A Costco food court's new menu item is raising eyebrows for its price

You should see the crazy ideas they have about pizza or burgers.

Surprisingly, McDonalds there has quite a nice menu. Greasy and unhealthy, but quite nice.


In the Philippines you can get an Aloha burger at McDonalds. A slice of pineapple instead of tomato.

They adapt their menus for the particular country. I can still order a Quarter Pounder with cheese and fries and it tastes just like here. I was told the beef comes from Australia.

Some of the local pizza places do have weird food. The cheese comes out of a nozzle. Not for me. I can go to other places and get really good pizza.
 
Nozzle cheese.


It’s a thing there because regular cheese spoils quickly. Highly processed cheeses are more popular particularly for pizza and spaghetti. But the taste preferences are changing as people become more exposed to foods they never tried before. Younger working adults are going overseas and bring back ideas.
 
That does seem steep

Used to be 7.99 and all you can eat and meat included
Every restaurant I been in lately is skimping on condiments, napkins and having to beg for a bag for your leftovers. Went to 54th St. and I'll bet there was not 2 oz of cream gravy in total on my mashed and chicken fried chicken. Had to ask for more. My Wendy's burger which I asked for onion, one small ring was on a double burger along with the smallest dab of Mayo I have ever seen. Had to wait 5 min for ketchup packets at What-A-Burger. The ones I got were stuck together by a leaker somewhere in the box. It was handed to me by the manager. Folks, it not getting better.
 
I might just venture out to Costco for a Dog and a Coke tomorrow. And see if anyone is ordering the $10 beef sandwich. Not today, it's a Friday in lent.

Fish is expensive in general, wouldn't eating a hot dog be a bigger sacrifice. It is in my world.
 
Lastly. $10 is like nothing. Sorry to say.
Exactly - $10 is the new $5.

$10 for what appears to be a decent sandwich is more than fair, especially when people pay $5-7 for boba drinks or $4-$5 for a side of fries.
 
Federal minimum wage isn't. Besides that's splitting hairs, people don't go to Costco food court to pay that much. How is that even rational, to try to equate a price with budgeting hours labor for it? We could rationalize the price of anything by stating "oh it's only 5 hr of labor to buy it". That doesn't change that the product may still be too expensive for what it is.
Fair enough...

Do you think people earning near minimum wage will be buying a lot of these $10 Costco sandwiches? I bet not. They're far more likely to get a couple hot dogs or slices of pizza, $3-$4. Even a bit above minimum wage, that's an exception to how their budget would normally stretch to cover everything. The sandwich costs at least 2X more than practically any other meal option at Costco. Do people earning $16 an hour typically pay over twice the average price for a car, home, clothing, or related to this topic, food itself? The numbers wouldn't add up.
Costco's clientele is not the minimum wage earner - or anywhere close to that. Last that I checked, their memberships are $60/yr. Minimum wage earners are usually not Costco members. So, why should Costco be obligated to cater their food court prices to that audience?
 
Back
Top Bottom