Cooking · 2025-12-25
Food Anthropologist 1978 (美食人类学家1978)

Over-55 Costco Shoppers Have a Secret Food List — Are They Smarter Than the Rest of Us?

55岁以上Costco顾客竟有一份秘密食物清单——他们比我们更懂消费?

Over-55 Costco Shoppers Have a Secret Food List — Are They Smarter Than the Rest of Us?
www.eatthis.com

55岁以上人群在Costco不只是在买食物,而是在执行一种历经几十年锤炼的生存策略。这些不是冲动消费,而是用大包装封存的世代智慧。

看看牛肩肉和Rao牌意面酱吧——它们不只是食物,而是可食用的退休计划。而千禧一代还在争论牛油果吐司。到底谁才是赢家?

评论 (7)
Retired CPA Who Cooks (退休会计师兼家庭主厨)
Gen Z Snack Enthusiast (Z世代零食狂热粉)
Okay, boomer. Not all of us can afford a 5-pound tub of sour cream. I’m just trying to survive on boba and instant ramen.

行了,老一辈。不是人人都买得起5磅重的酸奶油。我只想靠珍珠奶茶和速食拉面活下去。

Logistics Mom 2024 (2024精算妈妈)
They forget the real MVP: the $4.99 chicken dinner. Feed a family of four, freeze half, and still come out ahead. That’s math they don’t teach in school.

大家忘了真正的MVP:4.99美元的烤鸡套餐。四口之家够吃,还能冻一半,怎么算都划算。这才是学校没教的数学。

Urban Millennial Renter (都市千禧一代租客)
Y’all have freezers. I have a mini-fridge next to my hot plate. Bulk buying is a privilege.

你们有冰箱冷冻室。我只有一个连着电热炉的小冰箱。批量采购是一种特权。

Economics Nerd at Large (自由行走的经济学宅男)
What we’re seeing is intergenerational cost-benefit analysis. Pre-1985 brains are optimized for scarcity; post-2000s brains for convenience. Both rational — just different risk profiles.

我们正在见证代际间的成本效益分析。1985年前出生的大脑适应稀缺,2000年后的大脑适应便利。两者都理性,只是风险偏好不同。

Bakery Devotee Since 1995 (自1995年起的烘焙死忠粉)
None of you are talking about the elephant in the room: the $1.50 slice of cheesecake. That’s not food — that’s emotional support in dairy form.

没人提到房间里的大象:那块1.5美元的芝士蛋糕。那不是食物——那是乳制品形态的情感支持。

Skeptical Soylent Kid (怀疑主义的代餐少年)
Y’all do realize some of this ‘wisdom’ is just because they own single-family homes with basements full of freezers, right?

你们有没有意识到,你们说的‘智慧’,其实只是因为他们住独栋带地下室,里面塞满了冰箱?