Reaction To Finnish Supermarket K SUPERMARKET

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  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2023
  • Reaction To Finnish Supermarket K SUPERMARKET
    This is my reaction to Finnish Supermarket K SUPERMARKET
    In this video I react to a supermarket in Finland called K Supermarket and this follows up my reaction to another Finnish supermarket called Prisma
    #finland #culture #reaction
    Original Video - • K-MARKET | ADVENTURE I...

Komentáře • 77

  • @tossaja
    @tossaja Před 9 měsíci +36

    in Finland like 99% of cans and bottles end up in these machines. It is awesome.
    This is my local K-Supermarket in the video 😃. It is actually pretty high-end one.

    • @zabnat
      @zabnat Před 8 měsíci +2

      True, even those that are thrown in the trash or in the environment. Also a good way to earn extra cash by collecting bottles, if one is less fortunate on the financial side.

  • @SorbusAucubaria
    @SorbusAucubaria Před 9 měsíci +46

    fun fact. In the past the number of K's in the side indicated the size of the shop. One K meant it was a small shop, two K's medium sized shop and three K's indicated it was a supermarket. For some reason they gave up that kind of classification.

    • @Skege1000
      @Skege1000 Před 9 měsíci +20

      Wonder why 😂🤣

    • @formatique_arschloch
      @formatique_arschloch Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, KKK-MARKET😂

    • @unknownentity8256
      @unknownentity8256 Před 9 měsíci +10

      "Some reason" lol

    • @Moukula
      @Moukula Před 9 měsíci +4

      Another fun thing is to tell someone in english that you went to S-Market and bought a Megapussi (of chips).

    • @temet_fin
      @temet_fin Před 9 měsíci +4

      A clip called "America first, but Finland second" may have had some influence on the fact the K-chain stopped naming the the supermarkets "KKK-supermarkets .😄
      The K-shops all are nice, but unfortunately the most expensive ones. Prisma is trying to do their best to compete with the German Lidl, which has managed to take about 10% share of the market, while the other two big ones both share some 40% each.
      What the food products just meant to be heated cost, depends very much on the quality - prices range from 1.80 to 6.00, even more if prepared in the shop. But in my opinion all of them are just fine if you're hungry.

  • @LadyRotterdam
    @LadyRotterdam Před 8 měsíci +11

    Prismas and Citymarkets are actually called hypermarkets. They are bigger than supermarkets and offer almost anything you need, including clothes, house appliances, sports equipment etc. etc. Furniture is one thing they don't offer.

  • @Skege1000
    @Skege1000 Před 9 měsíci +26

    The deposit is included in the price. And now we have bigger machines that takes 100 bottles and cans at once. You just dump a bag full of bottles and cans in it and it automaticly checks them. Both Prisma and K-Markets are okay. They both have their own bonus-card systems. In K-Market they have special prices if you use their card. But Prisma has bonus where you can get bit of money back in every week. More you use and spend money, more you get back. It has tier list how many % you'll get back. And both stores have their own brand of products. K-Market has Pirkka and Prisma has Rainbow.

    • @KalleKilponen
      @KalleKilponen Před 9 měsíci +4

      Both chains have special discounts for their members and get money back depending on how much you buy, but the bonus schemes are a bit different. They also include things like petrol, and even purchasing things like cars. So a lot of things can impact which bonus scheme is the most advantageous for different people.

    • @a-mr8745
      @a-mr8745 Před 2 měsíci

      In K-stores, K-menu, and in S-stores, Xtra, are the cheapest brands of the stores.

  • @yorkaturr
    @yorkaturr Před 9 měsíci +8

    Milk production in Finland is absolutely huge, and cheese is a very common item. In fact, milk consumption in Finland is the highest of all the countries in the world. The spoken language word for any regular supermarket is "maitokauppa", literally "milk store".
    Cheese is still expensive because it's expensive to produce, and imported cheeses are even more expensive because of logistics obviously. We mostly eat Swiss style Emmental or Edam, and everything else is a distant second. Every Finnish household has at least 1 Fiskars cheese slicer. Not many people eat that pre-sliced individually packaged stuff you see in other parts of the world.

