The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Deals abound at salvage groceries

As prices keep rising, a new batch of customers discover these stores.

- Kim Severson c. 2022 The New York Times

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — In a world where a jar of peanut butter costs a dollar more than it did last year and the price of a gallon of convention­al milk inches up to $6 in some cities, paying $1.49 for a family-size box of crispy rice cereal can seem like a good idea, even if it’s August and the cereal is dyed red and green for Christmas.

At the salvage store, a deal is a deal.

With grocery prices 13.1% higher than a year ago, according to the consumer price index for July, a new batch of customers has discovered the joys and pitfalls of shopping at salvage food stores, where a crushed box is never a problem, package dates are mere suggestion­s and questionab­le marketing attempts (Hostess SnoBall-flavored coffee pods?) go to die.

The stores, which traffic in what mainstream food retailers call “unsellable­s,” operate in a gray zone between food banks and big discount chains like the German import Aldi or Dollar General, which has grown to more than 18,000 stores.

With names like Sharp Shopper, the Dented Can and Stretch-a-Buck, salvage stores have long been a salvation for families on tight food budgets and the naturally thrifty. Adventurou­s shoppers looking for bargains use them for culinary treasure hunts. Now, the inflation-weary are joining their ranks.

Maggie Kilpatrick, a food blogger and cooking teacher in St. Paul, Minnesota, with celiac disease, visited a salvage store for the first time in June after the cost of her favorite gluten-free products skyrockete­d. Someone in a gluten-free Facebook group mentioned a salvage store about 20 miles away.

“I was shocked,” she said. “There was lots of gluten-free, organic, high-quality stuff you never thought you would find in this dumpy little store in Fridley, Minnesota.”

A package of two baguettes from a company she loves usually sell for about $6.99. She picked up three packages for

$5. Vegan butter was $1.99, about $5 less than she would pay at Whole Foods Market.

“I can see how people get hooked on it,” she said.

Many of the stores are small, and some don’t use checkout scanners or take credit cards, so getting a complete picture of nationwide sales is a challenge. An analysis of 405,101 receipts submitted by consumers to the consumer rewards app Fetch showed the number of households shopping at salvage stores in the first half of this year was more than 8% higher than a year earlier.

The manager of Dickies, a small chain in North Carolina, said sales were up 36% from last summer. Other store managers reported double-digit increases. “I’ve been seeing a bunch of people come in who haven’t been here before,” said Nicholas Duke, 27, who manages what had until recently been called the Price Is Right in this tourist-friendly city in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The owners recently renamed the store Uplifting Deals. It’s part of a rebranding plan they hope will attract new shoppers, including people who once might have turned up their noses at places that sell tubes of frozen hamburger for $2 a pound, fading lemons and a jumble of items, from canned tomatoes to 99-cent bottles of celebrity-chef marinade.

“We’re trying to clean it up and show people it can be a real shopping experience,” Duke said.

In another twist, salvage food stores are drawing environmen­tally conscious consumers intent on doing what they can to reduce the $161 billion worth of food the Department of Agricultur­e estimates is dumped every year into landfills.

That’s why Lynne Ziobro started the website Buy Salvage Food two years ago. She maintains a nationwide map of salvage food stores and offers guidance on ways to reduce food waste.

“Most people visiting my site are looking for ways to save money on groceries, and I hope I’m able to raise their awareness of food waste while they’re there,” she said.

The idea came to her after she grew frustrated helping a friend find a retailer to sell his flavored nuts, which Amazon was pulling from its platform as the best-by date approached. Visits to her site, she said, have more than tripled since last year, and now hover around 11,000 a month.

A handful of new waste-conscious companies have taken the salvage store concept online, shipping out bargains on meat and dairy products, stock overruns and food from farmers that might otherwise get tossed out.

“I think the food-waste-warrior mentality has gone hand in hand with the value seekers,” said Abhi Ramesh, who founded the home-delivery company Misfits Market in 2018. The company is growing fast, and has shipped more than 14 million orders since it started.

As any smart salvage shopper knows, dates on food packages usually don’t mean much. Whether “sell by,” “best before” or “expires on,” they are intended to help stores and manufactur­ers control inventory, and to let consumers know when a product is at peak quality.

The federal government doesn’t require or regulate dates on any food except infant formula. Most states have rules about food dates, but they vary widely.

Last year, Congress began considerin­g a uniform national rule that would use only two phrases: “Best if used by” to indicate quality and “use by” to indicate when a food might become unsafe to eat. Refed, an organizati­on that researches food waste, said a universal standard would end the confusion that prompts people to toss $29 billion worth of safe, edible food each year.

“There’s nothing wrong at all with salvaged food or something that’s past the date,” said Sarah Kaplan, 29, who manages her family’s four Dickies salvage food stores in Asheville. “I’ve been raised on it all my life, and I’m not dead.”

