PolishForums   Poland Now and Then
Home . Polls . Search Witamy,  [Guest 38.103.63.18]  Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts
 Please register or login below:

 » Username  » Password 
Polish Forums / Life in Poland / Start a new topic in the [Life in Poland] forum

cost of nescafe coffee in Poland


 [1] 2  »»
posts: 37
 
surrey
  Mar 30, 08, 09:52  #1

Can anyone tell me the cost of nescafe coffee in Poland please. I am interested in 100gram and 200gram Nescafe original from the cheapest shops ie in other words what is the cheapest you can buy nescafe original 100g 200g for in Poland please?

Member
Posts: 2
Joined: Mar 30, 08
                              
Reply
Wroclaw
  Mar 30, 08, 09:56  #2

surrey wrote:
I am interested in 100gram and 200gram Nescafe original


100 gram about 12-13zl

200 gram about 20zl

It really does depend where you buy it.

Member
Posts: 3171
Joined: Apr 1, 06
                              
Reply
surrey
  Mar 30, 08, 10:01  #3

Thanks

Member
Posts: 2
Joined: Mar 30, 08
                              
Reply
andysterdam
  Mar 30, 08, 10:06  #4

I'll be moving to Poland soon, but having never been there I was wondering if whole, toasted coffee beans are easily available. I'm a bit of a coffee 'purist' and I like to grind my coffee before brewing it to preserve taste, texture, etc. (I also only drink it black, but that's beside the point).

Also, should I bring my grinder or is such a device readily available in Poland?

Member
Posts: 51
Joined: Mar 12, 08
                              
Reply
miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 30, 08, 10:09  #5

andysterdam wrote:
I bring my grinder or is such a device readily available in Poland?

bring your own, and as for coffee beans - it is not as available in most stores, unless you are lucky enough to be in a place where there is a speciality store. I would bring some and then find other options of getting your supply while in Poland.

Member
Posts: 3885
Joined: Nov 13, 06
                              
Reply
andysterdam
  Mar 30, 08, 10:40  #6

I take it the 'Starbucks Syndrome' hasn't yet gripped Poland; just as well too. Maybe I'll find a supplier in Warsaw(?). Thanks, miranda! :)

Member
Posts: 51
Joined: Mar 12, 08
                              
Reply
JustysiaS
Edited by: JustysiaS  Mar 30, 08, 11:06  #7

andysterdam wrote:
grinder or is such a device readily available in Poland


a GRINDER?? Poland has never heard of such an advanced device!! lol, of course you can get them, and i'm sure you wont have any problems with finding coffee beans either. dont panic ;)

Member
Posts: 1469
Joined: Oct 14, 07
                              
Reply
miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 30, 08, 11:16  #8

andysterdam wrote:
Maybe I'll find a supplier in Warsaw(?)

I am sure you will. My friend runs one of those speciality shops - kind of Polish Coffee shop but with a nicer ambience than Sturbucks in Szczecin.

Justysia, I understand where he is coming from - I am a native of Poland, yet I travel with my own baking goods since I don;t want to run around and look for things to the point of exhaustion - which can happen in Poland. I like to make my life easy.

Member
Posts: 3885
Joined: Nov 13, 06
                              
Reply
JustysiaS
  Mar 30, 08, 11:32  #9

miranda wrote:
I like to make my life easy.


i'd never take a coffee grinder or my baking goods anywhere with me, i'd prefer the thrill of hunting them all down by myself, and the feeling of victory and fulfillment after finding them LOL

Member
Posts: 1469
Joined: Oct 14, 07
                              
Reply
Davey
  Mar 30, 08, 11:40  #10

JustysiaS wrote:
a GRINDER??

What? People use coffee grinders for coffee?

Member
Posts: 324
Joined: Jun 29, 07
                              
Reply
VaFunkoolo
  Mar 30, 08, 11:40  #11

I went to a Polish coffee house last year and asked for a cappuccino. Simple enough request, wasn't being flash or anything. I got some sort of nescafe dishwater type stuff in a tall glass with whipped cream and a fukin glacier cherry on top. Slap me round the face with a wet kipper and cosh me over the head with a broken bottle I did my fukin nut. That's a lie actually. The waitress was a lovely women and doing her best so I drank my coffee meakly and said thank you very much.

Member
Posts: 857
Joined: Mar 24, 08
                              
Reply
JustysiaS
  Mar 30, 08, 11:44  #12

Davey wrote:
People use coffee grinders for coffee?


they use them to grind coffee beans actually lol. i remember my dad having one when i was little, it was the noisiest thing ever!