  • @jtekholm
    @jtekholm Před 9 měsíci +4

    Yes, you pay the price when you buy the bottle and when you return it, you get it back. Just encourages recycling, very nice system.

  • @elinahamalainen5867
    @elinahamalainen5867 Před 8 měsíci +11

    Salmiakki is not actually liquorice. Or it is liquorise base with added ammonium chloride aka salmiakki. We made that ammonium chloride on chemistry class on school once. It was actually white powder. They use charcoal for colouring it. In Finland we have laku (liquorice) and salmiakki as two different things.

    • @leohuxtable439
      @leohuxtable439 Před 3 měsíci

      The word "salmiakki" refers to ammonium chloride alone and also the mixture of ammonium chloride, licorice and sugar. Hence the wiki mention "Salmiakki on ammoniumkloridilla eli salmiakilla maustettu lakritsimakeinen", that isn't remotely logical (A+B=A).

  • @kimreinikainen
    @kimreinikainen Před 9 měsíci +7

    Only international supermarket chain in Finland is Lidl. Others are finnish origin.
    The K-group stores (as seen in the video) is the most expensive one to shop. The S-group stores (Prisma) are about 10-15% cheaper. The Lidl being at same price level as S-group stores, however their selection is a bit smaller

  • @sakle
    @sakle Před 8 měsíci +2

    Prisma and K-citymatket are competitors and can be found in almost every bigger city. In the shops, you can find almost everything that families need. there are products everywhere, usually at the cheaper end. For example, if you want better sports equipment, you should rather go to a sports store. Due to the large supermarkets, there are no longer separate meat, milk, cheese and bread stores in Finland, but everything can be found in one place. The main reason for that is probably our long and dark winter. It is more convenient to drive the car to the parking garage and do the shopping at once. This is what we are used to. This is efficient and easy, but perhaps not as romantic as, for example, in France and other parts of Central Europe where there are still many small private food boutiques.

  • @C0necat
    @C0necat Před 9 měsíci +15

    To answer your question about returning bottles, and if you get 0,40€ back, or if it is an extra 0,40€. It's a bit of both. Let me explain. Yes, the price is added to the price of the product, so the price you see on a price tag, already has the return value in it. However, the return value is meant to work in a couple of ways. Obviously, the person purchasing the product will be inclined to return the packaging (bottle, can, etc.) to get some of the money used on it back, but in addition to that, people that see these bottles or cans left on the ground can also return them, earning them an extra 0,40€ (for example). So it's a bit of a yes and no :), cheers from Finland.

  • @jk8557
    @jk8557 Před 9 měsíci +4

    The number of K's in the name previously indicated the size of the shop (from single K meaning the small neighborhood shop to KKKK which was the largest) but now there's only K-kauppa, K-supermarket, and K-citymarket and each name indicates the size of the shop where the K-kauppa is smallest and K-citymarket is largest. My nearest shop is K-kauppa which is only like 10s of meters from my home and the 2nd closest shop is the largest K-citymarket about a kilometer from my home in a local shopping mall. Then 3 kilometers from my home is the next closest shop which is K-supermarket.

  • @Ohris
    @Ohris Před 9 měsíci +3

    Pretty much all bottles are recycled like this in Finland. You get a deposit back when you recycle but since its a deposit you paid it when you bought the bottle.

  • @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja
    @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja Před 8 měsíci +1

    Haven't been to a K-chain store in a few years. The products are basically same as in S-chain stores and cost more.

  • @SPPhotography89
    @SPPhotography89 Před 8 měsíci

    There are two large market chains in Finland, Kesko and the S group. The M chain is small, entrepreneurs who left the previous stores. In addition, there are other individual local shops that do not belong to anything. The life of the Tarmo store ended.

  • @elinahamalainen5867
    @elinahamalainen5867 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Those were just deli cheeses. There is also packaged cheeses on another aisle, which are cheaper.

  • @marciusmarciukas5467
    @marciusmarciukas5467 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Watching those 2 people made me lose intelligence for first 5 minutes🤣

  • @ronny7216
    @ronny7216 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Yes the Pant is already included in the price when purchasing drinks

    • @Xerdoz
      @Xerdoz Před 9 měsíci +2

      Nobody knows what you mean by pant unless you mean you are exhausted from running or something. Or trousers but even then it's spelled wrong.
      It's a deposit.

