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20 grocery splurges we never feel guilty about

20 Grocery Splurges We Never Feel Guilty About

We are happy to save money on plenty of things at the grocery store. The plain rice is fine. The store-brand flour works. Nobody needs a luxury bottle of garlic powder.

But every shopper has a few categories where the budget mysteriously becomes more flexible. Sometimes the expensive version really does taste better. Sometimes it saves enough time to be worth every penny. These are the 20 grocery splurges we rarely regret.

white ceramic bowl with white liquid
Photo by Jess Bailey

20. The Good Butter

Most of the time, butter disappears into whatever we are cooking.

But when it is going directly onto warm bread, biscuits, pancakes, or a baked potato, we want the good stuff. Rich, flavorful butter can turn something incredibly simple into the thing everyone keeps eating.

a glass of orange juice on a wooden table
Photo by Sandie Peters

19. Freshly Squeezed Orange Juice

The price can make us hesitate.

Then we remember how much better freshly squeezed juice tastes than the version that has been sitting in the refrigerator for weeks. It is not an everyday purchase, but that first cold glass usually ends the argument.

sliced bread on brown wooden chopping board
Photo by Tommaso Urli

18. Really Good Bread

A great loaf can become half the meal.

Crusty sourdough, a proper baguette, or bread from a local bakery needs very little help beyond butter, cheese, or soup. We may pay more for it, but we are also much less likely to forget it in the back of the pantry.

Detailed close-up of an aged Parmigiano cheese block, showcasing texture and salt crystals.
Photo by Castorly Stock

17. Real Parmesan

The little green container has its uses.

But a wedge of Parmigiano Reggiano brings a salty, nutty flavor that can change pasta, risotto, soup, and roasted vegetables. Even the rind can go into a pot of soup, which is how we justify using every last bit.

A plate of strawberries sitting on a wooden bench
Photo by Artie Kostenko

16. Fresh Berries When They Are Perfect

We know berries can be expensive and unpredictable.

But when they are actually in season, fragrant, and perfectly ripe, we stop doing the math. A carton that disappears before it even makes it into a recipe was probably worth buying.

a pile of olives
Photo by Alexander Schimmeck

15. The Fancy Olives

A jar of basic olives is fine until you have tasted the ones from the good part of the deli.

Marinated with herbs, stuffed with cheese, or mixed with several varieties, they can make an ordinary snack plate feel much more interesting. We always buy slightly more than we think we need.

several pasta strips
Photo by Justino Sánchez

14. Fresh Pasta

Dried pasta is one of the greatest bargains in the grocery store.

Fresh pasta is a different experience. When dinner is simple and the pasta is the main event, paying more for tender ravioli, tortellini, or fresh noodles can feel completely reasonable.

a spoon is sitting in a bowl of red liquid
Photo by sidath vimukthi

13. The Better Vanilla Extract

Vanilla is one of those ingredients we barely notice until it is missing.

A good extract adds depth to cookies, cakes, pancakes, French toast, and countless other recipes. The bottle lasts long enough that we can usually convince ourselves the cost per teaspoon is perfectly sensible.

A person cutting a piece of cheese on a cutting board
Photo by Alyona Yankovska

12. Cheese From the Good Counter

Nobody has ever wandered over to the specialty cheese case because they were trying to save money.

A great aged cheddar, creamy Brie, funky blue, or unfamiliar imported cheese can become the reason we look forward to dinner. Sometimes the cheese is the occasion.

assorted fruits in plastic containers
Photo by White.Rainforest ™︎ ∙ 易雨白林.

11. Pre-Cut Fruit We Will Actually Eat

Yes, buying the whole pineapple is cheaper.

But the cheaper pineapple is not a bargain if it sits untouched until it becomes a guilt-inducing science experiment. If paying extra means the fruit actually gets eaten, we consider that money well spent.

a display case filled with lots of different types of chocolates
Photo by Marquise de Photographie

10. Good Chocolate

Cheap chocolate can satisfy a craving.

Great chocolate makes us slow down and pay attention. We would rather have a smaller amount of something rich and genuinely delicious than a drawer full of candy we keep eating without enjoying.

brown egg on white woven basket
Photo by Cara Beth Buie

9. The Nice Eggs

Egg prices have made this a more complicated splurge than it used to be.

Still, many shoppers are willing to pay extra for eggs based on farming practices, freshness, or simply the kind they prefer. When eggs are the center of the meal, the difference can feel easier to justify.

a person cutting food on a plate
Photo by Sherwin Ker

8. Fresh Seafood

Seafood is not the aisle where we want to make a decision based entirely on the lowest number.

When freshness and quality are obvious, we are willing to spend more and build the meal around it. A beautiful piece of fish or excellent shrimp needs very little else to become dinner.

orange tomatoes
Photo by Josephine Baran

7. The Expensive Tomatoes in Winter

Winter tomatoes can be deeply disappointing.

Sometimes we pay extra for the smaller, sweeter, better-looking ones because the cheapest option tastes like a memory of a tomato. If they are going into a salad or sandwich, we want to actually taste them.

a whole chicken is cooking on a grill
Photo by Sven Lippmann

6. The Prepared Food That Saves Dinner

We could make it ourselves.

We could also admit that it is 6:30, everyone is hungry, and nobody has started cooking. A good rotisserie chicken, prepared entrée, or deli side can cost more than cooking from scratch while still costing less than giving up and ordering delivery.

white ceramic mug on coffee beans
Photo by Raimond Klavins

5. Really Good Coffee

Coffee is too important to too many mornings to buy one we actively dislike.

Whether it comes from a local roaster or simply a favorite bag at the grocery store, this is one category where we understand brand loyalty. The cost gets easier to justify when we compare it with buying every cup at a coffee shop.

red apples on brown woven basket
Photo by engin akyurt

4. Fruit at the Absolute Peak of Its Season

There are peaches, and then there are August peaches.

The same is true of cherries, strawberries, figs, and other fruits that have a brief moment when they are almost impossibly good. We buy too many, eat them over the sink, and never regret it.

cooked meat on tray
Photo by Loija Nguyen

3. A Great Steak

If steak is the entire point of dinner, we do not want the one we already know will disappoint us.

We would rather buy it less often and choose a cut we are genuinely excited to cook. The rest of the meal can be potatoes and whatever vegetables are already in the refrigerator.

A person pouring a bottle of wine over a tray of food
Photo by Mitili Mitili

2. Extra Virgin Olive Oil We Actually Like

Not every dish needs the fanciest olive oil in the pantry.

But when it is going directly onto bread, tomatoes, salad, or finished pasta, flavor matters. A bottle we genuinely enjoy can make the simplest foods taste like we tried much harder.

Close-up of assorted spices and grains in metal bowls showcasing culinary variety.
Photo by Muhammed Salih Karabağ

1. The Ingredient That Makes Us Excited to Cook

This is the splurge that can justify almost anything.

Maybe it is an unusual mushroom, a beautiful piece of fish, a perfect cheese, or a spice we have never used before. If one ingredient sends us home genuinely excited to make dinner, we rarely feel guilty about putting it in the cart.

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