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Whole Foods, an Austin-Based Store with Over 300 Locations in the U.S. and U.K.

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#601 monavano

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Posted 15 September 2011 - 10:08 AM

I have to share one of my favorite things I can get at WF (Old Town) and it's Fulvi Pecorino cheese. Fulvi has more tang and flavor than Locatelli (which I don't like) and a little goes a long way. It has to be the best Pecorino out there and it's about $14 per pound. I find it grated in the refrigerated section next to the cheese counter.

#602 NolaCaine

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Posted 15 September 2011 - 02:04 PM

Has anyone been getting lumpy whole-fat, plain, organic yogurt in the 32 oz container at the Clarendon WF or is it just me? 2 months of this! 6 complains! no change!

#603 monavano

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Posted 24 October 2011 - 10:39 AM

Has anyone seen good white chocolate at WF? I'm so done with trying to melt crappy Nestle morsels!

#604 zoramargolis

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Posted 24 October 2011 - 11:35 AM

good white chocolate

An oxymoron, IMO. Sorry.

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#605 Barbara

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Posted 24 October 2011 - 12:12 PM

An oxymoron, IMO. Sorry.

True, but the best white chocolate is Callebaut, which can be found at WF.

#606 monavano

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Posted 24 October 2011 - 01:37 PM

Thank Barbara. Indeed WF did have good white chocolate. The Callebaut was more expensive than the El Rey White Discos that I bought. The bars of Callebaut were a bit big for my immediate needs and the discs looked convenient. There's no veg. oil in the El Rey so I'm hoping it melts without problem.
I'm dipping pumpkin biscotti into it :)

#607 Anna Blume

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Posted 04 November 2011 - 05:33 PM

Is Al Dente in charge of weekly specials in this region? Coincidence, maybe, but this week chicken drumsticks and Humboldt Fog (cf. recent discussions in spin-off thread and discussion of "artisinal") are on sale.

#608 Anna Blume

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Posted 08 December 2011 - 10:56 AM

The company now has an app that instructs the team in the cheese department on the various qualities of cheese so they can, in turn, educate the public on what to expect. Very misleadingly, it turns out.

For example, they were sampling a ribiola described accurately as "delicate" and "mild" on the identifying card. Because of the app from WFM, however, the descriptors on the card behind it said it is "extremely sharp" or words to that effect. Same goes for a Brie and Gorgonzola Dolce. I don't get it. Related but separate: When I used to shop at the Tenleytown, P St. and G'town stores, I could depend on team leaders who clearly had strong backgrounds in cheese. Not so in Silver Spring.

#609 zoramargolis

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Posted 09 December 2011 - 12:41 PM

When I used to shop at the Tenleytown, P St. and G'town stores, I could depend on team leaders who clearly had strong backgrounds in cheese. Not so in Silver Spring.

Caveat emptor is the watchword in Whole Foods stores, in pretty much every department. Alas, the team leader at the Georgetown WF retired some time ago--she really was terrific.

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#610 Pat

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Posted 25 December 2011 - 12:57 PM

The Whole Foods Old Town store on Duke Street currently has clamshells of Spanish pine nuts. I've been rather diligent in recent months in only buying ones of Spanish and Turkish origins, since they don't seem to have any association with pine nut mouth. It's much more expensive than buying sacks of them at Costco, which I'd done for years, but the Costco ones are from China, as are most of the ones Whole Foods seems to be stocking. (I've been checking obsessively on every trip and was finally rewarded with a new supply of Spanish pine nuts the other day.)

#611 Anna Blume

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Posted 26 December 2011 - 10:26 PM

^I hope you got your money back on the mussels! Pat, you need to get out to the Rockville store just to visit the bulk section. Disneyland! (In Silver Spring, the store is starting to adopt some of the Mother Ship's coolest features, but when you have team members dump lousy, squat, cheap pine nuts into the bin with the superior, expensive stuff...)

#612 Pat

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Posted 30 December 2011 - 09:26 AM

^I hope you got your money back on the mussels! Pat, you need to get out to the Rockville store just to visit the bulk section. Disneyland! (In Silver Spring, the store is starting to adopt some of the Mother Ship's coolest features, but when you have team members dump lousy, squat, cheap pine nuts into the bin with the superior, expensive stuff...)

They did give me my money back, with no problem.
I'd like to check out the bulk section at the Rockville store, but contemplating the drive to Rockville dims my enthusiasm <_< .

