Ritz Bacon Crackers Coupon
There is a new Ritz Bacon Crackers Coupon available to print. Ritz Crackers are on sale at Weis, Giant and Shoprite. If you store has the new Ritz Bacon Crackers in stock, you can get them as low as $1.99.
Weis
Ritz Crackers $2.99
use $.50/1 Ritz Crackers Bacon Coupon
$1.99 after coupon
Shoprite & Giant Deal:
Ritz Crackers $3.00
use $.50/1 Ritz Crackers Bacon Coupon
$2.00 after coupon
Please note, this a manufacturer coupon.
Geoff says
Ritz are on sale at Safeway for $1.99, so only $0.99 after coupon. They even have the new bacon flavor. But the sale ends today (Tues. 4/8).
Ruchama says
I’m not sure whether to be impressed or disturbed that, as far as I can tell, those are vegan.
Shannon says
ROFL. .. artificial bacon.
Ruchama says
There are some unspecified “flavors” in the ingredients that may or may not be vegan (I usually just figure that any non-vegan stuff within “flavors” is so tiny that I don’t really care, but other vegans I know will research it and email the company to ask about it), but the kosher dairy symbol means that, at the very least, there is absolutely no meat in there. (The dairy part of the symbol could mean that the “flavors” include something dairy-derived, or it could just mean that the machines they use to make these are also sometimes used to make stuff that does contain dairy, like they make Cheez-Its on those machines on certain days of the week and make Ritz on them on other days.)
Shannon says
Ruchama,
I am always curious at how hard it is to stick to vegan lifestyle? I am guessing many processed foods are out?
Ruchama says
It’s not really that hard. Well, I’ve been vegetarian since I was 13, and vegan for maybe seven years now, so I’m pretty much used to it. Lots of junk food type things are out, especially candy, but I really shouldn’t be eating too much of that stuff anyway. Some surprising things ARE vegan — Oreos are, for instance. And in the past few years, there have been a lot more vegan prepared foods becoming more readily available. One of the Giant locations in State College carries four different kinds of vegan frozen pizza. I usually try to cook most of my foods at least sort of from scratch — both cheaper and healthier that way — but there are plenty of meals that I can make relatively quickly. I’ve got a good recipe for vegan “meatballs” (made of mashed beans and bread crumbs and spices) that I can make a ton of and freeze, and then, when I need a quick dinner, just boil some spaghetti and defrost a few meatballs and pour on some jarred sauce. There are also a lot of great vegan cookbooks out there — some of them (like most of Isa Chandra Moskowitz’s books, which are my favorites) are generally things that can be put together fairly quickly, while there are also some others with more complicated time-consuming recipes, that I usually save for weekends or breaks, and make a bunch and freeze them. (I’ve also been cooking a lot out of 30 Minute Vegan Taste of Europe lately, because the food is really good, and because, any time you make French food, it seems really fancy, so I can just throw something together after work, and take a picture of it and post it on facebook, and all my friends think I’m some kind of master chef.)
Shannon says
LOL the Facebook part is hysterical! We do most of our cooking from scratch as well, it just is healthier and tastes better frankly.
Carolyn says
DUDE!! pass the cheap cheese!
Shannon says
LOL!