GERMAN vs. UK Prices. Are German Groceries actually cheaper?

2023 ж. 13 Мам.
7 664 Рет қаралды

With the discount Code: FRESHINGERMANY you can save up to €90 on your first 4 Boxes from HelloFresh in Germany bit.ly/FRESHINGERMANY. They'll even throw in FREE Shipping on your first order.
Prices have risen over the last few months across most of Europe. In this video I really wanted to delve into the question of just how cheap (or not) Germany really is in comparison to the U.K.
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About me:
I am a Brit who lives Germany. After completing University in the UK I moved to China where I taught English for two years. I’ve learned a thing or two about cultural integration, language learning and everything else that goes with upping sticks and moving to a foreign country. I make videos about Germany, cultural differences and tend to pose a lot of questions. Join me on my exploration of life abroad.
#pricecomparison #supermarkets #groceryshopping

Пікірлер
  • Good morning! With the discount Code: FRESHINGERMANY you can save up to €90 on your first 4 Boxes from HelloFresh in Germany bit.ly/FRESHINGERMANY. They'll even throw in FREE Shipping on your first order.

    @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • I live in the UK and moving to Berlin, I do visit often. I found that things are either cheaper or the same. The huge difference is the quality. If you buy vegetables in both it may cost around the same but the German vegetables will be much higher quality.

    @davidsellars3924@davidsellars3924 Жыл бұрын
    • Interesting. Germany does have more organic stuff…especially when comparing Aldi. I’m not sure about the quality of vegetables. I haven’t noticed a huge difference…other than they still wrap things in plastic in the U.K. like cucumbers.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@britingermany This may be part of it, there are definitely more organic foods in Germany and don't get me started on the plastic wrap obsession here! Comparing say Rewe and Tesco rather than say Aldi vs Aldi is where you really see the difference. Aldi is cheaper everywhere. To get the same quality of say tomatoes you have to get the "extra special" range whereas in Rewe the standard tomatoes are brilliant. I suspect it comes down to Germans having higher standards when it comes to food quality (culturally) whereas the UK for a long time has not really cared as much. I also think Brexit has made a huge difference with fewer homegrown foods due to the lack of EU workers, and the imported food takes longer at the borders due to checks. New to the content but I love it all so far especially as a Scot moving to Germany, keep it up :D

      @davidsellars3924@davidsellars3924 Жыл бұрын
    • @@davidsellars3924 thanks a lot. And best of luck with the move 😀🙏

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@davidsellars3924 I think a lower quality, esp. of vegetables would fall back on the entire shop. It would ruin the image, the reputation. It should never end with "this shop is selling rubbish". When Aldi started this used to be a little different. Cheap tiles, no shelfs, selling from the carton placed on the floor, and customer saying "I accept this, for the sake of a low price". This has dramaticly changed since kind of everybody is a discounter, REWE is not more expensive than Aldi, it just has more, and more expensive options, additionally. So the setup of "nice shops", with shelfs, and wood, and clean floor and lightning and smell has kind of influenced Aldi and Lidl to raise their standards. And all this beauty and cleanliness of the shop, has to correspond to the vegetables of course. Bad items are sorted out hourly. You need to attract people with those things also, cause this is cheaper in the long run, than lowering the price of cucumber.

      @holger_p@holger_p11 ай бұрын
  • But, in the UK, you can bulk buy and it is usually cheaper. In Germany, I have noticed it is often more expensive per kg to buy a larger size; something I find hard to get my head around.

    @alia9087@alia9087 Жыл бұрын
  • As a German married to a Yorkshireman I visit Britain e.g. Yorkshire on a regular basis since 1991. In my experience shopping is more expensive in the UK than in Germany. I'm not comparing individual items as such, but more the amount of shopping I have in my trolley for the same price. We used to shop at Asda and Sainsbury's in the UK and at a local supermarket chain and Aldi's in Germany. When Aldi's and Lidl arrived in the UK we did our shopping mostly there because it is cheaper. We are going this summer and will find out if the current inflation will make even more of a difference.

    @silkebower1977@silkebower1977 Жыл бұрын
    • It could be that the situation is already different in the summer but I was surprised at how similar the prices are, at least when comparing Aldi. It’s fun to compare Aldi products because you can make a direct comparison.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • I live in Bavaria, a food shop is much more expensive than the North of England. 1kg Lamb 10GBP vs 30EUR, Avocado 80p vs 2.50EUR, meat is generally at least double the price

      @RB-hw7yg@RB-hw7ygАй бұрын
  • I dig how chill you are! It's refreshing compared to all those super hyped faces you see in every KZhead video these days

    @sajjadrezaei91@sajjadrezaei919 ай бұрын
  • There may be no Lyles Golden Syrup in German supermarkets, but there is Grafschafter Goldsaft Zuckerrübensirup in the yellow bucket at all the usual stores, exept at Al** and Li**. Great with pancakes!

    @mikebegonia6134@mikebegonia6134 Жыл бұрын
    • Haha the those particular chains flagged on KZhead?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Grafschafter ist so lecker!

      @sisuguillam5109@sisuguillam5109 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sisuguillam5109 Stimmt, aber Golden Syrup hat einen ganz anderen Geschmack.

      @missymoppel@missymoppel10 ай бұрын
    • @@missymoppel Stimmt.

      @sisuguillam5109@sisuguillam510910 ай бұрын
  • the german counterpart to golden syrup would be goldsaft (zuckerrübenssirup)

    @nikomangelmann6054@nikomangelmann6054 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you👍🏻

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • The perception of UK as an expensive country in general from a german perspective seems IMO to come from the past - for a long time the Britisch Pound was consistently over decades an expensive currency for D-Mark (1 BP was roughly 4 DM) as well as for Euro (1 BP was 2 EUR). Since some years now this has drastically changed, i visited the UK often and for at least around 15 years in fact at least once every year (except the last 3 Covid years) and there was a quite sudden point in time when the value of my Euros changed to pretty much the same in UK as it has in Germany. I presume there are many people in Germany who aren't aware of this very significant change that happened some years ago.