  • @finnishculturalchannel
    @finnishculturalchannel Před 9 měsíci +2

    As a kid is was possible to get some money for the sweets by finding some empty bottles and cans and taking them to a store. I guess that's what they were up to too. Keeping a tradition alive. The possible pawn reads in the bottles and cans. Also crates can have a pawn. Food hygiene in Finland is on pretty high level. Meaning that food production and distribution is quite regulated. The healthiness of the ready meals differ. Some are like home food and some who knows what. Lonkero was created for the 1952 Helsinki Olympics. There's three main grocery retail chains in Finland, so not much competition there.

  • @digitalspecter
    @digitalspecter Před 9 měsíci +7

    Those two chains have pretty much a duopoly here. K -stores belong to a chain but each store owners whereas S-stores (including Prismas) are just owned by the chain (S-chain is a cooperative so technically owned by hundreds of thousands of people). This leads to more variety in K-chain stores but sometimes higher prices too. S-chain stores have more homogenous inventory so you usually know what you'll find there no matter which store you go to. Both also have their own store brands. Anyway, I tend to favor certain K-markets because they have stuff I like that's not found in S-chain stores.

    • @Tuomas_Oskari
      @Tuomas_Oskari Před 2 dny

      Yes, you're basically right that 40 cents is a little money. You won't even get 40 cents for smaller returnable bottles and cans, but when there are really a lot of those returnable bottles and cans, they can add up to big sums over time. And preferably returned and recycled, than littering nature. At least before, there were a few bottle collectors who went around the city, especially on weekends and holidays, collecting bottles thrown away by partygoers and then used the accumulated money for, for example, an annual vacation trip. The former neighbor's co-worker reportedly went on a two-week holiday trip somewhere in Southern Europe every year with only the money he accumulated by returning bottles and cans that others had removed

  • @a-mr8745
    @a-mr8745 Před 2 měsíci

    Note: K-markets are small convenience stores (quite expensive), K-supermarkets are medium-sized supermarkets, and K-citymarkets are large hypermarkets. The same system applies to S-stores as well. In K-stores, they have their own good products, and if you have a K-Plussa card, you can get good benefits from certain changing products, in addition to bonus points. Almost all Finns use bottle return, and it would be foolish not to use it when you can get money from it. Less mess on the streets. Quite a few also collect empty ones from the street/trash cans, which others leave there. You can actually make quite a bit of money from them if you're willing to roam around and search (especially in the summer time). You could also check out Lidl, they have their own unique, good, and cheap selection. You can get, for example, cherry pie there, which is heavenly. Finns use far too little cherry, and cherry products are not very common in our own stores.

  • @diamondsarenotforever8542
    @diamondsarenotforever8542 Před 6 měsíci

    Finland's Järvenpää City market was named the best grocery store on earth 2023 at a global retail awards in London by the IGD a consumer consortium based in the UK.

  • @MauriMahtava
    @MauriMahtava Před 8 měsíci

    Idea is to put the bottoms first.. In Finland they add 0,15€ to cans, 0,1€ to glass bottles, 0,2€ for small plastic ones and 0,4€ to big plastic ones. This is when you buy. Then when you return, you get the money back. This makes the bottles almost 100% recycled.

  • @Antony_Oscar
    @Antony_Oscar Před 8 měsíci

    Believe me, those chocolate crisps are DELICIOUS. I thought the idea was disgusting at first but then I tried them and became addicted.

  • @SK-nw4ig
    @SK-nw4ig Před 9 měsíci +1

    Long drink aka Lonkero was made for the olympics in the 1950's held in finland. It is super popular.

  • @arosko
    @arosko Před 6 měsíci

    I used to deliver pretty much everything except freezed goods, some drinks and other misc. stuff to this exact supermarket from the Kesko (K) warehouse 😂

  • @Antony_Oscar
    @Antony_Oscar Před 8 měsíci

    I believe the fresh breads and pastries are mostly transported to the shops frozen, and then baked in the ovens at the store (at least for the bigger stores, not necessarily for the smaller corner shop style stores). So they are made there at least partly.

