Trader Joe’s “Caro Sugo” Italian Tomato Basil Pasta Sauce, review


NEW ITEM

RAVE

Trader Joe’s New Item

(“Caro Sugo” loosely translates to “dear sauce / favorite sauce”)

CARO SUGO Italian tomato basic pasta sauce seems to be all over the internet with people saying this new Trader Joe’s tomato sauce is Da Bomb.

The best pasta sauce ever. That it is better than the highly rated Rao’s (and cheaper). So I had to check this out for a review. Well, guess what? Sometimes the hype is true. This sauce is SO GOOD. I was really impressed with this.

The freshest, most natural tasting, perfect, artisanal tomato sauce. It could have been cooked by your Italian nonna back in Italy.

I found this as good as everybody seems to be saying it is. A 10 out of 10.

Caro Sugo just has such a fresh, natural taste from excellent probably freshly harvested tomatoes plus Italian olive oil and fresh (not dried) garlic, and whole basil leaves. It’s got bits of tomato, a few little chunks. It’s not smooth like many jarred sauces are. Meaning not over processed.

Imported of course, this sauce is produced in Italy for Trader Joe’s. Specifically from the region of Puglia, which is the “heel of the boot” on a map. The supplier who makes this also grows the tomatoes, picks them and processes them. Close to where they are grown, so the tomatoes are as fresh as possible and you can actually taste that freshness.

Ingredients listed are: Whole peeled tomatoes, olive oil, diced onion, sea salt, chopped garlic, chopped basic, dried oregano.

Everything except for the oregano is a fresh ingredient. There is no sugar added. The sauce has a slight natural sweetness from good tomatoes.

Where’s what Trader Joe’s says about this sauce:

https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/caro-sugo-italian-tomato-basil-pasta-sauce-079753

TJ’s : “….Our supplier not only makes this sauce, but also grows the sweet, juicy tomatoes that make it so special. The rest of the ingredients are simple and fresh, including olive oil, diced onion & chopped garlic (not powders), chopped fresh basil, and sea salt. The only “dried” ingredient is oregano, which was chosen purposefully for its more concentrated flavor. 

What will you do with Trader Joe’s Caro Sugo Italian Tomato Basil Pasta Sauce? The answer is: anything you like! As you can imagine, it’s delicious with your favorite TJ’s pasta or ravioli. Try it with our Homestyle Angus Beef Meatballs on a Sandwich Roll topped with melted Sliced Provolone. You’ll also find this Tomato Sauce shines on pizzas, in shakshuka, or even as a dipping sauce for our Breaded Mozzarella Cheese Sticks!”

As they say do not limit yourself to just thinking of this pasta sauce. This sauce is a great sauce for cooking. PIZZA? Yes, I am thinking. I definitely want to try making a pizza using this Caro Sugo sauce and the Mozzarella log for one thing. My dough is developing now in the fridge. I will report back here with pix!

This is a Must Try. Granted this costs more than some other quite good pasta Trader Joe’s sauces which cost less than half the price ($1.99) However if you want to taste an artisanal imported Italian sauce which is truly Gourmet Level, this is well worth trying at least once. People who have are saying they go back and buy a few jars at a time.

CARO SUGO Italian tomato basic pasta sauce $4.99 (24 oz)

PIzza made with this Caro Sugo sauce (my wife said I should have used more sauce). I made dough but you can buy TJ’s dough. Whole milk mozz. Fresh basil. It was yummy.

Trader Joe’s 100% WHOLE GRAIN FIBER MULTIGRAIN BREAD


INGREDIENTS: Water, whole wheat flout, oat fiber, wheat gluten, cracked wheat, honey, brown sugar, plus steel cut oats, sunflower seeds, canola oil, yeast, cultured wheat, millet, salt, molasses, ground flax, rye, golden flax, vinegar, wheat starch, soy lecithin, brown rice, barley, triticale, buckwheat, enzyme, ascorbic acid

So as you can see from the Ingredients in this bread, you are getting a lot of variety of whole grains for one thing. You are also getting a good amount of fiber in this 100% Whole Grain High Fiber bread. Each slice has 5 grams of fiber.