    @SvenScholz@SvenScholz Жыл бұрын
    • Good point. I remember when I got around 2 Euros for every pound, now it’s almost 1:1. I think other things like rent and housing are more expensive but food in general…even restaurants and cafes is pretty much the same as the major cities

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Well, i'm old enough to remember the relatively stable Breton-Wood system. For a long time it was good enough for any practical purposes to calculate 1GBP = 14Deutschmark (~7€) and 1USD = 4,20Deutschmark (~2,1€). Compared to today (1GBP = 1,15€) the UK currency has lost 84% of the purchasing power! That is reflected in everything - wages, rents, GDP, prices... Absolutely nothing in the way of a further decline, the path for a currency equality is wide open.. As there is nothing to back up the UK currency except some dodgy monopoly money deals, there is only one way...

      @uweinhamburg@uweinhamburg Жыл бұрын
    • It's not so much related to the currency, but that the British drastically improved in quality and service (in general products). It isn't directly related to immigration, but more to reforms made under Thatcher, which took some time to fully work out. Germany already did such reforms in the 1930's. That's why the quality for every Euro or Pound spent improved. Also, British also bought more things abroad, if there is a benefit, what could also lead to cheaper production of goods to be sold.

      @schadelharry4048@schadelharry404811 ай бұрын
    • The UK is an Island...they have to import food in very high margins from mainland Europe ever since..therefore food has an higher price in the UK than at mainland Europe in general ever since...despite the current inflation rate and despite Brexit...although Brexit does have an impact in behalf of higher food prices as well but that´s now on top of that (UK farmers now don´t produce food that much nowadays than before Brexit because of the lack of harvesting workforce but also in the meat producing industry as well which increases the number of food imports as well)

      @michaelgrabner8977@michaelgrabner897711 ай бұрын
    • @@michaelgrabner8977 What has being an island got to do with food imports? New Zealand is an island as well and a big food net exporter...

      @uweinhamburg@uweinhamburg11 ай бұрын
  • We shop at Rewe in Germany and Tesco in the UK. We‘ve never compared prices product by product but always notice that a trolley full of products in England costs more than a similar shop in Germany. In addition to food, we would include wine, spirits, washing powder, toilet paper and so on. What about the cost of petrol and diesel, or local public transport? We generally have the impression that the UK costs more…

    @nevillewhite2458@nevillewhite2458 Жыл бұрын
    • Hello Neville. Are you going back and forth between the two countries a lot? I was mainly comparing Aldi as that’s really the only fair comparison one can make given the supermarket exists in both countries. I find Tesco has become pretty expensive. Petrol is a tricky one as its kind of like the stock market - going up and down all the time but the last time I checked it was around 1.80€ per litre in Hessen which is a similar price to the south of England (£1.50).

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany I moved from Somerset to the Frankfurt area in 1989, typically get back about once a year to visit the family. I’ve only shopped in Aldi once, and that was when I heard they were selling scones this year. If you’d like to hear how things have changed for a Brit in Germany over the past 30 years, I’d be happy to share.

      @nevillewhite2458@nevillewhite2458 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nevillewhite2458 wow you must have seen a lot of changes in that time. In both countries. I’m sure you have a lot of interesting stories to share 😀

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Aldi which is called Hofer in Austria, was just the same 40 years ago. It was seen as cheap and well-off people would avoid it. It had a stigma. Back then, we still had local grocers, bakers, butchers and Co-Ops. Chains were in their infancy. But Aldi always had a reputation of paying the highest wages in the industry. Similar to the UK, over time Aldi became the go-to chain and people would not be ashamed any more to shop there. They also transformed their shops and developed this wholesome image of offering very good quality at fair prices, pay high wages and treat their workers well. Which set a positive standard for the entire industry. They also were the first discounters to carry brand names and to have in-store "bakeries". Which in DACH, with our bread preferences, is a big deal.

    @teniente_snafu@teniente_snafu9 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Thanks for your comment 😀

      @britingermany@britingermany9 ай бұрын
  • My experiance of visiting Berlin 3 years ago is that Rewe is quite an expensive store. Aldi and Lidl being much cheaper.

    @airplane1831@airplane18319 ай бұрын
  • Australia has entered the chat 🙂 You're right about media hysteria emptying shelves - remember the toilet tissue wars of 2020, and the run on fuel in 2021? With the exception of Tempo Handtuecher, alcohol and tobacco, ISTM that like-for-like items are less expensive in England than in Germany. What I *have* noticed in the last 15 years is that some goods that were unobtainium are now available - Bahlsen and Lorenz in the UK, Yorkshire Tea and bacon in Germany. It's apparent, because these are the items I'd buy to transport from one place to the other on my trips. Weirdly, the Bahlsen business had English roots.

    @peterbrown6224@peterbrown6224 Жыл бұрын
    • Hello Australia 😀. Oh I hadn’t noticed Yorkshire Tea or Bacon. I’ll have to look out for that

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany Patriotic branding in Australia puts the rest of the world to shame - but that's only in supermarkets. There is no car industry there, for example. Yorkshire or PG Tips are available from some Indian-run small shops in FfM, and bacon from Karstadt (I could be wrong).

      @peterbrown6224@peterbrown6224 Жыл бұрын
  • That's interesting to see how things stand now. When I lived in the UK for a while ten years ago, the main difference I noticed was meat being more expensive than in Germany - everything else seemed to be roughly the same.

