News Grocery & Food News I'm a Chef & These Are the 15 Groceries I Always Buy at Target They even sell my favorite chips! By Kiki Aranita Kiki Aranita Kiki Aranita was the co-chef and owner of Poi Dog, a restaurant and catering company that served Hawaii's local food, for seven years. She closed its Center City Philadelphia location in July 2020, but has kept the brand alive in the form of large-scale pop-ups and a line of retail sauces that is available nationwide. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Published on April 4, 2023 Reviewed by Dietitian Jessica Ball, M.S., RD Reviewed by Dietitian Jessica Ball, M.S., RD Jessica Ball, M.S., RD, is nutrition editor for EatingWell. She is a registered dietitian with a master's in food, nutrition and sustainability. In addition to EatingWell, her work has appeared in Food & Wine, Real Simple, Parents, Better Homes and Gardens and MyRecipes. EatingWell's Editorial Guidelines Trending Videos Close this video player Photo: Getty Images As a chef and recipe developer, I test a constant rotation of products in my professional life. Plus my husband is a professional chef, so our kitchen is always filled with new, interesting ingredients to play with. For instance, right now there are 12 different types of mushrooms in my fridge that I'm creating recipes with, plus an assortment of new jackfruit-based meat alternatives that their makers sent me to try. But when it comes to our weekly grocery list, it's nice to have familiarity and consistency. I live in lower Manhattan, and there are three Targets within a mile of my house. Target is the most convenient place for me to shop for basics, though when I'm used to getting all my other food from specialty purveyors and small farmers, I feel a bit sheepish wandering through its grocery aisles. Nevertheless, shopping at Target for essentials anchors our diets amid the chaos of the new and unknown. Here are the 15 things that are always on our Target grocery list. I'm a Food Editor & These Are the 12 Items I Always Buy at Costco 1. Good & Gather Sea Salt Roasted Mixed Nuts The first time I tasted these, I felt like I'd struck nut gold. These are the good nuts, most delicious and startlingly large nuts, the ones you shove the inferior nuts aside for, with a mix of cashews, hazelnuts, pecans and almonds—and no peanuts for filler. Plus at $18.99 for a 30-ounce container, they're a mind-bogglingly good deal. Walk into any other grocery store and you'll get a fraction of inferior nuts for the same price. What Happens to Your Body When You Eat Nuts Every Day 2. Special K Red Berries Cereal Almost every other grocery store in Manhattan right now is selling regular-size boxes of Special K (and other basic cereals) for $7.99. In contrast, I can get a family-size box at Target for a steal at $4.99. Is this cereal gourmet or indicative of the composed dishes I pride myself in building? No. Is it comforting? Absolutely. How to Pick the Healthiest Breakfast Cereal 3. Spindrift Sparkling Waters My husband and I have a policy of generally not drinking alcohol on work nights. This is not easy in an industry that involves endless alcohol-tasting events and requires that we know spirits well enough to pair and sell them with our food. My husband has the sort of chef job that requires long hours in a restaurant, so cracking a drink open at the end of a busy service is really, really satisfying. Popping open a can of Spindrift scratches that itch, without the adverse effects of alcohol. Mango is our favorite flavor! We Tried All the Spindrift Flavors and Here Are Our Favorites 4. Bananas At 29 cents each, the bananas at Target are very reasonably priced. I always think the greener, the better, so that I have more time to consume them before they fully ripen. Plus green bananas are my secret ingredient for kalua pig, a Hawaiian-style smoky pulled pork that I make in the oven here on the mainland instead of in an 'imu (the underground oven used in Hawai'i, where I grew up). Pop a banana in with a pork shoulder, seasoned with coarse sea salt, and you'll have juicy, fragrant kalua pig five hours later. The One Surprising Ingredient You Should Be Adding to Your Banana Bread But Probably Aren't 5. Good & Gather Organic Baby-Cut Carrots In our house, baby carrots are called "orange treats" when we share them with our chihuahua, Coconut. Coconut gets an orange treat after every walk, and hearing her crunch on them is one of the most satisfying noises ever—for her and for me. I love digging into a bag of orange treats with Coconut, as they're good for both of us. Plus at $1.99 for a 1-pound bag, they're also so much cheaper and contain no additives, in contrast with other packaged dog treats. 6. Good & Gather Organic Baby Spinach We consume a ridiculous quantity of leafy greens at home. We adore fluffy salads and green smoothies, and these also balance out how we eat professionally, when we aren't always ordering (or being sent) the healthiest foods. I can't leave Target without these. This Easy Spinach Salad Has Just 5 Ingredients—and I Can't Stop Making It for Lunch 7. Oatly Oat Milk I don't know what to tell you. I am a dairy-based organism. There is not a single whisper of lactose intolerance lurking within my gut of steel. But I adore the creaminess of Oatly oat milk in my requisite two cups of coffee in the morning, consumed before I'm expected to be nice to people. 4 Ways Drinking Coffee May Help You Live Longer, According to a Dietitian 8. Good & Gather Organic 1% Milk Like I said, I am a dairy-based organism. While Oatly goes in my morning coffee, I use this for everything else that calls for milk, especially my Target-purchased Special K Red Berries cereal. At $3.99 for a half-gallon, it's a great deal in Manhattan, one of the most expensive places in the universe! Is Milk Good for You? Are There Benefits to Drinking It Every Day? 9. Good & Gather Riced Cauliflower Another treat I share with Coconut! This riced cauliflower sneaks its way into her dog food and into my nightly bowl of rice. I'm always trying to amp up our vegetable intake! 10. Good & Gather Low-Sodium Cannellini Beans My American-Israeli chef-husband makes proper, traditional chickpea hummus that is so delicious it will make you weep. I, on the other hand, will make you a garlic and cannellini bean dip that you will love almost as much as ranch dressing on your orange treats. What's the Difference Between Cannellini and Great Northern Beans? 11. Calbee Baked Shrimp Chips I can't believe I can buy these at Target. They are my absolute favorite chips. They're perfectly crunchy, and you'd never know they weren't fried. Is this health food? It depends. Is it good for the soul? It's definitely good for my soul. 12. Banza Four Cheese Chickpea Pizza Chickpea pizza has no business being this delicious. I don't fully understand it, either. But it's satisfying, and it gives me another way to eat legumes, has 17 grams of protein per serving (I think that's good) and makes a quick dinner in a pinch. 13. Halos Mandarins I keep these in a fruit bowl on our kitchen island to brighten up our living space. Think of them like decorative flowers, but you can eat them, you don't have to water them, and they'll nourish you with nutrients like vitamin C and fiber. They're perfect for a bit of sweetness at the end of a meal. I'm half Chinese, which means that I'm accustomed to citrus at the end of a large dinner and firmly believe that it aids with digestion. 14. King's Hawaiian Rolls These remind me of home, and Target always has them! They're so versatile—great for making kalua pig sliders, French toast or even croutons. 15. Rosemary and Olive Oil Triscuits For me, no other Triscuits will do. This is the most enchanting variety of Triscuit. With a little slice or smear of cheese or garlic cannellini bean dip, these will rescue you from being hangry as you're running out the door. They pair beautifully with ordinary supermarket Cheddar or with some of my favorite high-end cheeses. I do not discriminate against any cheese—and neither do Rosemary and Olive Oil Triscuits. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit