• bassgirl09@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Hahaha! I will tell you, my own mother (70s) buys rotisserie chicken because it is cheaper per pound of meat than a raw chicken and is just as good or better than if she bought the same size chicken and roast it herself in her own oven. Something to know about my mom is she is frugal. She coupons, and will always seek out the best deal. Whoever wrote that WSJ article truly has no idea what it is to budget is what I see. Additionally, some of the neighborhoods that were listed, are some of the richest parts of NY, so of course people who have money will also go out and buy easy meals rather than spend time cooking.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      Of course.

      Rotisserie Chicken is a loss-leader. But that smell stimulates your appetite and gets you to buy more.

      Plus you’re gonna want some high-margin foods to go with it. Maybe some veggies, potatoes. Box mash is a pain in the ass when the chicken is already cooked, may as well get the pre-made heat-and-eat stuff. It’s right here next to the chickens…

      Plus if you get box mash you need to get milk and butter too…and walk nearly the entire rest of the store to get all three.

      This is basic supermarket psychology.

      • BeardededSquidward@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        50 minutes ago

        I don’t want them to read our stuff, our stuff may include plans such as pouring raw sewage into the intakes of their bunkers when shit goes side ways like they plan for.

  • kreskin@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I think they’re hating on genz and millenials because of boomer embaarrasment that they’ve handed them a world on fire.

  • ArmchairAce1944@discuss.online
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    5 hours ago

    Rotisserie chicken is in some ways cheaper than raw chicken… and I know place where it is the case. Like is eating now a crime to these people?

  • SabinStargem@lemmy.today
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    6 hours ago

    Insult and injury on top: If you use EBT for food, you can’t buy warm food. Despite deli counter food often being fairly cheap, you aren’t allowed to enjoy a nice warm meal. You can’t buy a $10 baked pizza, 24 pieces of chicken for $26, or the $5 rotisserie. No, you must always homecook, with all the extra effort and time that requires.

    EBT is good, but the richies obviously think that poverty is inherently a sin. The carrot is also a stick, and will be used to paddle the backside of people who aren’t “good” in the eyes of the wealthy.

    • Simulation6@sopuli.xyz
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      5 hours ago

      $5 day old rotisserie chicken or $11 for an uncooked chicken and also prep and cooking costs.

  • hector@lemmy.today
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    7 hours ago

    Pfft, stupid millenials and gen z wasting all of their monies on fancy rotiserrie chickens and non processed fresh food. If they just lived on a starvation diet, they could afford their rent and insurance. They are just bad with money.

    But wages have never had more buying power! The CPI and inflation adjusted numbers say so, and although we’ve changed the way it’s counted to understate it, 2-3% from 5-8% under the old unimproved metric for the last half century, just by 2008, you can totally trust we wouldn’t in bad faith understate the numbers to give every worker, every retiree, and every fixed income a pay cut every year automatically, and transferring that money to investors in gate keeping corporations. /s

  • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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    12 hours ago

    I never bought rotisserie chicken because they were cheap to the point of being suspicious (i.e. what sort of corners are they cutting).

    Sort of the opposite of what I would consider a “splurge.”

    • RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      They take chickens that are on the sale by date and cook them. At least when I worked deli! So maybe not the nicest chickens but all fine!

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        10 hours ago

        I remember working on the deli when we’d markdown the chickens. Folks knew when we put them out and how long we waited before doing it. There was generally a little crowd of 2 to 3 folks when we’d do it on the weekend. Sometimes they’d get impatient and ask us if we were gonna come do it. Which, to be honest, I don’t really blame them. I don’t remember how much of a savings it was but it was significant. It’s sort of like “hey buddy, let’s stop the charade, I need to get going, can you come mark these down a few minutes early?”

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        10 hours ago

        TL;DR: Rotisserie chickens are smaller on average and price per pound usually more expensive except at stores like Costco. So you see similar numbers but don’t notice the size.

    • hector@lemmy.today
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      7 hours ago

      They go bad quickly. If you leave one in a hot car, it gets funky like in one afternoon. Which if you cooked your own chicken and left it in the car it wouldn’t, which is odd.