#613 Drive-by Critic

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Posted 30 December 2011 - 09:46 AM

WFM Friendship Heights has serious stocking problems. Why is the packaged salad selection nearly depleted at 9 a.m. on a Friday? Can't they use the massive amounts of data they collect to predict demand? This has been going on for two weeks now. I am getting sick and tired of having to make multiple trips to get basics. And they don't get their staff in early enough to get the prepared foods stocked. The selection of prepared salads and sandwiches was pathetic at 9:15. They never have the rotisserie chicken out before 10 a.m. (That's actually OK - it is an excuse to go to Don Pollo - but I don't always have the time to do that).

It's getting to be as random as Rodman's.

#614 goodeats

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Posted 17 February 2012 - 11:11 AM

I actually prefer Moro for their slightly bitter edge. For me, the taroccos are similar to "normal" tangerines and not quite as good as good honeybell tangerines.

Speaking of blood orange varieties, anyone ever seen Sanguinellos for sale?

I think Sanguinellos were what I saw at the Foggy Bottom WF today, next to the Blood Oranges, which are $1.00 per orange until Sunday.

Their air-chilled chickens are the Friday special at $1.99/lb, which includes their whole organic chickens.
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#615 astrid

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Posted 17 February 2012 - 11:39 AM

I think Sanguinellos were what I saw at the Foggy Bottom WF today, next to the Blood Oranges, which are $1.00 per orange until Sunday.


Thanks for the tip! Must stop by Foggy Bottom on my way home.

#616 The Hersch

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 06:10 PM

The last couple of weeks, the Glover Park store has had a citrus fruit called a "sumo mandarin". This fruit looks a lot like a Minneola tangelo, about the same size, with pebbly skin and the distinctive sort of nubbin at the stem end. The skin is a markedly paler shade of orange than the typical Minneola. There's a piece on this new hybrid here. Has anybody tried it? I've been loath to buy any because they cost $1.69 apiece--not a huge sum in itself, but rather a lot for a fkin tangerine. I might be willing to fork out if it's a superb fruit.

Speaking of cost, the Glover Park store outdid itself today. I've had a standing gripe about the terrible job they do of displaying prices for their wares. They have a whole refrigerator case next to the fish counter dedicated to smoked fish--many different kinds of smoked salmon, plus several other smoked fish varieties, probably a total of twenty different items, maybe more. Today, not one single smoked-fish item had a price showing. Not one!

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#617 Joe H

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 07:37 PM

Wegman's in Fairfax was giving out free samples of this today-they were selling them by the box, $11.00+ for a box of nine of them. When I got home my wife and I peeled one and read the literature included in the box. Supposedly this is the single most popular piece of citrus fruit in Japan or Korea and certainly must be the most expensive. Now a California company is growing them.

They're unbelievably easy to peel with thick (1/4") peel that would come off if you only used your knuckles. As for flavor they are sweet but I'm not so sure they are any better than, say, Indian River navel oranges. At their price point I doubt I will buy another.

#618 DaRiv18

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Posted 04 March 2012 - 10:27 PM

My in-laws love mandarin oranges for their peels, lots of applications in cooking. I wonder how these peels are.
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#619 zoramargolis

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 12:29 PM

Speaking of cost, the Glover Park store outdid itself today. I've had a standing gripe about the terrible job they do of displaying prices for their wares. They have a whole refrigerator case next to the fish counter dedicated to smoked fish--many different kinds of smoked salmon, plus several other smoked fish varieties, probably a total of twenty different items, maybe more. Today, not one single smoked-fish item had a price showing. Not one!

They've no doubt determined that if people know beforehand how much it costs, they won't put it in their basket. But if it's already there when they are checking out, they'll buy it rather than look like a cheapskate. Or maybe they aren't even paying attention to the prices as they are rung up.

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#620 Joe H

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 02:01 PM

In the WF Reston store there is not a single screen/register/place to watch the prices as they are rung up. After the cashier is finished there is nowhere to see the final total. The only way to know it is to be told it. The only way to confirm pricing is to review the receipt AFTER the order is finished.

I haven't noticed this in other stores but it personally bothers me since we are all human and mistakes can be made.

#621 Chocolatechipkt

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Posted 05 March 2012 - 09:51 PM

FYI, Certifikid is offering a $5 for $10 deal on meat at WF Bethesda this week.

http://www.certifiki...t-or-poultry-at

(and apologies if this shouldn't be here ... I just got this deal and thought I'd share.)

