CTBoss wrote:Some advice...take the music off your website. I HATE opening a site and music automatically plays. I don't care how great the music is.
Darren72 wrote:Jim, I've always been a bit curious about Restaurant Depot also. But my understanding is that you need a reseller permit to buy there. Is this true? (Maybe you have one?)
jimswside wrote:Darren72 wrote:Jim, I've always been a bit curious about Restaurant Depot also. But my understanding is that you need a reseller permit to buy there. Is this true? (Maybe you have one?)
yes, you need either a tax id number or a tax exempt number to buy there. The prices I have seen look really good
I just got my Illinois tax ID number last week for a BBQ venture I am starting so I am finally good to go.
swine dining wrote:I've purchased a lot of the bone-in butts from RD in the past. They're just fine for bbq, available cryovacced in 2-packs or by the case. They seem to average 10-12 lbs., and have nice fat caps. Back ribs (also cryovac) are trimmed nicely and are meaty. I've also purchased flank steak (decent) and skirt (needed a lot of cleaning up).
You can find bags of Royal Oak lump charcoal cheap cheap. Some other things that are good bargains at Restaurant Depot that you don't have to buy by the case or giant can/jar are butter (generic and Plugra), milk, buttermilk, kosher salt, turbinado sugar, regular sugar, pork tenderloins, some hot sauces, some types of rice (I think Thai jasmine and basmati came in 10 lb., as opposed to 50 lb. sacks), and frozen shrimp.
It's been a few months since I've last been to RD, so prices of course may have changed. The Lombard store recently started carrying El Milagro homestyle/totopo chips which I used for my pulled pork nachos. Saved me a trip to the El Milagro factory.
Have fun!
grace
Cathy2 wrote:
If you are using the food for yourself and not reselling the food purchased, you are still responsible for paying taxes.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
If you buy for the business for development, it is taxable.
If you buy product for resale, it is not taxable because you collect tax from the end-user.
Looking forward to hearing more about your business venture.
Regards,
jimswside wrote:I am just starting a small part time BBQ catering business(keeping my day job)
Vital Information wrote:Not everything here is a bargain, but as noted, much is. I second the rec's for the gulf shrimps and the royal oak charcoal. In the seafood/fish area, the whitefish is excellent. I have not purchased the dry pack scallops, but the price is very, very good.
jimswside wrote:My mistake was I went when I was kind of in a rush, and an hour before they closed, I really didnt have the time to wander around, and check it out more. The selection is kind of overwhelming, kind of a sensory overload for a person who loves to shop for groceries, and cook.
happy_stomach wrote:
Me, too. I shopped at the Chicago location for the first time last week. We got there literally 15 minutes before closing. I didn't get to see much more than the 50 lbs of duck we bought (3 whole ducks and 2 boxes of duck leg quarters), but I was very happy with the ease of retrieving the items and prices. I wish I had more opportunity to shop at RD.
jimswside wrote:happy_stomach wrote:
Me, too. I shopped at the Chicago location for the first time last week. We got there literally 15 minutes before closing. I didn't get to see much more than the 50 lbs of duck we bought (3 whole ducks and 2 boxes of duck leg quarters), but I was very happy with the ease of retrieving the items and prices. I wish I had more opportunity to shop at RD.
I saw the duck and was tempted, let me know how it turned out.
jimswside wrote:This stuff isnt organic, or any other of the trendy buzzwords that some seem pre-occupied with, but it is good, and affordable for working class, family folks who dont have $$$ to waste/burn
dddane wrote:jimswside wrote:This stuff isnt organic, or any other of the trendy buzzwords that some seem pre-occupied with, but it is good, and affordable for working class, family folks who dont have $$$ to waste/burn
I'm confused why you think the organic and other "buzzwords" (i assume you would be putting free range, humanely treated, hormone free, grass fed into some sort of buzzword silo) is a waste of money, or for that matter why working class families shouldn't be entitled to it? I think in a few years you'll find that these words aren't "trendy" but rather a mainstay that as long as 3 or 4 companies are controlling our entire meat supply, are desirable by many and won't be going away any time soon. Some people would prefer a
since nobody else has really said it... Restaurant Depot's meats are everything that's wrong w/ our food system in America. Restaurants who shop there go there looking for the cheapest stuff money can buy, and end up buying boxes of ammonia soaked ground beef.. because hey, it's a good deal right?
I would actually put some of Costco's meats at a higher quality than RD's, even though as someone else pointed out the selection is more limited at Costco.