    @ulrike9978@ulrike9978 Жыл бұрын
    • I think it’s gone through a few evolutions since then. Right now it seems to be around the same. Prices really have gone up a lot in both countries

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • 2.16 pronounce Rewe in a way like replacing the "w" against a "v". Yes, some german words are quite difficult to pronounciate by brits.☺ The german "w" is in most way a "v" phonetic.

    @Reaktanzkreis@Reaktanzkreis Жыл бұрын
  • I’m from the uk but live in germany and i find germany more expensive for food. Also pub meals and takeaways more expensive in germany than the uk. The only things i can say that’s cheaper in germany is public travel, that’s my personal opinion.

    @saschaborchers9337@saschaborchers933711 ай бұрын
  • Where i live, outside Washington, DC, Wegmans store brand products are at exactly the same price as at Aldi.

    @dcseain@dcseain Жыл бұрын
    • So that’s all of those branded products or is it just a selection?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany All I've found where both carry a category. Aldi's selection is a bit smaller.

      @dcseain@dcseain Жыл бұрын
  • The good thing about Aldi and Lidl is that the items cost the same irrespective of which outlet you go into. With Tesco (for example) the same item can cost a whole lot more if you go into a Tesco Express as opposed to a Tesco Metro or indeed a larger Extra outlet.

    @FrankMike2012@FrankMike201210 ай бұрын
    • Yes and as I found out also quite consistent across countries...

      @britingermany@britingermany10 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting video, thank you! 😊 I have not been to the UK in ages, and I hear from friends that live there - varying things, it really seems to depend of the region. Overall I vaguely get a more positive picture from Southern England, while other areas seem to have a lot more problems with empty Tesco shelves and BTW severe lack of labour in hospitality and food producing industries. Clearly prices have gone up in both Countries, and I am still astonished how much more milk costs in Germany nowadays. About 20 years ago it was as low as 49 Pfennig (0.25 EUR) for a 1L Tetra Pack... 😅

    @GrouchyBear411@GrouchyBear411 Жыл бұрын
    • Hello Matthias. Thank you for watching and thanks for your comment. The south of England is (in general) the richest part of the U.K. so there are generally more opportunities here and also more money flows here. Yes it’s crazy how prices have gone up everywhere. Imagine if wages had gone up that much 🤣

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • When I first came here I thought groceries were incredibly cheap. I'm not sure of it was more of a perception though. Nothing feels cheap anymore. I wonder how I'd feel walking through an M&S now. What blows my mind these days is the cost of bread, in Germany, like wow, when did THAT happen.

      @ebbyc1817@ebbyc1817 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ebbyc1817 I love artisan sourdough. There are two places on Frankfurt were I get it (occasionally) 7€ for 700g!!

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @Matthias - the variety of milk you get in England is much better too. When we lived in Frankfurt, I'd buy our milk from the Kleinmarkthalle, because you could get the good stuff. If I even considered using UHT for my girlfriend's coffee, I'd be six feet under. That stuff is for emergencies only.

      @peterbrown6224@peterbrown6224 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ebbyc1817 Ah yes, Bread/Rolls prices... they mostly went sky high fairly recently, with the increase in Energy Costs. While I see a plain roll at the bakery cost about 50 cents now in places like Hamburg, bakeries in Aldi and Kaufland elwhere still have them at around 17 cents/pcs

      @GrouchyBear411@GrouchyBear411 Жыл бұрын
  • Recently I have had difficulties buying tomatoes and eggs at my local supermarket (Asda). Even my local Lidl ran out of eggs

    @pamelagartner3759@pamelagartner3759 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for sharing Pamela. I’d be interested to hear Where are you in the U.K.?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • the egg thing is also because of other effects like bird influenca and ... problems in Netherlands

      @nnjmbjl5415@nnjmbjl5415 Жыл бұрын
  • I do wish you'd visit a Marks & Spencer Food Hall. The quality is far better than in Tesco and other stores, whilst cheaper than in the extremely high quality Waitrose. They stock both organic and ordinary foods of all kinds, but sell only free range eggs and all meat is sourced from approved British sources. There are no Union flags anywhere and the staff are extremely helpful. Only big drawback is that many vegetables are imported from Spain, so if there's heavy rain in that country you can't find vegetables or salads. I go to Tesco for domestic cleaning products but only for food if M&S have none. Here in the centre of London we have lost major Tesco branches and have only one left. And there's no Aldi here either, although friends outside London tell me they use and like it.

    @alidabaxter5849@alidabaxter5849 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes I actually haven’t been in an M&S at all this time. I see them more as a department store than a supermarket which is why I didn’t include them. I find the big food halls are not so common and just in the larger cities but if I remember correctly there are quite a few in inner city London whereas, as you say thing a like Tesco and Morrisons have moved out to the suburbs.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • I live in Strasbourg and prices here are astronomical compared to the same/ similar product back home, uk.

    @oriel9347@oriel934710 ай бұрын
    • Interesting. I wonder if that is a recent development? I wouldn’t have expected it to be the case

      @britingermany@britingermany10 ай бұрын
  • Tegut still exists? I haven't seen it for a long time in Germany as a German

    @ScreamyBanana@ScreamyBananaАй бұрын
  • I heard about the "heat or eat" phrase in the UK. What about the costs for electricity, heat in the UK compared to Germany?

    @capricorn1970i@capricorn1970i Жыл бұрын
    • I haven’t looked into that. Partly because it’s so variable in Germany. I know people that change their electricity provider…a lot…so as to save money. I’m not one of them. I’ve had the same contract for over 7 years. I think the “heat or eat” headline is very catchy. It’s really talking about the poorest of the poor which you also have in Germany. Many old age pensioners also didn’t heat last winter so save on living costs. It is definitely tough as prices have really sky rocketed…but they have also in Germany. I suspect there is more than a little schadenfreude from the remainers

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany Ah, I guess comparison is really difficult!

