. Back in the day of doorstep deliveries, this was denoted by the gold coloured foil caps.
Did you notice the price of butter remained the same but the package is smaller
@@MrPaulMorris Us old farts remember the days before homogenisation. The pints the milk man left on the door step had a thick glob of cream on the top which was delicious to us kids. Only problem was we had to get the pints in before the birds got to peck the bottle tops and slurp up all that creamy goodness.
I've seen a few of Ur videos and watched your video on Scottish new year earlier and commented. Now find myself commenting again to tell you that the cost of living in Scotland is cheaper in comparison to living in England.
And Gold Top !!!@@Drew-Dastardly
You mentioned at the end about the NHS.
Feb 2023 I had a stroke and within 40 mins, my family got me to the Hospital and straight through A+E.
The Doctors and Nurses were great and found that I had Arterial Fibrillation (Irregular Heart Beat), an enlarged heart and a Tumour on a nerve going to my right ear.
I entered the Hospital on the Friday night and left the next Monday.
Very fortuitous I had the stroke as I would have never known...now I'm on 5 tablets a day to thin my Blood and other stuff.
Having paid all my life for National Insurance, this service and the medication is 'free'... I know this isn't the case in the US.
National Insurance does not pay for the NHS. It's just another income tax, but the gov uses it to determine your entitlement to certain benefits and the State Pension.
if you are working and earn over a certain amount you pay National Insurance. But all you need for free healthcare is to be a resident in the UK with an NI number - all UK Citizens have that. So if you have never worked in your life you can still access the NHS - for free. @@BobBroon-k2t
Lamb is a huge thing in places where the landscape isn't suitable for crops or larger animals like cows. Like in the Scottish Highlands, Wales, Cumbria, etc. Fun fact: we couldn't export it for ages because of Chernobyl, some of the bans from specific UK regions weren't lifted until ~10 years ago.
I'm an English man who lived in California and Texas for decades. I returned to England late, 2023. I was pleasantly surprised at the overall cheaper, yet higher quality grocery products. Think freshly baked bread, for example. About 30% cheaper for a basket of goods, seems about right. There is no doubt that both California and Texas have outstanding artisanal products: beef, cheeses, bread, etc, but generally speaking, they are not easily accessible. Unless there is a local farmers market, but that's not everywhere and time-limited to Saturdays. And steep prices! Of course, we all want to support local, but a budget is a budget, after all. Somehow, US consumers are being cheated on price, quality, and accessibility. Enjoyed the show. Thanks, guys.
Coming out of the EU has already affected the variety and quality of food available in the supermarkets. 5 years ago, it was excellent. Now its slowly getting worse. No more EU market & food quality regulations.
Living in Ca and Tx are two of the most expensive states with high cost of living.
@@gart9680yeah I miss horse meat in my burgers. EU standards? 😂
Bread was the most shocking thing in an American shop to me, when I was in Maine there were no loafs under $2. The cheapest loafs in the UK are like 20p.
Not far off cheapest I've found is 45p.
Tesco has cut a lot of prices to combat Aldi and Lidl supermarkets. I, myself, shop at all three.
Same here, I start off in Aldi and then go to Tesco for the rest.
I shop nearly exclusively at Lidl but drop into tesco and Sainsbury's for particular items, and to raid the yellow stickers if passing😂
@@vladd6787 👍
@@RollerbazAndCoasterDad 👍
British strawberries are so much better though - I imagine Texas is one of the cheaper places to shop in the US with fewer taxes. She did seem to be be picking out Tesco's Finest items which are the high end ones
British Strawberries are superior in taste, they develop naturally and get that lovely flavour, I never buy those forced Strawberries you see out of season, pale in colour and no taste.
Small US fruit tends to be forced hydroponic rubbish
The price of strawberries in the U.K. are dependent on the time of year. In the mid summer (during Wimbledon) and in the winter they’re more expensive than the rest of the year.
Scottland grows alot of strawberries and berries, suprising but in the summer we have alot of light 3.30am to 10pm but iv come out of a nightclub at 3am total day light odd eating a kebab in daylight.
English and Scottish Strawberries are the best in the world without a doubt.
UK here. Can’t really compare produce as the seasons are different in both places. Strawberries are cheap when they’re in season. Oranges are cheapest around Christmas.
Costco produce is expensive in the UK. Imported from US. Anyway. Shop in Lidl!
I pay 0.95 for good seeded bread in Lidl.
The clubcard prices aren't sale prices as such, they are lower for people who have tesco's loyalty card - the "clubcard". You don't pay for club card membership but it allows tesco to track your shopping habits for marketing and research purposes etc. It's also one of the more expensive shops even with a club card, especially for brands.
My daughter only really shops at Tesco (& Tesco Express), The Co-op, and other local shops such as Costcutter or our nearest "Deli" ...we use the Tesco Clubcard, and the Co-op Membership* card - but since becoming disabled, I don't go out to shop these days so I forget what that card* is called!!🤔) 😊❤🏴🖖
Our supermarket milk is usually homogenised. Interestingly, to us, milk just looks white. I guess we don't have anything to compare it to. The big difference is that even our cheapest butters are yellow because of the grass-fed cows.
The salmon said it was farmed in Norway.
Both milks are the same white, it’s just the picture. UK milk tastes normal, US milk tastes like it’s watered down
@@kathleenchilcote9127 aaah someone a little bitter… unlike you I can afford to travel and live everywhere… It’s know that Us milk has lower standards, even Canada won’t let it in… so enjoy your water bitter Kathleen 😂😂
@@adrianday That's true. I've been to the US several times and the milk is always watery and lacking flavour.
I gotta say Britain really does food well, its an amazing place to buy good food.
What?!?! I live here and I am grateful to have access to fairly affordable food, but good food?? Struggle to find that here (or where I live, anyway). I go to other European countries for good food.
I also live "here" but in a country of 67million "here" is subjective. We have the highest food standards in the world and also top 1/2 country's in the world for food affordability. @@sg-vp2qg
it's good standard off food
@@sg-vp2qg
As an American in the UK, the food here is also a lot more fresh, with less preservatives, and less GMOs, which can be frustrating if you're used to an item lasting 123 amount of time.
So, while a lot of things may be cheaper, they also have a shorter shelf life, which means you may have to visit the shops twice or more a week. Sliced bread shelf life was the hardest thing for me to get used to.
Stick your bread in the freezer. Pull out 2 slices for toast for breakfast and /or 2 for a sandwich for lunch. Put the frozen bread sandwich in a freezer bag and by the time lunch comes your sandwich will taste like you bought the bread that day (and not be frozen i promise). A bread bin really does help but is not as good as the freezer. Two day old bread left on the side is crap compared to properly handled bread. I hate it when i see open bread bags at other peoples houses. I want to seal them. I converted my friend to freezering his bread but only after i stopped living with him during which time he staunchly refused to credit the notion or be happy that i put a load of bread in his freeer. Cheeky git is now freezing his bread and saying how much better that is.
keep the sliced bread in the freezer ( advice from a Dutch baker )
GMOs are a good thing and anyone who argues otherwise doesnt know what they are 😂
She's in Tesco. Go to Lidl and things like meat, cheese, and fruit get 1/4 cheaper. Regular veg, canned foods, sauces, and all other boxes/bagged foods get about 1/3 cheaper. Cleaning products and toiletries are a 1/3 cheaper too.
I agree. We buy most of our groceries at Lidl, and then go on to Tesco for some things they stock that we particularly like.
LIDL are significantly cheaper than Walmart in the USA and they sell many products in smaller quantities. I was in Atlanta last year.
Shit goes out of date by the time you take it home tho lmao
No they aren't. Aldi very over rated. If you want no choice and short dates it is ok
I find most standard grocery items are pretty much exactly the same price at Lidl & Aldi as Tesco and Sainsburys. For the generic stuff like milk, bread, fruit, veg, mince, chicken breast, tinned goods etc etc The brands can vary but usually cheaper whoever is currently offering the special price and often that means even Waitrose is the cheapest! There are some things that are cheaper in the german discount stores sure, but not loads, alot if just price matched by the other supermarkets now.
They were the small cherry tomatoes, most of our normal tomatoes are British. Especially in the summer they are grown local.
When it comes to fruit like bananas and clementines, you have to bear in mind that we can’t grow them in the U.K. so they have to be imported, usually from far away. You can grow them in the U.S. and in the case of bananas they are particularly grown in numerous very nearby countries.
I know this is not mass production but i have seen oranges grown in a garden near Corsham, Wilts. I couldn't believe it but they looked great. They also had grapes and other fruits but i can't remember what, maybe peaches loll It was weird to see.
Lamb is farmed in the Highlands of Britain where grass doesn't grow as well due to altitude and sheep can eat the plants that does grow up there and can digests it fine.
What?!! Lamb is everywhere in Britain.
@@invisiblekid99 ye in every supermarket
@@HardcoreHokageerm lambs are literally in the field next to my house and I’m miles from any highlands. My friend lamb is breed everywhere where this notion it’s only in the Highlands is absurd.
@@invisiblekid99 ye but the point is, you can't farm cattle at high elevation but sheep do fine on Heather and Reed grades.
@@invisiblekid99 plus I never said sheep are only in Highlands. By the way I'm not talking about just 'the highlands' of Scotland. There are high altitude places all over. Wales, the pennines(where I'm from) etc.
One thing to remember when looking at these prices is in the UK what you see is what you are charged. In US your prices are all advertised before tax and you are charged more at the counter. When we get to the counter the tax is included and we pay exactly what it said on the shelf/item.
Groceries are zero rated we dont pay tax on food shopping in the uk
Depending on the state, there is no Tax on food. I know that Arizona and California there is no tax on food.
There’s no tax on food in MD, DE, or PA. Also, what store is Krogers? All of those prices seemed high to me.
regular groceries don't get taxed in the US
I remember asking a member of staff in Safeways, on Market Street SF, where I could find some double cream I needed to make a meal. He was a British expat, and his answer was 'around 8,000 miles away' as a similar product doesn't seem to exist in US. We both found it hilarious!
"as a similar product doesn't seem to exist in US" - heavy cream?
@simhedgesrex7097 my uncle married a woman from Minneapolis, my aunt says they aren't the same, it's more akin to what we call whipping cream
Double cream is almost half percentage fat
@@sharonkemp1454 Ah, so significantly lighter than double cream. Thanks.
Try getting half-n-half in the UK 😢
Regarding your questions about toothpaste and fluoride they don't put fluoride in the water here however they do put it in the toothpaste, but not all of them, so you have a choice.
Plus there are people who still pointlessly buy filtered water, even though all the water in the UK is drinkable water like literally ALL water out of a tap (that's not 100 years old).
I filter mine as I live in a hard water area. Lime scale is a pain in the rear (my poor kettle, ☹).
Some parts of the UK does have fluoride in our water. The decision about whether to add fluoride to the water supply is made by individual local authorities.
She is selecting higher end products for many items , the Clubcard price is a discount for having a Tesco Clubcard which is free , many stores have similar loyalty cards . Prices have increased here a lot with inflation and stores own brands are now becoming more popular than big brands .
We're going through a horrendous cost of living crisis in the UK. Our family weekly shop has jumped from around £80 to over £100. Prices are ridiculous now.
Ye things are tougher in uk now. However compared to America uk prices are still cheeper. TH-camr Evan Edinger did a video on food prices in USA vs uk and near at the end of 2023 did a follow up & still prices in USA are more expensive than uk overall when you take the whole shop into account (rather than individual items).
@@EmilyCheethamTrue, but that video also showed the % change of the shop, which was much higher in the UK. So if you already struggling, a 10-15% increase will feel like it affects you alot more then a couple percent would.
Things have got considerable better over the last couple of months in the U.K. our big monthly shop went from around £90 to around £160 at the night and is back down to about £120 now.
The cost of living crisis is hitting all Western societies.
Our big supermarkets, Morrisons, Tesco, Sainsbury's, asda, price match to Aldi & Lidl ( as they are cheaper)
As a Brit living in the USA who travels backwards and forwards between the countries, this comes as little surprise to me. The biggest surprise was the bananas in USA. Wish we could get them as cheap in Nevada as Texas!!
The quality of products in the UK is much higher (especially butter and bread) and that is without going into the health issues (pesticides, chemicals, etc).
Eating at home or at restaurants in the UK is both a more pleasant and a tastier experience as well as much cheaper.
So looking forward to my next visit to the UK in the Spring.
Most of this, of course, is down to government regulation of food production. The price of American ‘freedom’(that’s another joke) is higher prices and lower quality.
Just a note the flat bottomed boats in Cambridge are punts. We just take the towns, villages, castles and churches as being there. Just back from Penrith and realised there were 3 castles plus pillars, monument within 10 miles radius.
I live in Cheshire, England we have a lot of cattle farms. It’s an every day sight to drive past fields and see cows grazing on pasture fields. In the fields around the town I live.
They’re bred for both milk and beef.
Fluoride is added to water in the UK, but whether it is or not depends on local authorities, and from what I read, in England that amounts to about 10% of them. It's worth noting that it is *naturally occurring in water,* and is generally only added where the natural mineral content falls below a certain level (1mg per L). It is certainly added to toothpaste.
It’s a shame she didn’t compare breakfast cereals because they are CRAZY expensive in the U.S.
It is toxic waste from aluminium manufacturing.
@@LulaJakeeverything is waste from something else. Regardless of that it still has some benefits to human health
Add bonus those extra help reducing tooth decay 😂
@@melissajane9652 why do they want to stop tooth decay when dentistry is such a money spinner!
The UK has a long history of sheep farming, so lamb has always been popular here.
In fact a traditional Easter dinner is usually a leg of lamb, and some mint sauce to go with it
That is the same in Australia - in fact, our agricultural industry was said to be 'built on the sheep's back'.
That is my favourite meal! My Nan made the best slow roasted leg of lamb 🥰
why do i enjoy watching two people talk about their costco shop
Hi guys! Out of season, a lot of our 'salad' vegetables, etc. come from Spain, The Netherlands or farther afield - but a lot of the veg (carrots, potatoes, etc.) will be British-grown, so a lot cheaper! When in season, British-grown items will be cheaper! Almost all of our milk is 'homogenised', apart from Jersey milk which has the rich cream on top! Having said that, I tend to shop around, and get a lot of the essentials (milk, eggs, etc.) from Aldi/Lidl as they are generally cheaper than Tesco.
Appreciate the insight! Thanks :)
Toothpaste does contain flouride in the UK and flouride is added to water supplies if the natural content is below 1.5mg per litre, We can also get flouride from our favourite tipple because a cup of tea can contain around 2mg
In some places fluoride is added, but not in others. The maximum allowed is 1.5mg per litre. Most of England has under 0.5mg per litre.
Fluoride is not added to the water where I live, there is a big poster in my dentist saying so lol
In Scotland no public drinking water supply is currently fluoridated and naturally occurring fluoride, in general, is less than 0.1 mg/l.
I live in Scotland but have family in England. I don't like the taste of the water with fluoride in it. It tastes sweeter and metallic tasting.
According to the Scottish Water website, no public drinking water supply is currently fluoridated in Scotland. The initiative for fluoridation of any water supply lies with local NHS health boards. They have to undertake a full public consultation exercise before applying to Scottish Water to add fluoride to the water supply. The onus is on the NHS health boards to demonstrate that a significant majority are in favour of the proposal. In addition, there are significant practical and logistical issues which would need to be considered carefully by all parties involved,
Yeah we do have similar issues with honey in the uk. A lot of it is imported and been found to be mixed with things like sugar syrup. For the salmon I believe most of ours is from sustainable farming, usually from Scotland or Norway, but it will say somewhere on the packaging whether it is farmed or wild
fluoride is added in tap water in uk, except for wales where its not allowed (atleast to an extremely low 00.01%)
most of the toothpaste contains fluoride in uk but you can buy it without, like charcoal toothpaste or sodium bicarbonate ones.
Bought yesterday in Tesco’s a 600 g bag of clementines easy peelers for £1. Their own brand butter was £1.69 yesterday. Our milk tends to be pasteurised, it is rare to see most brands raw. That is not to say they don’t provide it, it is usually kept on the shelves above the more common pasteurised type of milk.
Popular at the moment is filtered milk which makes for a very creamy taste. Our colour coding system tends to be red for minimal, green for 1/2 fat and blue full fat. The container is transparent so the handle also has milk in.
Costs fluctuate dependent on what time of the year they are and where they are coming from. The major shops in the UK tend to be Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrison’s, Asda, Waitrose Marks & Spencer‘s et cetera.
The cheaper lines tend to come from Aldi or Neto. I don’t think this price comparison is as accurate as it could be. Especially if the person you are comparing to on your video is doing their shopping nearer Christmas time when prices escalate because of demand.
By the way, if you buy a green pepper just leave it in the window and it will soon turn yellow and orange then red on its own. It only needs sunlight to create the various ranges of colour. So if your green peppers are cheaper, buy them and stick them in the window!