That is about 18% of the recommended dietary amount. It’s not hard to eat two slices, perhaps in a sandwich or just as toast. Do that and you are getting 10 grams of fiber, which is about 1/3 or more of the daily recommended fiber amount (daily dietary fiber is recommended at 25-38 grams).

How does this bread taste? I like it. It actually tastes pretty good. Like a 100% whole wheat bread. I find it just the tiniest bit on the dry side, but you have to take all that fiber into account.

This tasted quite good when I toasted it up, and ate with butter and marmalade.

It’s got no preservatives, and no additives. Seems pretty All Natural. I would buy it again.

$3.49 (1 1/2 lbs, 24 oz)

Trader Joe’s delicious BURRATA, PROSCIUTTO & ARUGULA FLATBREAD / Pizza


Trader Joe’s “BURRATA, PROSCIUTTO and ARUGULA FLATBREAD”. Sounds good but is it actually worth buying?

Please read my honest review if you want to see if I thought it was worth $5.50

First though. What do we think? Is it a Flatbread or is a Pizza? Aren’t they at times almost the same thing? I’m pretty sure all of us look at this and think “pizza”, but if Trader Joe’s wants to call it “flatbread” that’s fine by me. I guess they think it sounds slightly classier?

Actually this is pretty classy! I was in the mood to try either this one or the MUSHROOM TRUFFLE flatbread a few days ago. I thought I would try this one first as I especially love two thing on it: Arugula and Prosciutto.

Here’s what it looks like right out of the box, frozen. You get two packages, one being the flatbread/pizza and separately a small package containing a few slices of prosciutto. Aha! Why you ask is it separate? Because it will be added later, after the pizza is baked! Again. It’s for LATER. Don’t bake that.

The picture on the box looks very good. Is Trader Joe’s BURRATA, PROSCIUTTO and ARUGULA FLATBREAD as good as the picture? Well. You be the judge. Here’s what it looked like after I finished baking it and added the prosciutto on top…. Come on. Doesn’t this looks gorgeous? It tastes as good as it looks.

This looks so good, that you could pretend this came out of the restaurant pizza oven. It pretty much looked the same as their beautiful pizza in the picture. OK, theirs seems to have a bit more arugula that the one I got, but other than that, almost pretty the same.

FINAL VERDICT: OMG. So good! Well worth the money! You have to try this.

That prosciutto? It gives it a huge bump of Umami. It definitely adds a ton of flavor and really makes this great. Both my wife and I found this pizza about equal to something you would get at a restaurant.

Trader Joe’s made a smart decision to keep the prosciutto separate to add after baking. If they had put the prosciutto on the frozen pizza, it probably would just melt away into oblivion during baking or burn.

The pizza crust base was good and all the toppings match perfectly with the crust. It says it has burrata, mozzarella, pecorino, and marscapone cheese in there as well. All these cheeses, melt together and blend into a nice very cheesy mix. The arugula adds a very nice vegetable note however I didn’t think there was quite enough of it. I wished they put on just a little more arugula. I did add a drizzle of EVOO olive oil just before serving, plus a few grinds of fresh black pepper.

We both enjoyed this flatbread and thought this was quite yummy. Our only complaint was we wished it was a tiny just a tiny bit bigger so we each could have more! Two of us ate this for dinner along with a salad and a side of vegetables.

With our salad and a veggie, this was just enough for two of us to share for dinner. I would say this pizza might make one very large portion for one. But if you eat this whole thing by yourself that would be about 900 calories. Me, I wouldn’t eat the whole thing myself I figure this realistically could serve two people – along with some other things. If two portions, I figure that half would probably mean about 450 calories each. Not terrible at all and it was just enough to be satisfying (though we said we could eat more if there was more!)

HOW TO COOK: Remove from freezer and remove plastic. NOTE: You will use the prosciutto later – after baking! So just leave that out to defrost.

Set oven to 450 degrees. Let oven heat for at least 20 minutes or until it lets you know it reached 450. While the oven is heating, they want you to let the pizza and prosciutto rest out on the counter for about 20 minutes, to defrost a bit.

When the oven is ready, put the flatbread on a baking sheet or baking tray and put it in the oven (Again, without prosciutto!)

Let it bake for about 12 minutes or until edges a nice golden brown color and the crust looks nice and crisp. If your oven is uneven, turn it halfway (6 or 7 minutes) so it bakes evenly.

Now in our oven, I found 12 minutes was not enough time. I put it back for maybe another 2-4 minutes, and I think I could have still added another minute. If you look at the picture on the box you will see the crust is really well baked and very golden brown, which is exactly how you want it to look like, without burning of course. So as every oven is different you will have to judge the baking time. Keep checking it every minute or so after 12 mins.

When it looks done, take it out of the oven and let it rest about one minute, maybe on a cutting board or rack. NOW ADD THE PROSCIUTTO. Artistically. In my package, there were 3 nice slices. I peeled them apart and cut it in half to make 6 pieces, which I tried to roll up a bit into rosettes. Put your prosciutto around the pizza in about 6 bundles. The fat will melt a little bit into the warm pizza. Which you want.

Using a long knife, you can cut the flatbread up in half or quarters to Serve and Enjoy!

Optional: You could also grate on a little Parmigiano and add a drizzle of EVOO. I did and it made it even better. A sprinkle of hot pepper if you are a fan? Why not. If you have any arugula, I would add a few sprigs all over. I did and loved it.

YUMMY. Trader Joe’s BURRATA, PROSCIUTTO and ARUGULA FLATBREAD was $5.49 (12 oz) Is it worth that? Absolutely.

I would buy this again.

Portions/Calories: The Nutrition label describes this as being 290 calories / portion HOWEVER they count this pizza as containing 3 portions. HA! That might be a snack, not a portion, for an adult that is. I figure half a pizza (ie, 2 portions) might have about 450 calories/portion?

Trader Joe’s TOSCANO CHEESE with Black Pepper: A Flavorful Must-Try


https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/toscano-cheese-with-black-pepper-094535

TJ’s says: “One of our perennial favorite (cheeses) is Trader Joe’s Toscano Cheese with Black Pepper, an exceptional cheese that you don’t have to save for a special occasion. As it ages, each wheel of cheese is hand-rubbed with cracked black pepper, so every wedge features a burst of mildly spicy pepper flavor—the closer you get to the outside of the wheel, the more pronounced the flavor becomes, yet it’s never overpowering. Serve it on crackers, grated over pasta or shaved onto a freshly prepared steak.”

This TOSCANO cheese is one of my favorite cheeses that Trader Joe’s carries. I find this to be quite special. The Toscano cheeses kind of tastes like Asiago. There are a few varieties of them. Here the black pepper, on the rind and in the cheese, adds quite a bit to the overall flavor profile. However the black pepper doesn’t overpower the wonderful cheese, it just adds a little something extra. They also have other versions of Toscano. Another good one being the one with a “Syrah” wine coating.

I like it on its own, sliced very thinly with Wheat Crisp crackers. It’s great with fruit, like sliced apples or grapes. With pasta? Excellent. I like to grate this over pasta. Superb with any pasta sauce or just butter and cheese using this.

This is a really nice cheese, but all the “Toscano” ones at Trader Joe’s are. A hunk now usually runs about 5-6 bucks ($10.99 lb)

I would buy this again

Trader Joe’s EUROPEAN GRAINS & SEEDS BREAD review


Possibly this is the healthiest bread at Trader Joe’s

WHOLE GRAINS & SEEDS. NO PRESERVATIVES. MADE IN DENMARK

Ingredients: Water, sourdough from whole grain rye flour, rye flour, flaxseed, wheat flour, wholegrain rye flour, sunflower seeds, rye flakes, wheat bran…..

1 slice = 120 Calories, 4 gr Protein, and 10 gr of whole grains

Trader Joe’s EUROPEAN GRAINS & SEEDS BREAD is a European / Scandinavian style bread that Trader Joe’s introduced not too long ago. Here’s what they have to say about it :

“Our Danish bakery partner starts with a hearty sourdough rye Bread base, bolstering it with flax seed, sunflower seeds, rye flakes, and wheat bran before baking it to a deep brown hue. The resulting loaves are classically European—moist, toothsome, and somewhat dense, with a slightly sweet, delightfully nutty quality in each thin slice.”

https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/european-grains-seeds-bread-078717

I’m a big fan of these types of dense, hearty loaves of bread, seen all over Europe plus every Scandinavian country. I love these kinds of breads that have lots of whole grains. These type of breads are usually square loaves, sliced on the thin side as they are dense. Hearty, and delicious.

Wonder Bread this ain’t!

Here in the U.S., we don’t see these kinds of breads often enough, so over the years whenever I’ve seen this type of bread somewhere I will generally buy it. Especially pumpernickel breads which I really like.

I was so happy to find Trader Joe’s came out with this style of European bread, which are of course super healthy, compared to most any other breads. Is it any good?

Yes, this bread is good. Trader Joe’s new “European Grains And Seeds Bread” is deliciously nutty, tasty and full of seeds. It is baked for for them in Denmark by a Danish bakery, with the thin slices have a nice, nutty taste from sourdough wholegrain rye and whole wheat flours plus a lot of seeds.

So healthy. I am going to guess this is probably the healthiest bread you can buy at Trader Joe’s.

PERFECT FOR OPEN FACED SANDWICHES

https://www.saveur.com/smorrebrod-eggs-shrimp-dill-recipe/

How to enjoy European Grains and Seeds Bread: What this kind of bread is great for, is making things like open face sandwiches. Probably not so great for your average (thick) sandwich. It may not hold up. You could try thin sandwiches with two slices but really, think I would think about doing Scandinavian style open face sandwiches.

Of course you can just simply spread a slice with (softened) butter, cream cheese, cottage cheese, any cheese you love, jam, ham, or whatever you like. One way I love to enjoy this bread is to spread a slice with butter and top it with thin slices of cucumber or radish and a few grains of sea salt.

You can eat as is, or warm or toast it a bit. As usual with breads, warming it up even a little bit always improves the flavor. But you don’t have to, its fine at room temp.

While I love how this bread tastes there is one area I think they could improve it. The slices tend to break apart if you are not careful with it, as there are so many seeds in it which make it less solid. Which just means you have to be a little gentle with it. So if using butter for example, I let the butter get a bit softened enough to spread easily, least you rip your slice. Sometimes I cut the slices into half or quarters as its easier to handle. Toasting it makes it a bit more firm so try toasting this too. I do really like it just a little toasted.

I made an simple open faced sardine sandwich on this bread and enjoyed it a lot ; it matched great with the fish. SO GOOD!. Try it with your favorite cheese too.

TJ’s says: “When it comes to toppings and fillings, the thin-yet-sturdy slices of European Grains & Seeds Bread are ready for near-infinite riffing: try topping a slice with a pat of Cultured Salted Butter and a swoosh of berry preserves; sliced Cave Aged Le Gruyère and Rosemary Ham, or ripe avocado and a spoonful of Crunchy Chili Onion. Enjoy a slice as the base of an open-faced sandwich topped with Whipped Cream Cheese, Smoked Salmon Pieces, and plenty of fresh dill. If it’s soft & chewy you’re seeking, use un-toasted slices of European Grains & Seeds Bread to scaffold scoops of tuna salad—and don’t forget the pickle on the side!”

Will this last as a TJ’s product? I hope so. Like all new products, if they see it is selling well they will keep it. However if not enough people buy this, then it may go bye-bye unfortunately. So if you try and like this, keep buying it. I sure will.

I think it’s even gotten a little popular. A few times I have found this sold out, but it seemed to get restocked after a few days.

$3.49 (about 1 lb)

I would buy it again.

Update: Just FYI I did see it recently (5/12/25)

Delicious Review of Trader Joe’s Dark Chocolate Dipped Cookies


Trader Joe's Dark Chocolate Dipped French Butter Cookies; white wood surface with marble platter and white coffee cup, cookies surrounding

“Butter Cookies! From France! Dipped in Dark Chocolate!”