      @capricorn1970i@capricorn1970i Жыл бұрын
  • I am a German and i buy what I like and what is good and I never look for the best price but the best product. For me and my family it has to be not only organic but although organic with a private sign of proof: 'Bioland', 'Naturland', 'Demeter' or 'Bioring'. All this are private cooperatives wich guarantee certain standarts above the European food law and even above the German food law. And what I see a lot in the last 2 years is that Germans start baking bred them self and planting vegetables and fruits much more often then before. cheers

    @grischakugelmann2660@grischakugelmann266010 ай бұрын
  • There is one thing you did not mention while comparing the two countries. Germany on average is quite a bit wealthier than the UK. When you look at GDP per capita and the Gini Index, which of course measures the spread of this wealth, Germany comes out ahead quite a bit. Currently Germany of course isnt doing that great being so dependant on Russian energy sources, but when you look at lets say, the last 10 years the average German consumer has a lot more to spend, somewhere between 10-20% id say, compared to the UK buyer.

    @ageoflove1980@ageoflove19809 ай бұрын
  • I just remembered....a mars bar was 15p. At least in the first Adrian Mole book.

    @qugart.@qugart.11 ай бұрын
    • Wow! Yeah that must have been a long time ago🤣

      @britingermany@britingermany11 ай бұрын
    • @@britingermany Adrian Mole first appeared over 40 years ago. He was thirteen and three quarter years old in 1981, which makes him approaching 57 years old. The 15p in 1981 would be about 56p now according to the Bank of England's inflation calculator. A single 51gm Mars bar in Tesco is 80p, although it has to be remembered that there was no VAT on such things in 1981. Thus that 56p would now be 67p. Of course, that's assuming the size has remained the same. A (possibly dubiously accurate) Internet search indicates that the average Mars bar in the 1980s was 49gm (compared to that 51gm Tesco one), although it did increase to 65gm in the 1990s. In any event, it appears Mars bars have increased in price at a higher rate than the CPI in the intervening years.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
  • I just spent the two Easter weeks in the UK and I pretty much made the same experience as you. I found some items to be a bit more expensive than in Germany (some fruit & veg) and others cheaper (books and clothes). I took my daughter for a traditional fry up in a greasy spoon in Covent garden and it was excellent quality food for a very cheap price. But that was the type of place I only know because I lived in London for almost 18 years. As an environmentalist, I do pay attention to where my food comes from. I made sure I bought Somerset apples and Somerset milk in Somerset, because it's silly to buy Pink Lady apples from New Zealand when you are in a traditional English apple growing county. And in Germany the equivalent is the `Regional' labelling, even if the advertising is a bit more discreet. I think outside football season, we would all feel a bit uncomfortable with the German flag being as in your face as the Union Jack.

    @juliambada@juliambada Жыл бұрын
    • 18 years in London? Wow that’s an achievement😉. Most people I know only manage a couple of years before it gets too intense. And yes I remember when I lived in the U.K. a long time ago it was quite hard to get British apples…most were from NZ or even South Africa I think. I think in this sense it’s good to focus more on local/regional stuff

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany Yes. I did not realise how anglicized I had become in those 18 years until I moved back to Germany. I really struggled at the beginning. Therefore it is very interesting to me to hear how you and other Brits get on in Germany. And how you feel when you visit the UK.

      @juliambada@juliambada Жыл бұрын
    • @@juliambada I can imagine. After a while things become second nature and you don’t realise that you’ve adapted.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for this video. Having been to England only twice I immediately got a grip on prices being pretty much the same or insignificantly more expensive as compared to Germany IF you know where to shop! Yes, there will be random places, which will sell products for ridiculous prices, unlike in Germany, where everything regardless of where you go will cost almost the same - the UK seems to have huge huge differences from store to store, from city to city. But taking that into account, saying that the UK is in general more expensive than Germany is simply false. I even found some things to be CHEAPER than in Germany, imagine that! A coffee with a 0.5 bottle of water on a GWR train will actually cost you less, than on a german ICE! And you'll never find breakfast as cheap as at Wetherspoons anywhere around! This really blew my mind, even though it was always clear to me, that breakfast in german cafés and restaurants is completely unjustifiably overpriced.

    @AZ-vv1rf@AZ-vv1rf9 ай бұрын
  • No doubt, Aldi and Lidl have disrupted the supermarkets in the U.K. not a bad thing. Aldi, in my opinion has done a better job at offering really good quality at amazing prices, whilst aligning itself with the sense of being a part of the U.K…the branding you talk about. Also, since the Brexit fiasco, I think a number of retailers are pulling at the national heartstrings, as evidenced in the Union Jack co- branding. It’s all about sales!

    @colinrenfrew48@colinrenfrew489 ай бұрын
    • Yes I think Aldi does have a great marketing team…they seem to know what they’re doing!

      @britingermany@britingermany9 ай бұрын
  • I think what is missed here is that German salaries are higher on average

    @ZackYounguk@ZackYounguk11 ай бұрын
    • Fair enough👍🏻

      @britingermany@britingermany11 ай бұрын
  • You should compare Greggs to German bakeries :D. Greggs is cheaper than actually buying ingredients yourself.

    @manbok2035@manbok203511 ай бұрын
  • You mention rationing] but there definitely is some truth to there being shortages of certain products. This has been going on for over a year now. I could name numerous products which have been out of stock for months. At the moment you can't get hold of incontinence products in Aldi and can only buy 'premium toothbrushes'. Should also mention that the UK has some of the cheapest food in Europe and has done for a while so the conclusion you reached is unsurprising. What I was really surprised by is just how high food prices are in France.

