In my experience working at Walmart in Fresh and a local grocery store, Driscolls is often moldy in the truck it arrived at the store in before it even gets to the shelf.
Pro Tip: Never buy “fresh produce” of any kind from Walmart. Find a grocery store that has good produce and only buy there. It’s worth the extra money.
Fresh berries are hard to ship. And raspberries are probably among the hardest to ship 1000mile/kilometers and expect them to last. And most commercial varieties of berries taste have no flavor anyway.
The farms producing the berries are local; There is no excuse for Driscoll’s fruit to be moldy before it even gets to the store here when not one other producer has this problem. It isn’t traveling even 50 miles, let alone 1000. It is not a Walmart problem. It’s a Driscoll’s problem.
Raspberries are very delicate. I’ve got maybe a very short 1/4 acre of wild raspberries growing about my yard. And I can tell you that when picked, you can start to see them degrade within an hour or two after picking. Often in less time.
Now I don’t know how many raspberries Driscoll picks every day. But by the time they get from the field and get sorted, washed, packed and boxed, and into proper cold storage that might take a good half day or maybe a full day. And then maybe the next day the wholesale grocer comes and gets their order and brings them to their warehouse where they sit in cold storage for another day or two before getting onto the grocery store shelf. It could be nearly a week after you have picked them before you buy them.
As much as I’d like better produce, I’m not driving another 1.5 hours round trip to get to the store with the better produce. Not everyone has easy options.
Hey, I understand. I need to a 100+ mile round trip just to buy groceries. I still don’t buy fresh produce from Walmart because it doesn’t last long enough between the 3 or 4 weeks between shopping for groceries.
So if I can’t buy it from a good grocery store or grow it myself, I do without. I cannot afford the wastage.
In my experience working at Walmart in Fresh and a local grocery store, Driscolls is often moldy in the truck it arrived at the store in before it even gets to the shelf.
Pro Tip: Never buy “fresh produce” of any kind from Walmart. Find a grocery store that has good produce and only buy there. It’s worth the extra money.
Fresh berries are hard to ship. And raspberries are probably among the hardest to ship 1000mile/kilometers and expect them to last. And most commercial varieties of berries taste have no flavor anyway.
The farms producing the berries are local; There is no excuse for Driscoll’s fruit to be moldy before it even gets to the store here when not one other producer has this problem. It isn’t traveling even 50 miles, let alone 1000. It is not a Walmart problem. It’s a Driscoll’s problem.
Raspberries are very delicate. I’ve got maybe a very short 1/4 acre of wild raspberries growing about my yard. And I can tell you that when picked, you can start to see them degrade within an hour or two after picking. Often in less time.
Now I don’t know how many raspberries Driscoll picks every day. But by the time they get from the field and get sorted, washed, packed and boxed, and into proper cold storage that might take a good half day or maybe a full day. And then maybe the next day the wholesale grocer comes and gets their order and brings them to their warehouse where they sit in cold storage for another day or two before getting onto the grocery store shelf. It could be nearly a week after you have picked them before you buy them.
Supply chain delay can be a beeotch.
As much as I’d like better produce, I’m not driving another 1.5 hours round trip to get to the store with the better produce. Not everyone has easy options.
I get frozen berries, and they’re always fine.
Hey, I understand. I need to a 100+ mile round trip just to buy groceries. I still don’t buy fresh produce from Walmart because it doesn’t last long enough between the 3 or 4 weeks between shopping for groceries.
So if I can’t buy it from a good grocery store or grow it myself, I do without. I cannot afford the wastage.