😊😊😊
Yeah those were ‘finest’ oranges
Peppers don't magically just change colour in the window. 😂😂😂 They're different kinds of peppers, some might not be fully ripe, but they're not going to magically change variety sitting in a window. That's the dumbest fucking thing I've heard in a long time.
@@thrgost Different coloured peppers are not different varieties, just picked at different stages of ripening. I suggest you check your facts before you insult someone else.
A lot of the stuff she bought were tescos finest which is their most expensive range
So with Tesco there are two prices. Its cheaper if you have a loyalty card and a bit more expensive if you haven't got one. This is a permanent feature with Tesco ( we do these loyalty cards in quite a few other stores also)
It's important to know that some produce is season sensitive, which means that buying out of season is often more expensive because its imported. We do grow a lot of our own fruit and vegetables which, when in season, are plentiful, therefore making them cheaper. Tomatoes, strawberries, celery, cucumbers etc.
Absolutely correct!
I really wiah the greengage season was longer. Definitely my favourite plum.
You've never had Roast Lamb....Oh dear, you really are missing out. Slow Roasted Lamb (Leg or Shoulder) is an ideal Sunday Lunch, served with Mint Sauce (Lamb & Mint go together so well). We're actually having Roast Lamb for lunch today. With Mint Sauce, Yorkshire Puddings, Roast Potatoes, Cauliflower Cheese, Brussels Sprouts, and a Red Wine Gravy.
I’m drooling 😊
Can I come?😊
Leg is better cooked so it's still pink. Our local farm shop does lovely lamb and leave the fillet on. I sometimes buy the shoulder and take the fillet off, then I slow roast the shoulder so it can pull apart. I then quick cook the fillet leaving it pink so you get lamb cooked two ways.
red wine gravy? please can i have the recipe. cauliflower cheese though, I dunno.lamb is fatty and cheese with it might send the bloodclot ...sorry just had a stroke.
We have a lot of lamb in the UK partly because in the past, the wool was really important for the textile industry in the 19th and early 20th centuries. I live on the edge of the Cotswolds in the south of England, and the last cloth mill closed only about 30 years ago. By then, though, the wool was mostly imported from Australia as breeds which do well in the UK are better for meat than for wool. The other reason is that a lot of our land is unsuitable for crops or for cattle and as a small densely populated island, we have to make the most of what we have. Sheep do well on marginal land, so we have lots. Lamb is my favourite meat.
I would add that Harris Tweed (primarily woven in Lewis and which has the recognised Orb trademark) made from Scottish wools is an ongoing industry based on the islands although other tweeds have been added in the past 20 years. Also, Lewis lamb is spectacular in taste. They are basically free-range animals due to the type of husbandry applied in the islands. A diet of heather on the moors combined with hay from the crofts. It's taste is unique and differs from mainland scottish lamb and mutton. I know because I was born and raised there and had our own croft. I do remember NZ lamb flooding the country in the time period prior to the UK joining the EC (as it was known then). That import trade ended after EC membership.
Incomes in US alot.higher than UK so prices higher in US its all relative.
@@Herewithkop Not after you've spent half your salary on health care.
Lol you're wrong there, 25% of UK land area is used as cropped land already, and we produce 60% of our domestic food consumption, the rest is used as livestock areas but we are among the most fertile countries on earth, for our soil.
The salmon are generally farmed in giant nets in scotland so they get all the fresh sea water and can swin free and all our meats are not battery farmed and the chickens are not injected with chemicals thats why we dont inport meats from the US and the sale prices are on all the time if you sign up to the Tesco club card it give you points and that give cash coupons
It has to be remembered the prices on our shelve are what you pay at the till as the VAT is already added.
As food is zero rated for VAT, most prices would be unchanged if we followed the US practice of not including sales tax on the advertised prices. I think only the toothpaste and toothbrush in this video actually attract VAT.
I don't know if sales tax is charged on food in the US (or rather by the individual states as sales tax is not federally levied) or whether the original content creator took this into account.
I know what a bizarre concept!
My friend from Bellingham, WA came shopping with me in Tesco and he was blown away by how cheap food was compared to the USA.
I imagine so! It's pretty crazy, the difference
We had friends visit from North Carolina to travel around Northern Ireland for a week and when they walked around Asda they were blown away by the price difference. And it's only gotten worse over the past year for them..