  • @harrikaijansinkko8387
    @harrikaijansinkko8387 Před 9 měsíci +1

    K-markets is a chain of privately owned shops with wholesale organisation Kesko ( the K) Sometimes Kesko owns thd estate of bigger shops, but in countryside the shop houses are often also private owned. Citymarkets belong also to K-chain.
    S-group to which Prismas, S-markets, Alepas and Sales belong is a co-operative organisation.

  • @mariano7654
    @mariano7654 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Yes, we get money back of the bottles we recycle and the 20 cent or whatever we get back is included in the original price. I'm 47 years old and I don't remember time that this wasn't the case.

  • @Zarniwooper
    @Zarniwooper Před 9 měsíci +2

    Bottle pawning system is genius, it stops sea creatures wearing plastic bottles as jewelry and you will never see bottles or cans laying around outside, some kid or elderly person always picks them up and gets a bit of money to spend out of it.

    • @Xerdoz
      @Xerdoz Před 9 měsíci

      What the hell is a bottle pawning system? Maybe it's something where you make chess pieces from used bottles.
      It's a deposit.

    • @Zarniwooper
      @Zarniwooper Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@Xerdoz Ever heard of pawnshops? Oxford dictionary: "an object left as security for money lent." A bottle is literally the pawn of your money lent.

  • @temenurminen
    @temenurminen Před 9 měsíci +1

    There are two shopping chains in Finland the S and the K. S chain is usually cheaper but I personally like the K better for their wide selection of products. Prisma is the largest type of a S chain store where as the K counterpart would be K Citymarket. The S counterpart for K market is (surprisingly) S market. The smallest ones are called K supermarket and Sale for the S chain. The S and The K chains has their own hardware store where as S has their own restaurants. There is also a German chain Lidl in Finland. (You can take everything I just said with a grain of salt because I didn't sight my sources)🤣

    • @Ankfank
      @Ankfank Před 8 měsíci

      One correction I want to make it K-market=Sale and K-supermarket=S-market.

  • @LilA-zl6tf
    @LilA-zl6tf Před 8 měsíci +1

    If you compare Prisma, with the K-group market, it should be Citymarket. Those two would compare. Supermarket is smaller, like normal S-Market, which is smaller than S-groups Prismas. K Supermarket and S-Market are you everyday shopping stops, mostly for food and day to day household things, like paper products.

  • @kokkolintu3528
    @kokkolintu3528 Před 9 měsíci

    We have 2 main store -chains in Finland: Kesko (K Supermarket is part of this) and S-Ryhmä (Prisma is part of this). Basically similar as in UK they have Tesco VS Sainsbury's. I personally prefer S-ryhmä, as they are a bit cheaper + you can open a real bank account with them, where you get your bonus points as money every month. 😊
    About the bottles: yes. The deposit is included in the price when you buy the bottle, and you get it back by recycling the bottle. (It's VERY popular, people use these machines all the time)

  • @lightningrider5849
    @lightningrider5849 Před 8 měsíci

    This K-Supermarket is actually smaller than Prisma. K-group has also so called Citymarkets that is similar size as Prisma.

  • @ristovirtanen6396
    @ristovirtanen6396 Před 8 měsíci

    The K comes from their parent company Kesko whose biggest markets are called City Market in some big cities only. FYI Kesko refers to keskus =centrum in English. And Salmiakki isn’t sweet at all but salty and some would say bitter salty. Who has ordered that candy must be sweet when it can be salty also!😳👌

  • @user-wo6nh8ex1k
    @user-wo6nh8ex1k Před 9 měsíci +1

    Bottle Machines are 20 years old. More than 20 years there are been bottle machines in Finland.

  • @TheMinttuFI
    @TheMinttuFI Před 8 měsíci

    0,10€ for a glass bottle, 0,15€ for a can, and 0,40€ for a large plastic bottle! It incentivises people to recycle! Collecting bottles and cans is a big thing, since you get a deposit for it. You will see no leftover cans or bottles littering the streets, since they will be recycled.

  • @sundflux
    @sundflux Před 9 měsíci

    Prisma is cheaper for daily food and random stuff, k-market is more like premium food market, sort of. smaller ones sell local stuff etc and bigger ones sell that + premium imports and prisma /s-market is more like a budjet market, but good one.