“Just about everyone loves butter cookies. If they’re French butter cookies, there’s an expectation that those cookies are going to be truly great. And what if those French butter cookies are also dipped in dark chocolate? …Made for us in France”

https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/dark-chocolate-dipped-french-butter-cookies-076571

I got these to review and my review is these are quite good. We really liked them.

Very tasty, buttery cookies that have been dipped in good chocolate so that they have a nice coating. The cookies are on the thin side.

Frankly these taste way better than you would expect something which costs $2.99! (Note: they are only you about 10 cookies in a box). So you don’t get a lot of them but the quality of these cookies is pretty darned good!

These Cookies are, indeed, made for us in France. The usual cookie-dough suspects—flour, sugar, egg yolks, milk, leavening, and salt—are combined with cultured French butter (13% of the recipe) to create a dough that is shaped into thin rounds. The baked biscuits are coated in rich, Dark Chocolate (40% of the recipe), yielding an exquisite Cookie that is at the same time: smooth, crunchy, chocolate-y, and buttery!

Yummy. A big thumbs up. Put these out for company. Or eat them all yourselves!

I would buy these again.

$2.99/4.76 Oz

Trader Joe’s CHEESY BAGELS. Review, Expectation vs Reality


“Trader Joe’s Cheesy Bagels are hearth-baked Bagels with a plain bagel base, delightfully doughy on the inside. On the outside, they boast a cheesy, chewy crust that comes from shredded Asiago cheese that’s been pre-melted on top.” — Trader Joe’s

https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/cheesy-bagels-079365

When I saw these in the NEW ITEMS section a few weeks ago I was intrigued and thought this sounded like something worth trying. Just picking up the bag and smelling them, well it has a wonderfully appealing smell, from baked Asiago cheese! Since they smelled so good, I thought I would check them out. When I told my neighbor (another big Trader Joe’s fan) she said she wanted to try them too, and as she got back to Trader Joe’s before I did, she bought them for us both to try.

Well, guess what. We were both dissapointed in these, and not half as as good as we were expecting. We both thought, “just OK”. Yes, the cheesy part, the Asiago on top that is baked in, that is good, however it is called a “cheesy bagel” so the bagel itself has to be good. It’s not. Trader Joe’s says “delightfully doughy inside”. It is doughy. Just soft and doughy, bready. It did not delight this bagel maven. These have none of the chewy texture which defines a real bagel. You can tell this so called “bagel” is only baked and not boiled and baked, which is what makes a real bagel. Just to compare, these are nothing at all like Trader Joe’s ARTISAN BAGELS, which are boiled and baked and to which I gave a big thumbs up. Those are good, real authentic bagels with a chewy crust and soft chewy interior. And once again this is coming from a picky New Yorker who knows from bagels!

These just taste to me like the kind of “bagels” seen in supermarkets in maybe Iowa, where they have no idea about bagels. Now I think one could come up with something akin to a good “cheesy bagel”. Take one of Trader Joe’s good Artisan Plain Bagels, cut it open and toss on some grated Asiago Cheese. Toast this up till the cheese is melted all bubbly, and you may come up with a good tasty “Cheesy Bagel”. It will be far far better than this disappointing so called bagel.

Two of us reviewing them said the same thing: “Would not buy these again”

Trader Joe’s “Cheesy Bagels” – $3.49 (4 bagels) 2/10

TJ’s Artisan Bagels are $1.99 for three (good) perfectly chewy bagels. I kind of suggest you just buy those and toast them up with your favorite cheese.

(image: Trader Joe’s)

Trader Joe’s STEAMED CHICKEN SOUP DUMPLINGS, review


These I have gathered have gotten to be quite popular especially due to a semi viral “hack” about them on social media like Instagram and TikTok.

The hack is basically you cook these in chicken broth and drizzle with chile oil. So basically chicken dumplings in chicken soup. Almost like they were wontons.

I previously reviewed the other version of these that Trader Joe’s has, the more typical pork version of these dumplings. Pork and Ginger Soup Dumplings. I thought I would give these Chicken Dumpling versions a try as well.

OK, they are decent as long as I really just think of them as another kind of dumpling and not specifically “soup dumplings” aka “xiao long bao” or XLB, those prized jewels of the Chinese dumpling art. I am a huge fan, a devotee of XLB. Any good xiao long bao as I previously mentioned in that other review about TJ’s Pork Soup Dumplings.

I made these chicken soup dumpling two ways. First, the simple, classic way of just steaming them, then enjoying with a dipping sauce. For what they are and what they cost, I would say they were not bad (If not really “soup dumplings”). Round chicken dumplings.

Next I wanted to try this viral hack going around…. So I also made them this time cooked in chicken broth.

Yes, cooking the dumplings in chicken broth gives these an edge. First, serving them this way makes these into more of a meal or “dinner” rather than being an appetizer or snack.

I actually had some of my own homemade chicken broth which I had made a few days before, and let’s face it that obviously helped improve the whole dish. Tip 1: use good chicken broth.

PROS- I was pleasantly surprised by how tasty I actually found the chicken filling in these dumplings. The filling is definitely a step up. Very rich and meaty tasting having a good amount of chicken and really being loaded with ginger. The ginger gives these a great taste. The filling in these is so much better, compared to the standard Trader Joe’s chicken gyoza/dumplings (plastic bag, $4). No comparison. These cost more and you can taste the difference. So for the upgraded chicken Filling, I give these a big plus.

CONS – Where these lose ground with me, are the actual wrappers. I wish they had better quality wrappers. The dough wrapper here just turned too soft and mushy too easily. Yes maybe thats just what sitting in hot soup does to them, though frankly I must have eaten a thousand bowls of steaming hot wonton soup in my lifetime and never find the wrappers as soft and mushy as these became. Second, the “chicken soup” in them? Minimal. At best. Not nearly enough soup inside (though if eaten in broth, this may be a moot point, I admit).

An authentic soup dumpling has perhaps a tablespoon or more of liquid. These had maybe a teaspoon if that? These are fairly flat, like little pucks while real XLB are round and a bit tall, so can fit more stuffing inside. Real XLB you can be picked up with chopsticks (see pic) – which is next to impossible with these Trader Joe’s “soup dumplings” as they just don’t have enough extra dough at the top, as you can see in this authentic Xiao Long Bao.

(what an authentic soup dumpling looks like, image from Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao. See how much filling and soup they have?)

The fact is unlike many kinds of dumplings, xiao long bao don’t really freeze well. The wrappers are delicate. So real ones are almost always made fresh to order. As far as frozen xiao long bao, I’ve had them from supposedly high end vendors, but did not find any equal to eating them fresh in a restaurant by a long shot.

HOW TO COOK Trader Joe’s STEAMED CHICKEN SOUP DUMPLINGS:

Steamed in Microwave: Follow the package directions to put them in the microwave for a little less than two minutes right in the tray they come in.

Stovetop: I made them in this traditional way, in a steamer basket. Steam for 8-10 minutes until very hot.

Cooking In Chicken Broth: If you are doing the viral hack of making these in chicken broth, unless you have some good homemade broth, I would suggest getting the best quality chicken broth you can buy. Most broth in cartons are just OK. Nothing like homemade. I have found the Trader Joe’s Low Sodium Chicken Broth to be “just ok”. FYI, The NY Times said that Target’s GOOD AND PLENTY broth was among the best of store bought chicken broths in a carton. Yes you would be adding a bit of soy sauce and chili oil which will give things a bit more of a taste. Rather than the typical carton broth which everyone is showing you they pour on these dumplings, I would suggest trying Trader Joe’s BONE BROTH (sold in the refrigerated case, $5). I have found that broth pretty good, closer to home made chicken stock than TJ’s carton broths. Real chicken broths gel up when cold from the collagen in bones. The TJ Bone Broth is a bit gelled.

https://momsdish.com/recipe/530/easy-homemade-chicken-broth

Add a bit of soy sauce, sesame oil and chili oil (my chili oil of choice would be the real deal: Lao Gan Ma) over Trader Joe’s CHILI CRISP but it can do it a pinch.

Again if you think of these not really as XLB but as decent frozen chicken dumplings I would say these are worth trying, especially if you try the viral dumplings in soup with chili oil hack/recipe.

Trader Joe’s STEAMED CHICKEN SOUP DUMPLINGS $3.49 (for six dumplings)

More on Trader Joe’s BEEF BIRRIA (Made Queso Birria Tacos) Video Recipe!


Birria Tacos are all the rage now made popular via social media and food trucks that specialize in them.

Naturally the frozen version available at Trader Joe’s may not equal the best ones from a great food truck, However you can get cook them in a way which will make them closer using the Beef Birria which I previously reviewed and liked.

I made the tacos as per the video above as Trader Joe’s suggests. These turned out quite good done this way! It’s worth a little extra effort.

The cheesy beefy tacos got a little cruchy on the outside with some delicious fried cheese leaking out of them.

As I like corn tortillas that’s what I used but four ones could work as well. I used shredded Mozzarellam, which worked well as the “queso” but so could other cheeses, like cheddar perhaps. Add the chopped onions, cilantro and some lime juice at the end as they say for an authentic birria taco taste.

Though thought thought may turn you off a bit, that orange fat on top that you are dipping the tortilla in, is important for flavor and to give the tacos a crispy texture.

BTW I didn’t realize till recently Trader Joe’s had their own YouTube channel. Fun to check out.

I also later thought this dish could become a beef stew with other vegetables very easily. So I tried par-boiling carrots and potatoes for 5 minutes, then added them to the beef birria. Simmer all together until the carrots and potatoes are tender, which takes about 15-20 minutes with the par-boiling. Add a little water or stock if things get too dry. This turned out quite good and makes it into a Mexican style beef stew, with the veggies getting lots of flavor.

Trader Joe’s SAN FRANCISCO STYLE SOURDOUGH BREAD, reviewed


Trader Joe’s “San Francisco Style Sourdough” is a popular bread at Trader Joe’s. And for good reason. Its just a really good tasting bread which everybody seems to love and it’s priced reasonably at three and a half bucks.

How about this for a review? I buy this all the time. This has consistently been one of my standard Go-To items to pick up whenever I shop at Trader Joe’s. One of my favorites breads they sell, and they have a lot of good breads!

This is a handy bread to have on hand. Good for many purposes.

I bet you love ingredient lists where the list is nice and short, like I do. Which it is here. Basically the ingredients say: “unbleached enriched flour, malted barley, water, salt.”

No preservatives.

Its a round loaf, sliced. The slices here are a bit thinner than another TJ sourdough, their CRACKED WHEAT SOURDOUGH which I also reviewed with a thumbs up. That bread is sliced thicker with about 13 slices to a loaf, while this one has about 16-17 slices per package. One slice has about 100 calories.

The crust looks slightly shiny, typical of sourdough bread, and has a nice hole structure in the interior. Its slightly dense, slightly chewy, with a nice taste and a hint of that “sour dough” flavor. It makes excellent toast.

I love a slice of this toasted, say for breakfast with some butter and good jam. This make great sandwiches of course. You can not go wrong making a grilled cheese sandwich with this. Ditto avocado toast.

I found some (incorrect) rumors online last summer about it being discontinued which seemed to upset lots of people, only to learn it was not discontinued. Just to confirm that again, I just bought it recently (Jan 2025) As it is popular you might find it sold out, on occasion, but just ask at the front desk when they expect to get more in, if they sold out of all the stock that day.

If you haven’t tried this yet, try it. I would say its well worth every penny.

San Francisco Style Sourdough Bread, $3.49 (1 1/2 lb, 24 oz round slice loaf)

I would buy this again

I freeze it for long term storage wrapped inside another bag (double bagged). If its hard to pry a slice off frozen I just use a knife to pry one off. Can last 1-2 months frozen.

RAVE

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