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sojusucks

Joined: 31 May 2008
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Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 6:23 am Post subject: 9,900 won Sweet Potato pies at Costco |
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The regular price is 12,900 but there is a 3,000 off coupon. This goes along with the 6,900 pumpkin pies and the 12,900 cheesecakes and 12,900 blueberry tarts. How can you not love these pies? |
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sojusucks

Joined: 31 May 2008
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Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 6:03 pm Post subject: |
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I almost forgot to include the Boston Cream pies for 12,900. |
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meangradin

Joined: 10 Mar 2006
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Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 6:45 pm Post subject: |
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Does anyone else feel that the quality of Costco's baked goods has improved over the years? |
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sojusucks

Joined: 31 May 2008
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Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 10:00 pm Post subject: |
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You should have seen Koreans fighting for samples of that Sweet Potato Pie. I almost had to fight a couple of them to get my 4 samples. That Boston Cream Pie is very rich (sweet). It has a lot of chocolate and it may be too sweet for some of you.  |
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RMNC

Joined: 21 Jul 2010
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Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 10:08 pm Post subject: |
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Carrrbbbssss |
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Nadia_M
Joined: 15 Jun 2010 Location: Daejeon, Korea
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Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 6:49 am Post subject: |
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Pumpkin pie! Oh, how I love thee! I bought one yesterday and it was mm mm good. |
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sojusucks

Joined: 31 May 2008
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Posted: Mon Sep 27, 2010 4:06 am Post subject: |
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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/PrintStory.pl?document_id=2008437456&zsection_id=2002252657&slug=pies26&date=20081126
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Costco has pumpkin pies down to a science
By Karen Gaudette
Seattle Times staff reporter
When today's final batches of Thanksgiving pumpkin pies emerge from Costco ovens across the land, managers need wait only a few hours to answer one of the year's most pressing questions:
Did they bake enough?
It's a vital concern. By day's end, Costco expects to have sold more than 1 million fresh-baked, giant $5.99 pumpkin pies during this short week when in-store bakeries run around the clock.
"It's an adrenaline rush, that's for sure," says Mike Cruz, director of West Coast bakeries for the Issaquah-based warehouse chain.
So busy are stores that the wheeled pie-laden carts in transit from bakeries to mammoth refrigerated store cases grow lighter as they go; harried shoppers trot alongside and pluck off pies, then make haste for the cash registers.
Only a handful of times in his 20-plus years at Costco can Cruz recall running dry on pies. All the work that takes place this week, with militarylike precision, is designed to prevent that tragic outcome.
"Everything's planned out by day. If you don't have a strategy, you're going in blind," Cruz said Sunday night, hairnet in place, leading a pie brigade at the Tukwila Costco's bakery. "Issaquah's doing the same thing tonight. So's Seattle and Bellingham and Portland."
Tukwila's bakery fits the chain's reputation: Everything is on a gargantuan scale. Stainless canisters the size of kitchen cabinets hold chocolate chips, sugar, cocoa.
Costco's blend of pumpkin-pie spice arrives in sacks. A neat blue binder serves as cookbook, thick with formulas and baking times.
During this busy half-week, managers stamp out fresh pie crust alongside workers.
The holiday season is all hands on deck, and that's good for morale, workers say.
"Managers are everywhere, helping all the time," said Camilla Dizdarvic, of Renton.
Two by two, she fills 12-inch pie shells with bright orange pumpkin-pie mix from a pitcher ��� her personal best was 1,800 pies in a single night. The rich scent of baking pies permeates the bakery, tucked in a corner of the otherwise deserted warehouse.
Across the bakery, Doug Roffler, of Covington, stirs can after 6-pound-10-ounce can of pumpkin into megamixers, along with sacks of spice.
One million pies equals roughly 4.7 million pounds of pumpkin and roughly 12.6 million fresh eggs, by Costco's figures.
"She keeps me going," Roffler said of Dizdarvic, his partner in pies for nearly a decade. They egg each other on, literally.
Roffler pours plastic sacks of fresh, shelled, raw egg into his mixers to keep up with Dizdarvic, who fills pie crusts at a pace to keep up with the ovens, which are being emptied at intervals by Cruz.
Let no oven stand empty, the mantra goes.
Racks of pies are pushed into upright ovens 48 at a time. Inside they rotate in the heat for about an hour.
They are racked as they emerge, and a sticker is slapped on each rack, a reminder of exactly how long the pies should cool before they're chilled, wrapped and stored.
Sunday night was warm-up night, and Tukwila's goal was 1,000 pies. That figure rose as the week progressed.
Of course, pumpkin pies aren't all that's cooking this week. The other side of each bakery is cranking out fresh dinner rolls, muffins, Danish, birthday cakes, and chocolate, apple and pecan pies ��� the other essential sweets of life.
By Roffler's calculations, he mixed just over 1 ton of pumpkin-pie filling last year at Thanksgiving time. But he hasn't grown tired of pumpkin pie.
"I still have a piece when I go home," he said, ripping open another fragrant sack of spices.
Karen Gaudette: 206-515-5618 or [email protected]
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