Member
Posts: 1469
Joined: Oct 14, 07
                              
Reply
Davey
  Mar 30, 08, 11:54  #13

JustysiaS wrote:
they use them to grind coffee beans actually lol. i remember my dad having one when i was little, it was the noisiest thing ever!

Oh I just mean here in Canada, we use them for zioło=) Honestly, if you see a teenager buying a coffee grinder, the store clerk knows it isn't for coffee=)

Member
Posts: 324
Joined: Jun 29, 07
                              
Reply
JustysiaS
  Mar 30, 08, 11:55  #14

Davey wrote:
Oh I just mean here in Canada, we use them for zioło=)


oh wow, i learnt something new about Canada today! lol

Member
Posts: 1469
Joined: Oct 14, 07
                              
Reply
realcoffeeluver [Guest]
  Mar 30, 08, 12:20  #15

VaFunkoolo wrote:
I drank my coffee meakly and said thank you very much.


I couldn't do that! I cannot drink a bad cup of coffee for anyone, even if I was dying of thirst!

Has to be a good cup of coffee or else!


;-)

Guest

                              
Reply
LondonChick
  Mar 30, 08, 12:22  #16

surrey wrote:
Can anyone tell me the cost of nescafe coffee in Poland please. I am interested in 100gram and 200gram Nescafe original from the cheapest shops ie in other words what is the cheapest you can buy nescafe original 100g 200g for in Poland please?



Anyone else dying to know the reason behind the question? School project? Graduate trainee?

Member
Posts: 1112
Joined: Nov 19, 07
                              
Reply
realcoffeeluver [Guest]
  Mar 30, 08, 12:24  #17

LondonChick wrote:
nyone else dying to know the reason behind the question? School project? Graduate trainee?


He/she is just a coffee enthusiast surely? You must be a tea drinker then LC ?

Guest

                              
Reply
VaFunkoolo
Edited by: VaFunkoolo  Mar 30, 08, 12:27  #18

realcoffeeluver wrote:
He/she is just a coffee enthusiast surely?


drinking nescafe?

Surely not.

realcoffeeluver wrote:
I couldn't do that! I cannot drink a bad cup of coffee for anyone, even if I was dying of thirst!


I so know where youre coming from. But I was so shoked I behaved in out of character.

Member
Posts: 857
Joined: Mar 24, 08
                              
Reply
miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 30, 08, 12:29  #19

JustysiaS wrote:
i'd never take a coffee grinder or my baking goods anywhere with me, i'd prefer the thrill of hunting them all down by myself, and the feeling of victory and fulfillment after finding them LOL

I presume he doesn't know his way around, nor the language and since he likes his coffee, it is up to his own discretion to take enything he wants to Poland.
unless you want him to bite on beans and drink hot water;), which I don't think he has indicated.

Member
Posts: 3885
Joined: Nov 13, 06
                              
Reply
LondonChick
  Mar 30, 08, 12:36  #20

realcoffeeluver wrote:
You must be a tea drinker then LC ?



very perceptive ;)

Member
Posts: 1112
Joined: Nov 19, 07
                              
Reply
realcoffeeluver [Guest]
  Mar 30, 08, 12:38  #21

VaFunkoolo wrote:
drinking nescafe?


Well, I think so as he must have heard about your experience and a good jar of nescafe sounds better than the stuff you drank.

Hey, I like your name what does the Va stand for? I get the 'oolo' bit though! My great grandfathers was an 'oolo' and got a medal for it.

VaFunkoolo wrote:
ut I was so shoked I behaved in out of character.


I can just see that happening too. Bet you left her a big tip too !

Guest

                              
Reply
Davey
  Mar 30, 08, 12:42  #22

LondonChick wrote:
very perceptive ;)

Oh come on you're from London!!! anyone could have figured it out ; )

Member
Posts: 324
Joined: Jun 29, 07
                              
Reply
realcoffeeluver [Guest]
  Mar 30, 08, 12:44  #23

Davey wrote:
Oh come on you're from London!!! anyone could have figured it out ; )


thats not quite true as many Londoners like their coffee.....

Thank you LC ;-)

Guest

                              
Reply
VaFunkoolo
Edited by: VaFunkoolo  Mar 30, 08, 12:51  #24

VaFunkoolo is a reference to my fictional Italian heritage and my love of telling people exactly where to go. Places where the sun dont shine in particular. Nonetheless, its entirely possible we are related on your great grandfather's side as my mother too has a medal, although hers is for her strawberry pavlova.