#622 zoramargolis

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Posted 06 March 2012 - 03:17 PM

In the WF Reston store there is not a single screen/register/place to watch the prices as they are rung up. After the cashier is finished there is nowhere to see the final total. The only way to know it is to be told it. The only way to confirm pricing is to review the receipt AFTER the order is finished.

I haven't noticed this in other stores but it personally bothers me since we are all human and mistakes can be made.

I was just at Whole Foods Arlington and noticed that the items appear on the little credit card/debit card screen as they are rung up, and then the total appears, before you run your credit card through it.

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#623 mdt

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Posted 06 March 2012 - 03:36 PM

I was just at Whole Foods Arlington and noticed that the items appear on the little credit card/debit card screen as they are rung up, and then the total appears, before you run your credit card through it.

It is like that at the WFs in Springfield and Fairfax too.
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#624 monavano

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Posted 06 March 2012 - 03:46 PM

^^
Old town too. It's a relatively new location and I don't remember ever noticing that I could not see items and prices rung up before I ran my CC.

#625 Barbara

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Posted 06 March 2012 - 04:27 PM

I was just at Whole Foods Arlington and noticed that the items appear on the little credit card/debit card screen as they are rung up, and then the total appears, before you run your credit card through it.


Ditto for the P Street store.

#626 giant shrimp

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Posted 14 March 2012 - 09:25 AM

what's up with the new packaging for driscoll's raspberries and blackberries on sale usually in the $3-$4 range at whole foods? the 6 oz. plastic containers have two layers of berries, and sometimes those on the bottom become moldy. you used to be able to check them out by looking through the plastic. unfortunately, the container bottoms have become untransparent, obscured by an opaque berry-colored paper liner. if the purpose of the liner is to prevent spoilage, it is not entirely successful. i have discovered moldy berries in a couple of cases. i have discussed this issue with store managers and they don't know what to make of it.

#627 goodeats

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Posted 12 April 2012 - 08:40 AM

Still at a quandary when it comes to buying Whole Foods - can someone reply to this in the Shopping and Cooking thread? South or Central American whole beans from Quartermaine is generally my coffee of choice there, but they often don't have them, forcing me to buy "Red Line Blend," etc.

I've seen a good selection at the Foggy Bottom WF. The selection at Clarendon is much smaller, but if you drive to the Tyson's or the Vienna location, I seem to recall a few more options.
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#628 dcs

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Posted 19 April 2012 - 07:33 AM

I missed this announcement when it came out. Whole Foods Market to stop selling red-rated seafood.

#629 goodeats

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Posted 20 April 2012 - 02:17 PM

For those living or working nearby the WF Foggy Bottom, Kaz Sushi has partnered with this location for its sushi to go or customizable sushi orders. I have not seen this at other WF locations.

Also, they are opening (have opened?) a Korean cafe, riffing off of current Asian-Taco fusion food truck cuisine as a dining option.
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#630 dcs

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Posted 22 April 2012 - 12:25 PM

I missed this announcement when it came out. Whole Foods Market to stop selling red-rated seafood.


... and the fishermen complain.

#631 Anna Blume

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Posted 17 July 2012 - 01:16 PM

Context: a lament in the Trader Joe thread about not finding raw peanuts.

That's strange. I have a partially-used sack of raw peanuts from Whole Foods, bought a few weeks ago. Must be a temporary shortage.

Or the decision of buyers at Friendship Hts and Silver Spring (both checked) vs. Tenleytown? I don't know since I am convinced I've seen them at WFM before.

You can grind your own nut butters at Whole Foods Old Town. So they most definitely have raw shelled peanuts.

Actually, you grind roasted peanuts. $3.99 lb. vs. the bins of roasted peanuts sold at $5.99 lb. as part of the Granola Bar. Talk about cynical, sleazy selling practices...

#632 qwertyy

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Posted 17 July 2012 - 01:26 PM

Or the decision of buyers at Friendship Hts and Silver Spring (both checked) vs. Tenleytown? I don't know since I am convinced I've seen them at WFM before.

P Street definitely has* them.

[Sorry--should have said "had." This was two weeks ago.]

#633 JuneBacon

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Posted 17 July 2012 - 01:50 PM

Actually, you grind roasted peanuts. $3.99 lb. vs. the bins of roasted peanuts sold at $5.99 lb. as part of the Granola Bar. Talk about cynical, sleazy selling practices...