        • hector@lemmy.today
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          5 hours ago

          When travelling I’ve had cause to buy those pre cooked chickens, and to cook mine own meats, and had to leave them in cars for a bit, so quite a bit actually. Not often on the Rotisserie chickens after a couple got funky, but plenty on mine own meats.

          Hamburgers cooked over a wood fire died down to charcoal will stay good for up to days in a hot car.

            • hector@lemmy.today
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              2 hours ago

              Oh yes. Burger is a different beast than chicken to be sure, but wood smoke is curative, and cooked food lasts longer in general. I’ve had cooked burgers in a trunk/backpack for up to three days, hiking and the like, in the summer, that didn’t go bad. I bet if you cooked it, you could pack it in a jar with vinegar right away and it would stay good indefinitely.

              Or if you expose it to smoke long enough it cures it completely and doesn’t have to be refrigerated at all forever. Usually salt is involved, and often other plants that help preserve it if traditional curing. If new age curing they use toxic chemicals like sodium nitrates to cure it, like in ham or bacon nowadays. Those are to be avoided and are bad for you, just as preservatives like sodium benzoate put in condiments and the like, even in some pop, is bad.

              Personally I always sprinkle some yellow 5 on my food after I cook it because testicle shrinking properties or no, it’s worth it to not have to eat food that’s not yellow enough, yuck.

  • deathbird@mander.xyz
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    11 hours ago

    Yeah I just want to know what grocery store food Wall Street journal is going to call Gen Alpha privileged for eating. Store brand hummus? Whole wheat bread?

  • InvalidName2@lemmy.zip
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    18 hours ago

    I know this is preaching to the choir here, but that is so very out of touch for many/most/all of us.

    Those things cost like $5 - $9 in my area, and you can even get the “old” ones for a couple dollars cheaper at times. It costs very little more than raw chicken, and in some cases, the rotisserie chickens cost less. Then you factor in time for cooking, clean-up, products for clean-up, and other time / material costs, and the difference comes out a wash.

    So, they are apparently suggesting that having chicken in a meal at all is a splurge. Sure, in some idealistic world where we all eat a vegan diet to save the earth, that might fly. But in the real world, it’s literally insane propaganda to suggest that chicken is a splurge.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      These people writing these stories are probably ultra rich, and go to fine dining resteraunts. They probably pay $300 a meal for what you or I might pay $11 at the grocery store.

      Then they think if THEY paid $300, then surely the non-privilaged must be paying $600. And they’re doing it several times a week! Such splurge!

      Meanwhile we could buy these things every day for a month for what they pay for 1 meal. And the quality realistically can’t be all that much different. They probably assume they’re eating a chicken thats twice as good, at half the cost.

      But they don’t know who we are! Say that name! Say it loud!!!

      LEEEEEEEROOOOOYYYYYY

      JEEEEEEEEENNNKKKKIIIIINNNNNSSSS!!!

      Least we got chicken…

    • ameancow@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      They know there’s going to be pushback and people hollering and shouting how out of touch they are for printing it.

      They don’t care, they’re just seeding the public narrative, trying to get people used to seeing the message in media that they should expect less and be content without things.

      It’s not how we feel about the article today, it’s about the kids and young people growing up seeing this message as normal.

      • tempest@lemmy.ca
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        14 hours ago

        It’s just rage bait. You don’t need to read into it any more than that

    • Solventbubbles@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I can also add, as a vegetarian myself, a vegan diet is nowhere near as cheap.

      Unless you have the ability to grow all your own produce and protein, vegans are spending just as much if not more for those calories/proteins.

      • teslekova@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        Well, you can live on rice and beans pretty well, and simple salad is cheap. But yes, I agree. Vegans pay more than vegetarians, because milk and eggs are cheap.

  • 58008@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    If saving 5 bucks on your grocery bill is the thing that keeps your head above water… you’re probably already deep enough to meet the ghost of that OceanGate CEO.