The Va stands for 'go', as in vavavoom.

Member
Posts: 857
Joined: Mar 24, 08
                              
Reply
realcoffeeluver [Guest]
  Mar 30, 08, 13:08  #25

VaFunkoolo wrote:
my fictional Italian heritage


That'll be why you asked for a 'cappuccino' cos it's Italian innit !

Long distant Italian cousins meeting on a Polish Forum Board. Who'd have thought it. I bet you just love lasagne don't you ?

I like plum tomatoes and I eat' em raw.

Very clever nickname, am in awe with it. Cousin oolo :)

Guest

                              
Reply
VaFunkoolo
  Mar 30, 08, 13:18  #26

Yes, you are quite right, this was my reason for ordering a cupofchino. I am exceedingly proud of my make believe Italian heritage and my pasta scoffing roots.

Indeed, I recently made a trip to Chicago in search of Polish relatives and was taken to an Italian restaurant. I ordered a pizza and lo and behold the blighters bought me a pie. You can imagine my suprise.

I said mama mia, slap me round the face with a wet kipper and cosh me over the head with a broken bottle, this ainta no pizza. I wanta the thin and crispy eh you wannabe wop, gowa getta me the chef pronto, eh.

Actually that too is a lie. I ate one slice of the pie and it was delicious. Perhaps I am American.

Member
Posts: 857
Joined: Mar 24, 08
                              
Reply
Harry
  Mar 30, 08, 14:30  #27

andysterdam wrote:
I'm a bit of a coffee 'purist' and I like to grind my coffee before brewing it to preserve taste, texture, etc. (I also only drink it black, but that's beside the point).

Also, should I bring my grinder or is such a device readily available in Poland?

Hmm, I only know of at least seven places where such a device is available in Warsaw. Perhaps you should bring your own.

As for beans, they are so common that the nearest place which sells beans is no more than 100 metres from my apartment. They do sell Hawaiian Kona and have three different roasts of Ethiopian Harrar but they kicked me out of their shop when I asked them for Blue Mountain (asking for it was a joke but the owner didn't think it was at all funny).

Member
Posts: 609
Joined: May 2, 07
                              
Reply
finT
  Mar 31, 08, 02:24  #28

Harry wrote:
I asked them for Blue Mountain

H, they have Jamaican Blue Mountain in the big supermarket in Promenada, can't remember the name of the supermarket but there is only one! Unfortunately as far as I remember it was around the 120PLN mark for 250g (who the f*** is buying that here?)

Member
Posts: 188
Joined: Oct 25, 07
                              
Reply
Magdalena
  Mar 31, 08, 04:07  #29

finT wrote:
(who the f*** is buying that here?)


I personally knew people (young professional Poles) who could easily afford that kind of stuff. I hope some of the glory rubs off on me ;-)

Member
Posts: 269
Joined: Aug 15, 07
                              
Reply
Harry
  Mar 31, 08, 12:57  #30

finT wrote:
H, they have Jamaican Blue Mountain in the big supermarket in Promenada, can't remember the name of the supermarket but there is only one! Unfortunately as far as I remember it was around the 120PLN mark for 250g (who the f*** is buying that here?)

There are actually quite a few places which sell Blue Mountain. The problem is that the stuff is no longer worth the price, not after the Japanese invasion of the early 1980s. I go for Kona myself (although it costs 400zl per kilo so it's not my everyday cup of coffee!)

Member
Posts: 609
Joined: May 2, 07
                              
Reply
 [1] 2  »» Similar Threads¦Latest Discussions Go UPtop of page

Home / Life in Poland /

Your Reply re: cost of nescafe coffee in Poland 

Bold  Italic  Horizontal Line  Cite Source 
Ą  ą  Ć  ć  Ę  ę  Ł  ł  Ń  ń  Ó  ó  Ś  ś  Ź  ź  Ż  ż

 If you read this, you are probably not a registered user yet and cannot access all forums and features!

 - Before creating a new topic, make sure to follow the Topic Title Creation Rules.
 - Your message must comply with the General Forum Rules.
 - If you have further questions, check the Forum FAQ & Feedback section.

 To post anonymously, please enter a temporary and unique Username (without password).


 Please register or login below:

 » Username  » Password 

Newer thread in this forum: Older thread in this forum:
Name of hospital near to Poznan Plaza? Beauty saloon in Poznan?


46 users online in the last hour [Guests - 25 / Members - 21] All times are CST (GMT -6)

Home . Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts . Statistics
© 2005-08 PolishForums.com | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy, TOS, Rules | Poland Advertising | Support PF