    @Talkathon408@Talkathon40810 ай бұрын
  • I can't tell much on the prices but i just moved back to the UK and have been ranting about how little organic produce there is in UK supermarkets. The health food aisles are much better in Germany and they are more health conscious. I am struggling to find any organic products in all the supermarkets here. I used to shop in Rewe, Hit und Tegut. They have an abundance of organic products across all lines. Their gluten free ranges are healthier and better too. In tesco and Morrisons here I could barely find any organic fresh produce let alone organic canned, tinned, jars or cosmetics. I do miss that in Germany. German sweets and pastries are lovely and not so sweet. Over in the UK, the cakes are ridiculously übersuess. All synthetic sugars and flavorings. I like how Germans use natural fruit, saure Sahne or custards to sweeten their patisserie products naturally.

    @CharlemagneProkopyshyn@CharlemagneProkopyshyn8 ай бұрын
    • Wow that must be so interesting for you to notice all those differences now while things are still fresh. I wonder how long it will take before you readjust and stop noticing the differences…

      @britingermany@britingermany8 ай бұрын
    • Organic food is not healthier. It's a complete myth.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
  • For me, the union jack isn't nationalist, it's about not increasing CO2 emissions by pointlessly shipping food around the world that can be produced here. For example I was horrified when I bought some apples and saw that they'd come from New Zealand, that's madness to be shipping apples so far When Britain has a perfect climate for growing apples.

    @Kie-7077@Kie-70777 ай бұрын
    • Apples are only imported from New Zealand when there are no significant British supplies. This is no accident. Apples are a seasonal fruit, and they only keep in cold storage for so long. As the seasons in New Zealand are pretty well the reverse of those in the UK, then apples are imported from that country (and others in the southern hemisphere) to fill the gaps when there are no British supplies. This is actually reflected in tariffs on imports where, unless there are special treaties, they are much higher during the period when British supplies are high than when they are low. Of course it does take energy to ship apples from the other side of the world, but of all methods of moving bulk products, shipping is by far the most energy efficient per ton-mile. That even includes things like rail.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
  • I was calling it RUH-ER for 3 years before someone skooled me!

    @uknikmartin@uknikmartin11 ай бұрын
  • So, a German supermarket chain has the guts to sell a Weltmeister cheese in the UK? Well, looking back at the last world championship in Qatar the English team was much closer to the title than the German team, meaning Aldi's forecasting capabilities aren't too bad I guess

    @sindbad8411@sindbad8411 Жыл бұрын
    • You are right, they should have called it Viermaliger Weltmeister, and if that Wembly goal didn't happen, it would have been Fünfmaliger. :P

      @Schnittertm1@Schnittertm1 Жыл бұрын
  • Ray-wuh for Rewe, maybe?

    @LaureninGermany@LaureninGermany Жыл бұрын
    • Haha yes let’s start a new trend Lauren 🤣👍🏻

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany my parents once visited Bayreuth and kept saying Beirut… 🤣

      @LaureninGermany@LaureninGermany Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@britingermany like the following it should be easy to say easily REWE: at ...we think at west and say the we just short (like in west), and the Re say longer: Reeewe(st)

      @nnjmbjl5415@nnjmbjl5415 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@LaureninGermany The difference is minor😂

      @arnodobler1096@arnodobler1096 Жыл бұрын
    • OmG! I was also very confused when I first heard that

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • He missed out the most important difference which is the Pfand machine for returning bottles and cans to collect a deposit receipt which is then deducted from your next shopping bill. This thing he has about the Union Jack flag on food products is irritating to listen to. Yes, British cheese in Aldi's may have a UK flag on it. But the German sausages have a German flag, the French cheese a French flag and Belgian pate a Belgian flag. In Ireland they have an Irish flag on their food products. In Wales they have a Welsh flag and in Scotland they have the Scottish flag. And yet he has this chip on his shoulder about seeing the Union Jack on food products. In 2022, I used supermarkets in Lubeck, Berlin, Nuremburg and Augsburg. The prices were very good, particularly compared to the outrageous food prices in Denmark and France. But during most of 2022 fuel prices were being subsidised by the government. When this ended in October all of the fuel prices shot up and may be passed on to food prices. Alcohol prices really come down to tax regime of the country rather than the cost of poroducing the drink.

    @stevo728822@stevo72882211 ай бұрын
    • It’s not a chip on my shoulder it’s just an observation. And it was a “culture shock” as you don’t see that in Germany or if there is a flag it is tiny…it could have been ramped up for the coronation but I think especially in Aldi it is a normal everyday thing

      @britingermany@britingermany11 ай бұрын
    • And I have mentioned Pfand machines so often…obviously you a new but it gets boring for regular viewers after a while

      @britingermany@britingermany11 ай бұрын
  • There used to be that "quality" seal for German produce "Aus deutschen Landen frisch auf den Tisch", which German farmers were actually forced to pay for, whether they wanted to or not. Even with that slogan, the circumlocution "aus deutschen Landen" instead of "aus Deutschland" feels significant. Notoriously, there was that Nazi propaganda slogan "Deutsche, kauft bei Deutschen!", implying, of course, that Jews were not to be considered German.

    @th60of@th60of Жыл бұрын
    • Ok yes I assumed it had fairly recent negative connotations

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Same reason why Germans feel uneasy saying positive things about Germany, if we do, we make ourselves open to criticism from the right of the spectrum @@britingermany

      @sylviaderby3822@sylviaderby382211 ай бұрын
  • You are right that grocery prices undergo dramatic changes these days, and there still seem to be problems with supply chains here in Germany, so some supermarkets are again publicly thinking about rationing (and more so, as can be assumed, in secret). edit: As you mentioned demeter, I don't buy from them. They may have good organic produce, but I don't like their philosophical background.