I don't buy in Tesco. Not happy with the price or quality but mozzarella cheese can be as little as 50p and you can buy a loaf of bread for as little as 47p.
Our milk is generally homogenised
I don't buy in Tesco either. I prefer Morrisons, Aldi @@gillfox9899
Lamb is quite common in Britain as a lot of Britain's grazing land isn't suitable for cattle, so sheep are very popular, and you will see some pretty large flocks in the Welsh and Scottish hills, and in quite a few areas in England too.
IMO lamb fat also makes the best roast potatoes
But soooo expensive
I love lamb but it is expensive so it is a treat I keep meaning to try Hoggit.
9:16 when she says sale, she isn't correct. It's clubcard price. It's a loyalty card that you just sign up for, free of charge and scan it at the till to get reduced prices on a lot of items in the shop which tend to always be the same products too mostly. You also gain 1 point per pound you spend and can turn the points into vouchers to use to pay towards your total.
one thing about the milk is that a high percentage of dairy cows in the UK are predominantly grass fed, with grains only used to supplement their diet. whereas in the USA grass fed cattle is a rarity.
I live in Norfolk, England and we're very rural, there is a farm nearby thay sells trays of free range eggs 24 to a tray but they also sell trays of double yolkers and yes every egg has 2 yolks. Cant beat that for a fry up or bacon/egg baps.
Can second this, Norfolk is very rural and there are a lot of farms you can directly buy produce from. There are also some shops around that tie in with local farmers, so sometimes you can even find them in local shops ands stores.
Slow-cooked lamb is absolutely delicious. We regularly put a leg of lamb in our slow cooker for 7 hours and have it with roast veg and potatoes etc. And mint sauce of course.
Agreed, lamb is the king of meats 🥰🥰
That’s what I did for Christmas lunch. I had about 15 coming so I did two legs in the slow cooker the day before- one was traditional the other was a curry. Delicious !
It says this on the salmon packaging:
Farmed in waters off the coast of Norway or Scotland. Responsibly sourcing our seafood is important to us which is why Tesco fish experts work with responsibly managed farms and fisheries to continually improve their high standards of quality, welfare and sustainability.
Several supermarkets have an instore bakery . They can get products in either partly baked or unbaked and then finish them in the ovens. Some things are frozen and thawed out first before preparing for serving, by adding cream/jam etc
The other thing to mention is that at UK supermarkets we normally have a butchers, fishmonger, fresh bakery and deli counter (which contains the cheeses) at the back of most stores as well as your usual product aisles. So you can get even nicer quality produce if you wish.
I was thinking the same thing like with the bread she didn’t point out that at the end of the aisle is a bakery with the fresh uncut bread.
Not in our supermarkets in my town . We have a large Tesco extra supermarket. No butcher, bakery (separate nice bread area ) fishmongers or deli . We did have them but no longer.
@@mair6406indeed - Sainsburys and Tesco stripped out all manned counters now to save money 🙄
Do you still have those departments in your Supermarkets? We don't in my area. Busy suburban area but all our big mega store versions of Tesco, Sainsburys, Waitrose and Asda have all closed their counters now. I thought that was across the board in uk but obviously not if you still have them. Lucky you!
Sushi takeaway has recently replaced the massive deli counter in my local big tescos. What your saying is a thing morrisons tried to make their unique selling point a little while back (Market street which i dont think has been/is/was super super successful) but the trend has certainly been away from the separate areas your talking about.
Supermarkets or grocery shops pricing varies a heck of a lot in the UK. If, like me, you get certain items at one outlet and other items at other shops you can *usually* save a few pennies per shop.
I tend to use three different places and more often than not stick to them. I do save money but not every month sadly.
Yes I do that as well when I'm in my Town .but unfortunately it's getting harder as shops are closing .Back in day you could save a bit .
Here in the UK a lot of the grocery stores have their own bakery so the bread is really good
No! …for the fruit produce she’s only looking at the Tesco Finest range! Also on the same shelf we sells packs of just green, red or black grapes without being mixed…. And we sell eggs in packs of 12 as well as 6. 😝
I can buy a case of 30 large eggs free range for under £4.
Most UK supermarkets have 12 and 15 packs of free range eggs, including Tesco.
Another underrated perk of UK groceries is every major supermarket offers home delivery. Just book a 1hr time slot for next day and pay somewhere around £3 - £7 for delivery.
Or you could pay a monthly fee and save 75% of the cost of deliveries per week over the month.
