I just went to Wegmans for the first time ever - now I get what all the fuss is about
I asked to visit Wegmans this weekend, on a trip to the Pennsylvania Main Line. It's located off of Route 29 in Malvern, in a big shopping center.
I was not prepared to be won over by Wegmans.
I grew up close to Stew Leonard's in Danbury, Connecticut.
I love Stew Leonard's because it reminds me of my childhood. I assume the Wegmans super fans feel similarly about their beloved grocery store, so I was willing to keep an open mind.
Chiquita Banana is the best part of Stew Leonard's...but that's another post for another day. Back to Wegmans.
So I pulled in and was greeted by a castle-like building. The entire thing is Wegmans. Keeping in mind that most grocery stores in NYC are tiny (and the bigger ones like Whole Foods and Trader Joe's are impossibly crowded), I was excited to have a little wiggle room with a shopping cart.
You can start shopping before you even enter the store. There are tons of flowers and deck furniture to be purchased. This was Memorial Day Weekend, so Wegmans was seriously pushing the summer merchandise (think tiki torches and potato chips in bulk.)
And corn on the cob.
The shopping carts were kid-friendly. I opted for a more unassuming vehicle.
Wegmans will celebrate its 100th birthday next year.
In 1916, it was the Rochester Fruit and Vegetable Company founded by John and Walter Wegman. It's still a family-run corporation today.
This store is massive. The Wegmans site boasts its "stores run 75,000 to 140,000 square feet."
There was plenty of fresh fruit.
Fresh flowers.
And fresh vegetables.
In every direction I looked, the store seemed to go on for miles.
They say you should never go food shopping on an empty stomach. At Wegmans this is especially true.
If you don't have a game plan you could probably wander the aisles for hours and spend hundreds of dollars.
It's not all apples and oranges. This particular Wegmans had dragon fruit in stock.
This is rambutan, an exotic fruit of Southeast Asia (and a little intimidating-looking.)
And there were baby red bananas.
They look like this. I tried one; it was good.
One of my favorite parts of grocery shopping as a kid was helping my parents weigh the produce we wanted to buy. There were plenty of weigh stations scattered throughout the aisles at Wegmans.
One of the first times I heard about Wegmans was when I met some of my Business Insider colleagues who had gone to Syracuse. (Here is a picture of lots of mozzarella cheese.)
They say most Wegmans have food courts that sell really good fresh food; everything from burgers to sushi.
There's also a self-serve hot food bar, which reminded me of Whole Foods.
Loyal Wegmans fans say the difference is that Wegmans food is better and costs a little less, depending on which location you're visiting.
Bread for as far as the eye can see.
We've only just gotten to the meat and fish section. We've barely made a dent in our visit.
Foursquare is home to tons of people who often frequent Wegmans. The location in Syracuse had 301 photo uploads and lots of positive comments about the cleanliness of the store and the friendly staff.
Hi lobster friends.
"Best sushi and cheese section. Hands down. Pre-sliced deli meats are fresh and theres no lines. Puts Whole Foods to shame," a woman named Corey wrote on Foursquare.
In 2013, BuzzFeed's Rachel Sanders reported "the (family-owned) company’s benefits and work culture have put it on Fortune’s list of best companies to work for every year since the list started in 1998, reliably in the top five."
Gluten-free folks are in luck.
I quickly bypassed the bakery as not to be too tempted by the delicious-looking donuts.
I still had a long way to go, and there was stuff I apparently missed completely. One Foursquare user wrote of a child-sized train somewhere in the back of the store, "perfect for occupying your children" in the middle of a long shopping trip.
Wegmans is also one of only a handful of grocery stores in Pennsylvania that has a license to sell beer.
And unlike Trader Joe's, which never has sales, Wegmans seemed to have a lot of stuff priced down.
There was even an aisle full of makeup, nail polish, and cosmetics.
It was starting to feel like there was nothing Wegmans didn't sell.
I don't have a deck or any outdoor space in my Brooklyn apartment, but if I did, I'd come here and buy a bunch of stuff to decorate.
There was even an entire aisle dedicated to pots and pans.
Need mason jars? You got it.
This is the store that never ends.
Other highlights of my first Wegmans visit ever was its trail mix bar.
Complete with nuts.
And candy.
There are tons of books and magazines. In 2005, The New York Times called Wegmans out for being a grocery store that expanded its book selection greatly.
There was a pretty big variety of books. Hardcovers, paperbacks, cookbooks...
Even Brooklynites would feel at home here; this particular Wegmans sold Murakami.
"Most of Wegmans' newer stores [built after 2009] are of the "superstore" or "megamarket" type," its Wikipedia page states.
There was a build-your-own box of salt water taffy section.
So. Much. Candy.
In the back, there was an entire garden shop full of flowers.
When it was time to leave, I was surprised to find out I had spent over an hour inside Wegmans and still hadn't seen everything. But I get it now. Wegmans is great. And I'll be back.
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