    @eisikater1584@eisikater1584 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes I’m sure things will continue to change. I don’t think we’ve felt the full effects of the lockdowns yet let alone the repercussions of sanctioning Russia…maybe starting a vegetable garden on the balcony would be a good idea…

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany I'm not an economist and not very much into politics, but I'm convinced that a society that relies on everlasting growth can't survive in the long run. So I find the British signs in Aldi "Made in Britain" a good thing. I also have a look at the signs when I buy fruit and vegetables, and, yeah, "produce of Spain", alright, it's the EU, so why not. But onions from New Zealand, what the ...? Is there an onion island I don't about? And, yes, sanctioning Russia was a big mistake, especially with respect to German history. We had one chance in history to be a mediator for a peace treaty, and we blew it.

      @eisikater1584@eisikater1584 Жыл бұрын
    • @@eisikater1584 I do remember (when I Stil lived in England) that the apples would often come from new Zealand and the apple juice from South Africa. I never understood the logic behind this so I do also see at least this development as a positive one

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Bei uns sollte man bei Teigwaren nur eine Packung pro Haushalt kaufen

    @christinamotzer174@christinamotzer174 Жыл бұрын
    • Wo ist das?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Es war am Anfang des Ukraine-Kriegs, in Stuttgart

      @christinamotzer174@christinamotzer174 Жыл бұрын
    • @@christinamotzer174 ahhh ok. Wow!

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • You cant get milk, real millk, at any price in Geralot.😊

    @markrussell4682@markrussell468211 ай бұрын
  • The question that arose for me: Do you think this emphasis on British Produced Food is in any way linked to Brexit? After all, Britain has cut the lines to stuff coming from Europe. And from what I hear there are fears that the new trade agreements Britain has made/joined may bring lower quality produce (and products) into the country. So, I could very easily see a link between these facts and the, as you say, "moral" but perhaps also defensive way of emphasizing British Produce (or any British Made product, really).

    @pfalzgraf7527@pfalzgraf7527 Жыл бұрын
    • I think it has intensified since Brexit but it was always more extreme in this way than Germany. Even though it is quite a materielaistic society there has now been for a long time a real focus on regional/local/sustainable etc…maybe even more of a focus than in Germany

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany That is an interesting change. Good to know! (haven't been to Britain in ages)

      @pfalzgraf7527@pfalzgraf7527 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm British and can't really compare to Germany (or anywhere else), but I can give you the long-term British perspective. Which is that there may be some slight extra attempt to sell a kind of "national solidarity" with the British/Union Jack labelling in the last few years post-Brexit, but I think this is very marginal. To me, emphasising the British origin of products has always been much more of an attempt to suggest quality than anything nationalistic (And this type of labelling far pre-dated Brexit. It was the same when I was a kid back in the 80s). I think the British origin label has traditionally been used by supermarkets to give customers an assurance that: 1. it's high quality food to eat (since this is the perception of British customers) 2. it's been produced in a high quality regime (good animal welfare standards, regulations on food processing and farming chemicals, environmental policies and such) Food from abroad didn't mean these things would automatically be worse, but you just couldn't be sure about every other country. For some customers this would even be a particularly important and deliberate point of principle, for something like animal welfare. So the "British" logo is used as a reassurance of a known quality standard (at least in the customer's mind). If there's an attempt to give money to national farmers instead of foreign ones, I think this might be a factor for some British customers, but my sense is that it's nowhere near as important as the point about quality. (Also "air miles" might be a thing for some people, avoiding long transport chains for environmental reasons, but this is a much more recent worry.)

      @zak3744@zak374410 ай бұрын
    • "After all, Britain has cut the lines to stuff coming from Europe" No it hasn't, and that is complete nonsense. You only have to look at where the food actually comes from in UK supermarkets to see that.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
  • so you went shopping in brighton? oh, what a pitty! right place, wrong time.... ren is in canada, right now... you could have seen him busking in the streets.... i hope, you got a chance to see - and listen - to some good stuff. if i had to choose a weekend in london for the opera or going to brighton beach busking, this would be a very hard decision to be made! 🙂

    @susanneostermann6956@susanneostermann6956 Жыл бұрын
    • I must admit I had to look up who ren was. There was quite a bit of live music and people jamming on the beach

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany hope, you like his art.... even, if the first song might not do for you, give it a second try with something else, he is completly out of the box, his music goes deep and sometimes needs some time to think about. if you like it easier, try his band "the big push", they paused busking when ren went to canada for health reasons. i hope, they will reunited. 🙂

      @susanneostermann6956@susanneostermann6956 Жыл бұрын
  • You don’t drink much wine?

    @depeche242@depeche2427 ай бұрын
    • No not really…I don’t drink much alcohol in general

      @britingermany@britingermany7 ай бұрын
  • Cheap food is coming from people, prefering to buy the cheapest option available. So discounters are ruling the country by price. Maybe Germans and Brits are very similiar, to have more a preference on price and are not willing to pay anything extra for quality. Milk is Milk. This gives high competition and low food prices, lower than in France or Italy at least.

    @holger_p@holger_p11 ай бұрын
    • Milk is a bad example as a simple commodity given that in France UHT milk is about 95% of the market, whilst that isn't the case in the UK where it has to be distributed refrigerated - a practice which some want to ban in the interests of reducing CO2 emissions.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
    • @@TheEulerID It's the most homogenous product I could imagine. Maybe we switch to butter instead ? If more people only buy the cheapest of the cheap, producers less likely raise the price. Price sensibility is higher, while in France it's more quality sensibility. They are willing to pay 10% more, for a 10% better product. While a German is unable to notice a 10% better product, they are less sensible.

      @holger_p@holger_p3 ай бұрын
    • @@holger_p I don't know about Germany, but in the UK at least, there are a range of supermarkets with widely different prices. Waitrose, for instance, is a very different place to Aldi. Even the mid-range will usually have two or three different quality offerings aimed at different market sectors. As far as Aldi and Lidl are concerned, then much of their cost saving model is based on carrying a much more limited number of stock lines and minimising overheads, avoiding national brands and so on rather than necessarily compromising quality. Of course that is not true in all areas. Both carry far more bakery lines of better quality in Germany than they do in the USA or the UK (although Lidl do try harder in that respect in the UK than Aldi). In any event, there is an important factor in that not everybody can afford premium foods.