@Adobomonster - Sainsburys delivered our weekly shop this afternoon.
most large grocery stores offer this in the US now too (not really for rural areas though....)
From 99p per delivery with co-op 😊
Here in the UK food ingredients must be as advertised in the label so the honey will be 100% Also any free range eggs have a stamp on to guarantee free range. Also this is the same for organic foods. All our foods have to display the sugars, fats etc on the cover!
Yes, although since Brexit, one wonders how much these rules are being enforced now?
Letting bees feed on sugar solution produces “honey” it’s cheap and tasteless
actually most supermarket honey's in the UK are honey flavoured syrups, only way to increase your chances of buying real honey is if it specifies it is from bees of a single country as apposed to something like 'a blend of EU honeys'
@@Attackzone2010 I don't know where you got this idea. If it says "Honey" on the label then it has to be honey in the jar.
'Free range' means a chicken must be housed in a defined space. This space means it should be with no more than 13 birds per square metre. It must have access to outside area for at least part of the day. But there are no fixed rules about what this period of time has to be.
People need to stop trusting government 'labels', it nothing to do with animal welfare, its only a way to charge you more and therefore farmers will be less reliant on government subsidies
Clubcard prices are not a sale, the clubcard price is the normal competitive price, they have an inflated price if you don't have their store card. A lot of our stores are running this dual pricing model to get your information.
Hi Steve & Lyndsey, my dad's a beekeeper here in the UK and he's looked into supermarket honey, the runny honey isn't honey it's usually mostly corn syrup and has other additives in it to stop it going solid. All honey will be filtered to some degree because you don't want to find bits of bee etc in your honey. Proper runny honey will have been heated to a certain temperature otherwise it would be solid or my dad also sells soft set which is the consistency of cream so more for spreading. He sells his honey in local independent stores and from home to local villagers. The strawberries the lady in the video bought were probably out of season so would have been imported, proper british strawberries are delicious also our raspberries. Quite a bit of our food is imported. We also have farm shops here but supermarkets are more convenient, we also have fresh food markets where you can buy fresh veg etc, usually better quality and a lot less packaging. The salmon was probably farmed usually in Scotland, there have been investigations into the farmed salmon in recent years and I think the RSPCA are overseaing the welfare now.
The salmon was farmed in Norway
Lamb is versatile and unbelievably delicious! You have to try it when you get over here!
I don't know where other commenters shop but yes, we do have sale prices, price drop and price matching (where the price is dropped to match other big supermarkets' prices) here in the UK! (NOT just loyalty card schemes)
I think the majority of comments have been to explain that the 'Clubcard' discounted prices noted in the video aren't, strictly speaking, 'sale' prices (as they are not available to all shoppers) but instead preferential prices for holders of the (free) loyalty cards. There are, of course, also items run on promotions of various sorts--straightforward markdowns, bulk pricing (Buy One Get One Free or 'BOGOF') and combination offers ('Meal Deals').
Not a big fan of lamb myself as I find it rather too greasy for my tastes--others may disagree!
@@MrPaulMorris Fascinating.
@@MrPaulMorris I've noticed the few "lamb haters" I have met have always explained they first tried it when it was cold. It is extremely fatty and when cold does not taste good. Not as bad as eating raw lard or dripping, but up there. When it is nice and hot it is divine.
@@Drew-Dastardly Roast lamb and lambs chops were staple parts of the dinner rotation at home when I was growing up and my mother was always a stickler for food being hot but lamb was never my favourite. I did, however, always like mint sauce--made freshly every time by my father from mint grown in the garden, the only culinary contribution he made other than mixing the Colman's mustard powder with water!
I much prefer pork, both for taste and texture, rating it even above beef.
I never realised how hard it is for Americans to get real proper food. It’s so easily accessible over here we take it for granted.
Bonne Maman jam, when I was a kid (about 25 years ago) used to be sold exclusively in France.. and we'd stock up a tonne of it when doing day trips to Calais, France on the booze cruise
You are right Steve. Our groceries and food in general have to pass stringent safe/ health laws. 🇬🇧 🇺🇸
They used to - but then we left the European Union ... anything goes now
While travelling to Scotland a couple of weeks ago, I stopped at a KFC ... I've done it many times for years ..
