Tuesday, April 29, 2008

My Vienna :: My grocery store

And here's the next installment of a look around my daily life. Today's topic is grocery stores. I generally shop at two stores: Merkur and Lidl.

merkur 1

Lidl


Merkur is pretty similar to grocery stores in the U.S. -- a large selection of products, wide aisles, bright lights. In fact, when my family was visiting last month, I heard my mom tell my dad that the store was "just like Albertson's."

Lidl, on the other hand, is a bit different. The environment is kind of like a warehouse store, but it's much, much smaller. Here, I'll show you.

Lidl 2


This is the entire width of the store. All together, the store has six aisles in the back half and five aisles in the front half. You'll only find your basic food needs here and mostly off-brand products. But the cost is much lower than Merkur.

And even though they don't have a large selection of items, they do have some rather unusual things. There are two rows of bins that stretch the length of the store and each week new items show up in the bins. Take a look.

Lidl 1


Sorry for the poor photos. I was trying to be inconspicuous with my camera.

Often, the items in the bins are seasonal. For example, during the winter you could find coats, ski pants, boots, snow shoes, and even ice skates. And now that spring is here, you'll find all kinds of gardening equipment, home improvement supplies, springtime clothing, and outdoor games. I always enjoy browsing through the bins even though I've never bought anything from them. (Not at this store anyways.)

One more interesting thing about Lidl -- and grocery stores here in general -- is that there is a lot of space dedicated to candy. Even though Lidl is tiny, they still have half an aisle of candy. And it's the only aisle that has primarily brand-name products.

One of the most unusual things about the grocery stores is that you have to pay a deposit for the shopping cart. The carts are chained together and when you put a coin into the blue box on the handle, the chain pops out from the back of the blue box. When you return the cart and stick the chain back into the blue box, your coin pops out.

shopping cart


Despite the deposit system -- and the signs that say you can be fined for removing the carts from the property -- it's pretty common to find grocery carts like this:

runaway cart


The other day I noticed someone who had three grocery carts in front of their house -- all from different stores. Somehow people figure out how to get their coins out without returning the cart.

A few more interesting things about grocery stores in Vienna:
  • You have to provide your own shopping bags or purchase bags from the store and you have to bag your own groceries.
  • Another interesting thing about the shopping cart, all four wheels can pivot (unlike the U.S. carts where only the front two wheels pivot). This is nice when you want to move your cart sideways, but it means you can't really pull the cart from the front end. I learned that the hard way while nearly taking out a whole shelf of bottles.
  • There's really no such thing as one-stop-shopping. Sometimes you have to go to a certain store to find a certain item. Take cooking spray (like Pam) for example. I've only found it at one grocery chain even though other stores carry other products by the same brand.
  • Organic and fair trade products are much more prevalent here than in the U.S. (or at least in Oklahoma).

4 comments:

Candace said...

I love those little shopping carts. We pushed ours home one time while we were in England and it was in front of our house for a few days and then I suppose someone wanted our pound because one day it was just gone. Also, that little store reminds me of Aldi's. I love that place.

Alisha said...

I've checked several of the carts I see on the street and I've never seen money in them. I don't know how people get the money out.

Lidl is a lot like Aldi. We have Aldi here as well, but it's called Hofer. Apparently "Aldi" is too German-sounding, which I find strange since Austria is a German-speaking country. (Aldi is a German company.) I think that Zielpunkt -- the place where I took the photo of the shopping carts -- may also be a German store. It's called Plus in Germany.

Unknown said...

I think I might have wandered into a Lidl near Sudbahnhoff once while walking home when someone decided to commit U-Bahn-assisted suicide and the trains all stopped running. It seemed huge to me because I was used to a tiny little Julius Meinl and a Billa down on Keplerplatz. I didn't even know that they had something like Merkur in Vienna--I figured it was all bodega-y places like we had in our neighborhood.

Alisha said...

Gina - I think a lot has changed since your last visit to Vienna. Maybe it's time for another visit.