      @TheEulerID@TheEulerID3 ай бұрын
    • @@TheEulerID I was more talking about the reverse. Millionaires shop at Aldi, and something like "premium food" does not exists in shops. For something like a lobster you go to a fancy restaurant. And even normal supermarkets offer things in the price range of Aldi, not to loose customers to them. Something like bakeries, also butchers is still a subject to craft shops. Real bakeries, like 100 years ago. Saving money is so much in genes of germans, it generates lowest food prices in europe. Actually it's the reason why Lidl and Aldi had this inspiration to fight for each cent on each product.' And their first strategy was, to produce everything themselves, and sell it non-branded. And the sold from the forklifter, without putting products in a shelf, for a long time. Germans are just smart enough to understand, any service will result in higher prices, that's why there is no demand for service. They don't want to pay for it.

      @holger_p@holger_p3 ай бұрын
  • are the british really paying more for more quality or more "patriotic" food? This advertisement is an outcome of brexit. In germany it would be very curious to put german flags on every shelf around.

    @minimax9452@minimax9452 Жыл бұрын
    • No it actually doesn’t cost more than food form elsewhere, it’s just encouragement to choose British over foreign food

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • We always had buy British and the various British flags on our foods, long before Brexit. Like in Germany there is made in Bayern or Künstengold promoting regional products.

      @LaureninGermany@LaureninGermany Жыл бұрын
    • In France its similar.

      @amanda7549@amanda7549 Жыл бұрын
  • That's interesting. Maybe inflation really is just changing everything. I always felt my shopping in the UK to be cheaper and better quality overall. I was a predominantly Tesco and Lidl shopper in the UK, and Lidl (UK) always had excellent prices, and Tesco was often a bit more expensive, but it really has everything! Here in Germany, I overwhelmingly shop at Penny or Aldi, and it feels much more expensive just for basic things, with much less choice. It's honestly a bit dispiriting sometimes 😅. In the UK, I never felt the need to buy Bio/organic because the normal quality was so good. Here in Germany, I buy fruit and veg which normally taste like nothing! And another German challenge is that if you want to buy something not carried by your local discounter, then you have to go to a very expensive, very out of the way, specialist shop (or Tegut / Rewe). As a vegetarian, the absence of a wide selection of *cheap* fake meat is also very noticeable. It's really cheap to eat well as a vegetarian in the UK. Brands like Quorn are sorely missed here. Veggie mince meat, for instance, costs about 4* the price I would pay in the UK, and that makes me seriously sad.

    @ElliotShayle@ElliotShayle Жыл бұрын
    • Wow that is a perspective I haven't heard before. I think most people would say the quality of food is better in Germany. I would agree with veggie/vegan products, I think this is culturally more developed in the UK than Germany

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany Well I'm going back to the UK again next week, so I'll do another comparison! I also like to bring back all my favourite canned foods from the UK, as Germany has almost no variety in their canned veggie food. Admittedly German (non-bio) vegetables are still decent, but my experience of regular fruit in Germany is much worse. Z.B. I've never seen shrivelled up passion fruits being sold in the UK, but here in Germany, it's the norm!

      @ElliotShayle@ElliotShayle Жыл бұрын
  • wow that was weired... i already wondered why you dont upload new content after quiet a while so i checked and remarked that somehow youtube unsubscribed me... you may should look into that greetings from aschaffenburg

    @bendjohans3863@bendjohans3863 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks a lot for checking in😀. I can’t really do anything about that KZhead does what it wants 🤣. Only about 8% of people who watch my videos are subscribed…and most of my subscribers don’t watch my videos 🤷🏼‍♂️🤣

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany :) well that seems to be normal for most youtube content creators but somehow youtube is somtimes bitchy about kicking people from subscriptions without letting them know, usually that happened before with channels like redacted and similar thats why i wondered that it happened with your channel... on one suggestion , if you want to gain more followers you might should start making shorts, content shorter than 3 minutes as they are consumed fastly by a large number of people and that way you can harvest subscriptions lot faster keep up the good work and have a lovely spring time

      @bendjohans3863@bendjohans3863 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bendjohans3863 thanks a lot😀. Yeah I tried out shorts but I really do not enjoy making them and I don’t watch them myself not really my format…but I know some people are killing it with them

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany oh you dont really need to *make * them just take some fun short part out of one of your existing videos.. you come up with a catching title and than hand out the answer or solution to the title in the short film, a few content creators i meet so far make most of their earnings that way as with a catching title you can get many many views fastly and usually that creates likes too

      @bendjohans3863@bendjohans3863 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bendjohans3863 haha if only it were that easy.😀

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • I would like to know if Berixt is really causing changes in a ppls lifes. We hear so many bad things about GB. Like healthcare or poverty.

    @amanda7549@amanda7549 Жыл бұрын
    • This is such a difficult question to answer. For one thing the Pandemic was really severe here. The lockdowns lasted 3-4 months longer than in Germany and that was brutal. The war and inflation are still playing a large role. On top of that the Media is dominated by the left who were pretty much all remainers. That’s why there are a lot of “I told you so stories” going around. I think Brexit is a great scapegoat but it’s way more complicated than that…for example the narrative that the NHS is on the Brink of collapse has been going on ever since I can remember (so at least 30 years). I think with everything there are winners and loosers but the fact that prices are rising can’t be pinned to Brexit. There are too many other factors involved. Time will tell

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Probably.I agree 100%. Sometimes i m just missing that there aren t more european news. Or tv stations like ARTE for other countries.