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#634 Rhone1998

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Posted 23 July 2012 - 06:50 PM

So, I go to Whole Foods quite a bit, but not to very many individual stores...usually just the one on P St. So I really had little idea how much variation in selection there is across stores until I came across a display of a dozen different varieties of smoked salmon (!) at the Framingham, MA location a few weeks ago. The rest of the store looked pretty different (and generally better), too. Why can't we have this sort of thing around here (or do we)?

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#635 TheMatt

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Posted 24 July 2012 - 07:36 AM

So, I go to Whole Foods quite a bit, but not to very many individual stores...usually just the one on P St. So I really had little idea how much variation in selection there is across stores until I came across a display of a dozen different varieties of smoked salmon (!) at the Framingham, MA location a few weeks ago. The rest of the store looked pretty different (and generally better), too. Why can't we have this sort of thing around here (or do we)?

The Fair Lakes Whole Foods has an in-house smoker where it does its own smoked meats and sausages, though not salmon like this. They also seem to have a better selection of whole fish than most Whole Foods (aka fish on ice).
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#636 MsDiPesto

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Posted 25 July 2012 - 08:35 PM

So, I go to Whole Foods quite a bit, but not to very many individual stores...usually just the one on P St. So I really had little idea how much variation in selection there is across stores until I came across a display of a dozen different varieties of smoked salmon (!) at the Framingham, MA location a few weeks ago. The rest of the store looked pretty different (and generally better), too. Why can't we have this sort of thing around here (or do we)?


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#637 kirite

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Posted 25 July 2012 - 10:02 PM

Haven't you heard? We're a second-tier city.


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#638 giant shrimp

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Posted 18 November 2012 - 08:26 PM

I assume that there is consumer regulation in DC requiring grocery stores to provide prices for what they are selling. If I am correct, and it is possible I am not, then why is it that Whole Foods does not comply? I can say categorically, since the store has been in existence, I have never once visited one of their stores where I did not find product on the shelf with no price within a million miles. Typically, if the product looks good and there is no price, you can bet that few customers would buy it if they knew the price. Tonight, at Tenleytown the problem even exended to crackers. Four or five different crackers in the chese, wine and coffee aisle had no price. The wine guy, who is always reliable, said he would tell the cracker guy he should put prices on them. I told the manager I would not buy anything in the store if it did not have a price. I also told her that I have had frequent problems purchasing moldy raspberries where the condition of the fruit is obscured by an opaque napkin on the bottom of the plastic container. It does an outstandingly poor job of correcing moisture problems, if that is what it is there for, but it is highly effective at covering up any blemishes. The latest purchase from the store I opened up a couple days ago were coated in black mold on the bottom, and even the raspberries on the top layer had their throats infected with little black dots. These rapsberries have never been that good in the first place, mass harvested from California, so I am ready to give them up. And customers at the store are well aware of the problem, judging from what they have had to say when adding them to their carts. The store has been advised for months about this problem, by me, and done absolutely nothing to correct it that I can see. If it were up to me, I could go into this store and bust it for its shady pricing inconsistencies tomorrow morning. But it is up to somebody else, who is apparently happy to regard the place with a blind eye.

#639 Pat

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Posted 18 November 2012 - 08:37 PM

It's not just DC stores. I've encountered the no price tag problem at other locations. The store I usually shop at is Old Town and it's definitely a problem there as well. Occasionally, I will buy something when I can't figure out the price (usually because it's something I really need), but other times I just walk away.

#640 Anna Blume

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Posted 19 November 2012 - 11:15 AM

I wonder how many new foods are introduced to WFM stores over the course of a week and while that may be a source of the pricing problem, it seems easy enough to include three new steps into the process of displaying/stocking new products or foods: 1) make a sign; 2) check to see if all the foods rearranged to accommodate the new food also are labeled w name, bar code & price; 3) make and display all other necessary signs in that team's section of the store.

Often cashiers will charge nothing for a food that doesn't correspond to the numbers they memorize or have listed in their binders of codes. This was the case Saturday in Silver Spring when I bought two unlabeled mandarins.

#641 zoramargolis

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Posted 19 November 2012 - 11:51 AM

poorly-trained, lightly supervised, often deficient in knowledge about the products they are selling: the Whole Foods workforce is one of the major aspects of the company's profit model. selling over-the-hill berries at full price is another.

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