View Full Version : Bulk Buying Rice
Anyone got any contacts or info on buying rice in bulk, i'm looking at about 120-200kg of it, maybe more if it's a good price and quality rice.
I usually by my rice from Costco but it's shot up and there's a group of people i know trying to get hold of some for food storage so we could all buy in bulk whihc will hopefully reduce costs for everyone.
Thought and advice appreciated
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 11:49
The aisan an' chinese markets here in Cardiff have HUGE sacks o' rice.....want me t' get some prices tony?
I'm not sure what a good price for rice is. I sometimes use the site below to look at supermarket prices. There's a couple of offers on Basmati rice in Tesco - is £1 a kg cheap or not?
http://www.madaboutbargains.co.uk/offers/view.htm?searchtext=rice&searchtype=1
Or as the Cap'n says, have a look on Tudor Street.
Toadflax
27-11-2009, 11:54
I'd also suggest finding a Chinese supermarket. No use to you, but there's one in Oxford that sells big sacks of rice, so I guess if you can find one over there then they may well do the same.
Prices should be cheaper than British supermarkets. I got a bag of about 200 dried red chilis there for £1 last week.
Geoff
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 11:57
lol...I live just around the corner o' tudor st.:)
Yes please Cap'n that would be appreciated :D
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 12:04
No probz boss...just on the way out t' town now anyway....I'll post prices in about an' hour o' so.
British Red
27-11-2009, 12:47
Theres a good English store now doing the proper mylar and O2 absorbers for bulk rice storing if its of interest Tony - I can bung a ling if you want?
Red
bulk rice - not problem you could buy it by the tonne here in Bradford.
Seriously, every Asia supermarket sells it by at least 25kg sacks.
wolf man
27-11-2009, 13:20
If you check out the Indian shops (particularly the larger ones) you can usually buy sack of 25kg from about £16 up to £35 depending on quality of rice.
I tend to buy the cheaper bags, and have tried the more expensive ones, and to be honest, can't tell the difference.
It works out cheaper than Tesco's or the other supermarkets can manage.
There are often Asian cash and carry stores around (plenty near me but I'm a long way from where you are). These work out pretty cheap and if you're buying enough they generally don't care about membership and other paperwork.
Bulk buy stores generally do 25kg sacks.
Theres a good English store now doing the proper mylar and O2 absorbers for bulk rice storing if its of interest Tony - I can bung a ling if you want?
Red
yeah, that would be good thanks Red;)
I can buy 50 tons at $.50 a kilo but it's a bit much :D
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 14:38
Ahoy commodore...
Tesco....£18.99 for 10kg...in comparison..
20kg - basmati £20
20kg - tilda £40
45kg - longrain £50
Local stores Cardiff
Hope it helps
Thanks mate, appreciated.
Cap'n was the basmati £20/20kg branded?
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 15:48
er...dunno mate....just asked the shop keeper..lol
Cap'n Badger
27-11-2009, 15:51
It'll be the rice all the asian peeps use here as it's a main supplier for our area..
British Red
27-11-2009, 16:18
yeah, that would be good thanks Red;)
http://www.theselfsufficiencyshop.co. uk/
Some really great self sufficiency and food preservation stuff - also stuff like 2 man crosscut saws etc.
Hope it helps - nice guy that runs it - very helpful - drop him a note if he hasn't got waht you need and tell him I sent you - he'll probably sort it
Red
The price of rice went up about 300% last year:eek:
There're a couple of indian and chinese bulk suppliers in Swanse.I'll get some prices for you.What rice do you want?
yes please sapper, just some general prices, i like basmati but if the price is right other types might sound more attractive :D
The price of rice went up about 300% last year:eek:
Does anyone know the reasoning for this massive increase?
I thought that with the advent of snorkel rice ( recent , i realise ) that future rice concerns would be diminshed.
Do you have a link to that article Rik.
wingstoo
28-11-2009, 09:36
Bad weather has caused shortages
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aMlMojVDQ_E8&pos=7
Nov. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Rice prices have nowhere to go but up as drought in India and cyclones in the Philippines cripple harvests, according to the world’s biggest importer and the top exporter.
Rice may double to more than $1,000 a metric ton as dry El Nino weather shrinks output and the Philippines and India boost imports, said Sarunyu Jeamsinkul, the deputy managing director at Asia Golden Rice Ltd. in Thailand (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=US42EXTH%3AIND), the largest exporting nation. Prices won’t peak until March, said Rex Estoperez (http://search.bloomberg.com/search?q=Rex+Estoperez&site=wnews&client=wnews&proxystylesheet=wnews&output=xml_no_dtd&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&filter=p&getfields=wnnis&sort=date:D:S:d1), a spokesman for the National Food Authority of the Philippines (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/quote?ticker=US42IMPH%3AIND), the biggest importer. The agency issued a record tender for 600,000 tons last week and today called for bids for the same volume on Dec. 8 to secure grain before prices rise.
Anyone got any contacts or info on buying rice in bulk, i'm looking at about 120-200kg of it, maybe more if it's a good price and quality rice.
I usually by my rice from Costco but it's shot up and there's a group of people i know trying to get hold of some for food storage so we could all buy in bulk whihc will hopefully reduce costs for everyone.
Thought and advice appreciated
:yikes:
And I'm chuffed when I manage to eat a 250 grams package of rice in a years time!!
There were also some small issues with rice that was contaminated and they had to destroy a load, not sure how much was affected though.
For storage they reckon that temperature counts for the most important thing other than being well sealed.
Infinity Foods in Brighton are a good source of organic stuff. My wife used to buy from them with a food group when she lived in Worthing.
They are certainly still trading as our local organics shop stocks a large range of their prouucts.
They had a minimum order requirement of £150-00 then and it may now be more but their ethics are good. Try a google for them, I'm sure it will come up trumps. Hope this helps.
Swyn.
I can buy 50 tons at $.50 a kilo but it's a bit much :D
Hmmm, Group buy?:)
Posting it may be an isssue.
he he, yeah, I could repackage it all, post it out and everyone would get it some time in the next year :D I'd go off rice that's for sure :rant:
I'll have a look at them Swyn, thanks for the info.
Graham_S
28-11-2009, 18:15
I'd have a look in the local market, but shipping costs might be a problem...
If you want to store rice, oats etc.. long term then it may be worth your while looking at the dry ice method that I saw on a Ron Hood DVD the other day. You get a pound of dry ice and a large 40-50 litre metal can with a top that can be screwed shut with a ring & bolt seal on the tope. You put a bin bag in the container, then add half the dry ice on a paper plate, before filling the container half full with bags of rice etc.. You then add the other half of dry ice on a paper plate, then fill up the other half. It's important to then leave the lid on the container but NOT screwed down overnight. What happens is the dry ice metls and fill the can up with CO2, thrus driving out all the oxygen & bugs, cant live in that environment. You then put on the lid, seal it with the ring that fixes the lid on in an airtight way & put the can where you want to keep it long term. Apparently someone buried some rice & oats for 40 years with this method & the food was as good as the day it went in. Worth looking at, although it is a bit survivalist... but thats probably the idea. It's something I will be giving a go when I get the time.