      @amanda7549@amanda7549 Жыл бұрын
    • @@amanda7549 yeah that’s true. It’s a bit Insular news wise

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@britingermany I'm a bit surprised by your statement that the media were mainly left leaning. The Times, Sun, Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, Daily Express ... I thought that they were all leaning to the conservatives. But I need to admit that I have no idea about their circulation in comparison to Guardian, Independent and Observer. And I don't know how influential those national newspapers are compared to regional or local ones. The latter ones in Germany tend to be more conservative in general (Frankfurter Rundschau is quite exceptional in that regard). BTW, wouldn't that be an interesting topic for a video: a comparison of media in the UK and in Germany ?

      @michaelburggraf2822@michaelburggraf2822 Жыл бұрын
    • @@michaelburggraf2822 Indeed it could be😉. I also meant the distribution of news on sites such as facebook, Instagram and KZhead which are all pretty left leaning.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • This whole video didn't really do a comprehensive investigation. More of a weird opinion piece about some very selected product prices, kinda disappointed watching.

    @MegaCooliam@MegaCooliam11 ай бұрын
    • Sorry to hear that you were disappointed…I chose milk, cheese and carrots as I thought these are things most people buy. Of course I could have included eggs, flour butter and meat but I like to keep the videos short and succinct. I generally talk about cultural and social differences which is what really interests me.

      @britingermany@britingermany11 ай бұрын
  • I don't know where this rumor or clichee comes from that British supermarkets would be more expensive than Germans? Maybe because tourists compared a Morrisons from the expensive London with a German Aldi. Up to C0vid me and my friend found UK was MUCH cheaper. But this depends a lot on what products you by (my British friends cook 90% with fresh food...). And vegetables etc can be rediculous expensive in Germany

    @nnjmbjl5415@nnjmbjl5415 Жыл бұрын
    • I wouldn’t say it is much cheaper. But it’s not accurate to say that Supermarket prices are cheaper in Germany than in the U.K. anymore.

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Ireland is dearer then germany

    @krugerfuchs@krugerfuchs Жыл бұрын
  • Interesting, but you don't pronounce Aldi and Lidl properly. I initially thought you were a learner of English. That is NOT how "Aldi" and "Lidl" are pronounced in the UK.

    @disappointedenglishman98@disappointedenglishman9813 күн бұрын
    • But did you know that Aldi and Lidl are German? I am pronouncing it as it should be said in German.

      @britingermany@britingermany13 күн бұрын
  • I'm not nor will I ever be a Hello Fresh subscriber, on top of which, I am a wholefood plant based ethical vegan, who buys primarily from Aldi, as it is the cheapest AND the best value for money. What I can't buy there, I get from Lidl. I suspect that you confused Tesco Metro (the overpriced convenience store, akin to the Co-op convenience store, which is equally and grossly overpriced) with the original but now out of town only Tesco supermarket. Yes, the shelves were hugely empty but now they have overcome that by only stocking them with twice as much of one item. This is still a stocking filler strategy, as many items are still out of stock, and we bulk buy when they are. Certain item that were cheap are now expensive, so I stopped buying them and buy cheaper alternatives. I suspect that if the price of oats has remained the same, that many supermarkets are artificially overpricing their products and blaming the current economic crisis. Aldi wonky carrots are ca 60p /1.5 kgs. Tesco Metro target shoppers are predominantly gullible university students too lazy to economize. The only label that matters to me is the VEGAN symbol, and nothing else, other than the nutrition traffic lights. I never notice flags etc, as ethics and health are my priorities.

    @awizenwoman@awizenwoman Жыл бұрын
    • I wonder where you are living? They are definitely not double stacking in the south of England, where I currently am, or the midlands where my parents live.Obviously it depends a little bit on the time of day you go there. If you go in the morning then the shelves are full. If you go just before closing not so much...and no I went to the Tesco megastore in Brighton which was huge...they had the Aldi Price guarantee labels all over the place but actually only a handful of products met that requirement otherwise they are significantly more expensive than Aldi.And regarding the last point you don't think where your food comes from is an ethical question?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Darn I just deleted my own comment

    @awizenwoman@awizenwoman Жыл бұрын
    • 🤣I think it is still there...or did you rewrite it?

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
  • Hello Fresch, it's. Disgusting!

    @thorstent2542@thorstent25425 ай бұрын
  • British products do not display the Union Jack but the Union Flag and I would have thought that you as a Swiss born Brit should know the difference, Two years ago I was the last time in Germany and the prices then were substantially cheaper there than here in the UK. I buy most of my food from Polish shops as the quality is much better., Meat, for instance, hasn't any water added like they do quite legally in supermarkets and even ALDI and Lidl do that.

    @hanshartfiel6394@hanshartfiel6394 Жыл бұрын
    • We all said Union Jack for years and I doubt I will say flag, even if I‘m on dry land. Union Flag sounds very strange to me, political correctness style.

      @LaureninGermany@LaureninGermany Жыл бұрын
    • I am an English born Brit actually and I don’t know where you got the idea that the Union Flag is correct?! They are used interchangeably. I think two years ago Germany was cheaper however it seems to have now caught up…at least with groceries

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • @@britingermany Sorry but I seem to remember that you mentioned in one of your videos that you were born in Switzerland. And to the Union Jack, that is the name for the flag flown on ships of the Royal Navy but this is an easy mistake to make like folks call the tower at the houses of Parliament "Big Ben" when it fact the tower is called the Elizabeth Tower and the bell at the top is Big Ben

      @hanshartfiel6394@hanshartfiel6394 Жыл бұрын
    • @@hanshartfiel6394 I am half Swiss but I wasn’t born there😉. Not that it really matters but seeing as you brought up there is no official answer the point regarding the Union Jack…there are those, like yourself who insist there is a difference and then there are those who use it interchangeably…🤷🏼‍♂️

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
    • Totally! That’s what I wanted to say. It just sounds wrong

      @britingermany@britingermany Жыл бұрын
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