Veterans of salvage shopping suggest that newcomers get to know the store and the staff, who can point out the real bargains.

Trust yourself and not labels, they say. Find out which days merchandis­e is delivered to the store, and get there early for the best selection. And make sure to pick a good store. They vary from chains whose stores would be at home in affluent suburban neighborho­ods to homespun markets with cluttered shelves and softening vegetables.

“I’ve told a lot of my friends and co-workers, ‘You have to be willing to sort through the stuff that isn’t good to find what it is,’” said Molly Nicholie, the executive director of the Appalachia­n Sustainabl­e Agricultur­e Project, based in Asheville.

Although she appreciate­s the savings, Nicholie enjoys the hunt. During her most recent trip, she found a pound of foilwrappe­d European-style butter for $2.50. The shipping box, which held 36 pounds, had been ripped open and one wrapper was torn, so the distributo­r sold the whole case to a salvage food broker.

Food brokerages can be as small as a few ambitious people with a truck and some connection­s at a restaurant distributi­on warehouse. Others are sophistica­ted operations that work directly with food giants like Hormel or Mondelez.

Food producers need to unload vast amounts of extra inventory because they’ve reformulat­ed a product or changed the package. Sometimes sales forecasts have changed. Manufactur­ers sell to stores or brokers who agree to keep the food out of the retail mainstream so the brand’s price strategy and image won’t suffer.

Some salvage store owners have direct relationsh­ips with grocery chains that have to clear out food that they have failed to sell at a discount, or that is nearing expiration dates. Some owners buy bread directly from the person driving a local delivery route.

It’s an unpredicta­ble system whose currency is reputation, connection­s and hustle. And it has its share of bad actors.

“I knew people who would wipe dates off mayonnaise,” said David Fox, president of Java Holdings, a food and merchandis­e liquidator in Los Angeles. He got his start 31 years ago working for a company that was selling dented cans of vegetables from Northern California canneries hit by the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.

Salvage stores and food banks aren’t in competitio­n for surplus food, he said. The government caps how much food a company can donate for tax purposes. Food banks turn to salvage brokers when they need to buy specific items, like canned tuna or pinto beans, to round out what they give to families.

Some salvage store owners, especially in rural communitie­s, see their stores as extensions of food banks, and view their work as a religious mission.

Hunter’s Salvage Grocery, near the Tennessee border in Trenton, Georgia, is one of them. Stephanie Hunter, 47, runs the 4,000-square-foot store in a little strip mall. Customers toggle between her store and the Dollar General next door.

She has plenty of customers who were having a hard time feeding their families before inflation drove up food prices. It’s worse for them now, she said.

She prices her food as low as she can, though inflation is hitting the discount food market, too. At Hunter’s, cans of tomatoes are six for a dollar. A loaf of bread is $1. Last month she decided to offer a five-for-one special on infant formula to a father who was nearly in tears because he couldn’t afford more than one can.

Hunter orders food from a broker who assembles pallets of banana boxes filled with similar products, labeled “drinks” or “groceries.” But she never knows what she’s going to get.

She unpacks each order with the hopefulnes­s of a birthday girl. Sometimes, the boxes hold nothing but disappoint­ment.

“We get some things and you think, ‘It’s no wonder we got this, because it’s disgusting,’” she said. “Sometimes it’s really good, but something where someone was clearly late jumping on that trend train.”

And then there are those days when she hits pay dirt, like a load of coffee in K-cups, which go fast, or a case of Velveeta cheese, which she sells for $5 a block.

“That,” she said, “is pure gold.”

 ?? MIKE BELLEME/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Molly Nicholie, with her son Charlie, 10, shops at Dickies Discount Food in Woodfin, N.C., earlier this month.
MIKE BELLEME/THE NEW YORK TIMES Molly Nicholie, with her son Charlie, 10, shops at Dickies Discount Food in Woodfin, N.C., earlier this month.
 ?? DOUG STRICKLAND/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Stephanie Hunter, owner of Hunter’s Salvage Grocery, in Trenton, Georgia, has plenty of customers who were having difficulty feeding their families before inflation drove up food prices. She prices her food as low as she can, she said, though inflation is hitting the discount market, too.
DOUG STRICKLAND/THE NEW YORK TIMES Stephanie Hunter, owner of Hunter’s Salvage Grocery, in Trenton, Georgia, has plenty of customers who were having difficulty feeding their families before inflation drove up food prices. She prices her food as low as she can, she said, though inflation is hitting the discount market, too.
 ?? MIKE BELLEME/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? This juice was only $1.98 a gallon at Uplifting Deals in Woodfin, North Carolina. Amid rising prices, new customers are discoverin­g the joys of shopping at salvage food stores.
MIKE BELLEME/THE NEW YORK TIMES This juice was only $1.98 a gallon at Uplifting Deals in Woodfin, North Carolina. Amid rising prices, new customers are discoverin­g the joys of shopping at salvage food stores.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States