lördag 5 december 2009

The world of Tesco & co

To go shopping in England is so exciting, at least I think that there are so many things to discover everytime you do it. Even more than in Germany, I feel the urgent need to buy much more senseless things once I am in a supermarket.
Cambridge has approx. 100,000 inhabitants which makes it to a rather small town. The first day I was here I heared that the best store for a bigger shopping is Tesco which is located at the outskirts of the city in Cherry Hinton Village. And the first impressing point are the "normal" opening times:

And of course, you can find everything in that superstore. Computer, clothes, home appliances and even food. The biggest problem is just that you can't stop buying stuff. "Buy one, get one for free", "3 for 2 pounds" a.s.o. My bitter statistics after my first shopping round was 75 pounds. (more than 80 €) whereof 90% of this amount was spent for food! And actually, things are not necessarily more expensive here. When it comes to clothing, people from euro countries get even a big advantage as prices often are calculated for an exchange rate of 1 pound = 1.5 euro which is no more the case. Practically, something that in Germany would cost 30 euro is available for 20 pounds in the UK which is not more than 22 euro. And best of all, is the range of stuff that you get in the shops. It is everytime a pleasure to get there and everytime I have to realise painfully that I spend more than an hour in the supermarket. But no light without shadow and the bitter part of english shops is the bread section. Thousands of different kinds of bread and one worse than the other. However, my biggest discovery in Tesco superstore was "German Rye Bread". In a country with no bread culture - isn't this reason enough to admire Tesco?!

Yesterday, I was unfaithful - I went to another supermarket, Budgens. Not as big, not as nice and not as cheap, but it is the closest one. And actually, I made another big discovery. Innocent superfruit smoothie with pomegranates, blueberries & acai. It was horribly expensive but caughtmy eyes. I haven't tried it yet - probably it sounds much better than it will taste. This liter contains 76 pressed grapes, 2 1/2 mashed bananas, 1 1/2 pressed pomegranates, 2 squeezed oranges, 160 crushed blueberries, 100 peeled acai berries, some freshly squeezed lemon and 0 bungalows (or any stairs whatsoever) - no idea what they mean with that last fact. Sounds good, right?!

3 kommentarer:

Cathérine sa...

Hey!! Ah das mit Tesco kommt mir sooo bekannt vor. Fand die Öffnungszeiten auch total super und diese Auswahl....schlecht für den Geldbeutel ;) vorallem "2 for 1" etc. Nur als ich in der UK war, war der Wechselkurs ungünstiger, so dass vieles wirklich teurer als in germany war. Erstaunlich fand ich auch diese endlosen Regalen von Fertiggerichten. Das gibts in hier nicht in der Größe.
Wünsche dir noch viel Erfolg bei deiner DA und nicht halb Tesco leer kaufen ;) ;)
Grüße aus Berlin,
Cath

Anonym sa...

Ja den Laden kenne ich auch. Ist ne große Konkurenz zu Metro, weil es die auch in Ungarn so gibt. Mary hat da immer nachts eingekauft. Warte mal erst bist du die Großpackungen da findest. Ich habe auch nen Superstore hier und auch schon für die WG eingekauft. ;-)

Alex

Ida sa...

haha, ett helt inlägg om tesco. Underbart! :) Gjorde ett "case" om innocent på ekonomi-kursen. Men har inte provat något utav dom än! Borde kanske göras. Hade glömt bort din blogg norris, sorry. Men nu tänker jag ha den under bevakning igen! Min kommer återupplivas också nu när jag drat till USA, eller jag har redan börjat skriva lite om jag ska vara ärlig. Puss och kram