These days our bank accounts are hurting. Food prices are on the rise, and 82% of American consumers are feeling the pinch. Since January 2020, the cost of groceries has shot up by 7% overall. One result: More customers are turning to private label or store-brand products, which tend to be 20 to 25% cheaper than their brand-name cousins.
But do private labels taste as good as the branded stuff? As more people turn to store brands, Bon Appétit food staffers are blind taste-testing products from popular grocery stores around the country to make sure you’re saving money without sacrificing flavor.
First up: jarred marinara sauce. Processed foods are especially impacted by rising costs, as the ingredients, packaging materials, transportation, and labor it takes to produce them all continue to become more expensive. And this simple red sauce is the backbone of everything from easy poached fish to piping hot pizza. It’s a weeknight workhorse when time and money are in short supply.
To test the marinara—which came from Costco, Trader Joe’s, Target, Walmart, Safeway, and Whole Foods—we stirred ½ cup of sauce with 1 cup of cooked fusilli and sampled for flavor, texture, consistency, and versatility. While none of our lineup tasted better than Rao’s, the test kitchen’s expensive-but-official favorite, all were better than or as good as Ragú, the most popular name-brand marinara in America. And the great news: Each sauce we tried costs less than $3 a jar.
Between forkfuls of fusilli, here’s what we thought of six popular private-label marinaras.
The Simple Sauce: Costco’s Kirkland Signature Organic Tuscan Marinara, 24 oz.
The Sauce: Costco’s store-brand marinara has a delightfully short ingredient list—we’re talking tomatoes, onions, carrots, basil, sea salt, and bona fide olive oil from Toscana. “Hands down fave,” wrote one Canadian reviewer online.