  • @hennahallikainen711
    @hennahallikainen711 Před 3 měsíci

    Yes! We finns recykle everything ❤every store we have these machines.

  • @nickonijo4444
    @nickonijo4444 Před 9 měsíci

    id wager most peoples favourite fazer product is a rye bread called Puikula

  • @r2dezki
    @r2dezki Před 9 měsíci +1

    We do produce a lot of cheese but not a lot of it is handmade premium cheese.

  • @saturahman7510
    @saturahman7510 Před 9 měsíci

    It is hard to find a-cup bra here in Finland !

  • @Jantzku
    @Jantzku Před 9 měsíci

    Yes it is included in the prize. But for example a lot of people are collecting cans etc on the weekends and people give them to you, if they don't want to return those themselves. Then that is just free money for the gatherer.
    It is a incentive to recycle.

  • @Robert-k-R
    @Robert-k-R Před 9 měsíci

    K-market is more expensive but have often sales on items and a bit better selection on items while s-marker never have sales but all the pruducts standard price is a bit cheaper

  • @the_yay_guy
    @the_yay_guy Před 9 měsíci +1

    It is actually most of the time K-Market than K-supermarket

  • @qwineth
    @qwineth Před 7 měsíci

    Well, we have K and S, the duopoly... At least Lidl makes an effort

  • @Zarniwooper
    @Zarniwooper Před 9 měsíci

    The taffel chips/snacks bags historically did read "megapussi" but when globalisation took over we decided it might not be a best trademark :)

  • @SPPhotography89
    @SPPhotography89 Před 8 měsíci

    This new government will increase the maximum percentage of alcohol for drinks sold in shops to 8%, while it is now still 5.5%

  • @Sc0pee
    @Sc0pee Před 9 měsíci +1

    K-Market is a small, typical market. K-SUPERmarket is a much larger supermarket(duh) and last, K-Citymarket is a HYPERmarket which is the biggest of the three. Almost everybody uses those machines. You get 0,15e for typical smaller bottles and cans and up to 0,40e for the large 1.5 liter bottles and yes you pay for the PANT as well. But the good thing is that sometimes you find bottles and cans on the street that some lazy ass just tossed out there.

    • @Wezqu
      @Wezqu Před 9 měsíci +1

      Well its 0,10€ for small bottles (under 0,35l, includes glass bottles under 1l), 0,15€ for all cans (size does not matter), 0,20€ for 0,5l bottles (in reality bottles over 0,35l and under 1l, but you rarely see anything else than 0,5l, also over 1l glass bottles) and 0,40€ for any bottles that are larger.

  • @ricmatify687
    @ricmatify687 Před 8 měsíci

    Bottom first! Jeez!

  • @freddyfatbear03
    @freddyfatbear03 Před 8 měsíci

    K Supermarkets are commonly a lot expensive than Prisma

  • @gode2573
    @gode2573 Před 9 měsíci

    Its part of the price you paid. Bottles and cans i mean

  • @AngelicaSJ
    @AngelicaSJ Před 8 měsíci

    These prices are very comparable to American prices

  • @yoretabio4537
    @yoretabio4537 Před 8 měsíci

    Tyttö ajatteli että kärki edellä tässäkin?

  • @Gekko1970
    @Gekko1970 Před 9 měsíci

    K-Market .... KOO Market .

  • @QHullu
    @QHullu Před 8 měsíci

    If you don't teach your kids better options, with cheap microwave pizzas and meat pockets you can feed them years.

  • @santtumoilanen3065
    @santtumoilanen3065 Před 9 měsíci

    after covid shit food prices went insane... it wasnt that expenice always.... was actuallly rather cheap

  • @pekkakalevi2718
    @pekkakalevi2718 Před 2 měsíci

    98% bolltes get back.. fact.. NO BS!! as Birti Bs..LYE

  • @kikkoman3696
    @kikkoman3696 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Lidl is very cheap market and it has also very good selection. Please if you ever go to finland, make a my day/week in finland and experience everything you have watched about markets, foods, places, commons in finland it would be so interesting and awesome video idea! Have a nice day (:

  • @zoolkhan
    @zoolkhan Před 8 měsíci

    why do we care about frigging supermarkets? :)