But this time, I could tell it wasn't chicken I was eating - it was another animal done in batter and spices (and they were stingy on the spices this time, I noticed - which is how I could tell something was wrong)
@@jazzx251 that sounds horrible. I've only experienced dodgy diet Pepsi that was inported from outside the EU and had Arabic writing on the ingredients
Our British lamb, is brought up on very green pastures, so it's quite abundant. Near the early spring, March April spring lamb is out, which is quite expensive, but tends to be some of the best in the world!
I’m sorry they don’t have a leg of lamb in the USA they are missing a great tasty treat
Props to the lady in the video for changing her pronunciation of tomato 🍅 when talking about the British and American products!
Some of the items like the easy peeler satsumas were from Tesco's finest range eg their premium range, you can get them for less from their normal range. Also things like strawberries vary in price depending on season, if this was in winter they would be more, lot cheaper in summer
Strawberries ate much cheaper in the UK in the summer and much nicer. British strawberries from April to July August at a push. But outside these times we have to import more expensive versions. Lots of people choose to only eat Strawberries in season, like Pumpkins etc.... better to eat them local. Strawberries are less than half the price of the ones in this video in the summer. Grapes are also seasonally priced due to either importing from Europe or further away.
Great video though guys.
You need to come to the UK and try all of the British and European Cheeses. The list of available cheeses is huge.
I was shocked to see lamb is hard to find in the US. Its a very fatty and now very expensive meat over here, but it is really delicious, a much different taste to beef or pork.
Absolutely one of my favourite meats
As a kid my mam used to do a lamb roast dinner for us every sunday. It was cheap new zealand lamb then the EU interfered n we had to stop getting it n the price rose rapidly !!! To this day a leg if lamb is a luxury compared to even the best cut of steak !!!
Semi skimmed in green 24:06 label
Skimmed in red label
Whole milk in blue label but not always depends on whole saler😊
There is a bee keeper who is a regular in our pub. He sells pure raw honey in 500g jars for £2 and a larger jar for £5. Absolutely NO additives. We also sell it in the pub for him.
Would love to know which pub, so we could go and buy some?
@@Thurgosh_OG it's in Cadishead, Manchester.
I have hayfever but after eating locally produced honey from a bee keeper. I've found that I am less susceptible when the summer comes
also cost of living is higher by around 12% at the moment and i remember a time when milk in uk or 98p for 2 pints. i still go local farm for eggs and pay £2.50 for a tray of 30
Hi guys, there is a video from a young woman in London shopping at Aldi, it’s a good comparison for you as you have Aldi in the US. It depends where you shop in the uk. We have ours delivered weekly from the the grocery store, it’s convenient for us.we use Ocado, as they sell marks and Spencer’s food, which we like. We have noticed such a rise on our weekly bills.
I've seen it (assuming it's the same one) and because it's a metro style aldi and London I don't think it's representative of just how cheap Aldi and LIDL are elsewherr.
30:22 I live in a hard water area (UK). Not sure exactly what is in there, but apparently the minerals calcium and magnesium are commonly found in it.
It's safe to drink, I tend to joke when drinking tap water that it's limescale flavoured.
There's a cost of living crisis here in the UK and inflation has been crazy recently. Plus VAT/tax is usually included in the price
The cynic might say companies are just trying to see what they can get away with. The same with energy prices
The majority of UK foods do not have any VAT on them. Food items defined as 'Luxuries' are the only ones with VAT in the UK. In some US states, you have to pay a State and/or Country tax on top of the price seen for some/all foods, so there is an added cost after the price tag, in some places.
You need to get a job what pays more lol
@gordonmahamat7687 Actually, I am disabled and have conditions like Autism, anxiety, Severe Depression and Diabetes and am seen as in need of support, have carers, and am seen as not capable for work. So no, I can't get a job that 'pays more'. Thank you.
@@Thurgosh_OG I live in the UK. I didn't know that, I was under the impression the sales tax was included in the prices here.
As a Brit living in the US a long time now I so miss shopping for food back home. Overall the quality is far superior in UK but quantity is larger in US. As for bread most bread in the US is horrible and never fresh but 3 x the price and after 20 years here I still miss it so much. They make the bread in the supermarkets in the UK so you can smell it in the store which goes straight to shelves still hot. I used to nibble on it before the check out and it's just no contest to compare and much cheaper. Don't get me wrong there is good food in the US but you really pay to eat well here and way too many chemicals because US regulations are less strict. Liked this video a lot.