Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Springfield Sale Items July 27-August 2

Our Signature Steak
8 oz. Bacon-Wrapped Filet Mignon
2/$10!

Also at Harter House

USDA Choice Bone-In Ribeye 
$6.99 lb.
Italian Sausage or German Bratwurst
$2.99 lb.
Smart Chicken Drumsticks/Thighs
Family Pack
$1.69 lb.
Super-Trimmed Pork Steaks
$1.89 lb.

Made Fresh at Harter House

Diet Lean Ground Round
$3.29 lb.

Seasoned Pork Patties
$2.49 lb.
100% Pure

Quarter Pound Ground Chuck Patties
10 Count
$6.99 lb.

Buy One Get One FREE! (LIMIT PLEASE)

Sara Lee Honey Wheat Bread
Save $3.19!

FOR EVEN MORE SAVINGS AT OUR STORES CLICK HERE!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Springfield Sale Items July 20 - 26, 2011

USDA CHOICE BONELESS TRI-TIP 
3.99 / lb.




FRESH, NEVER FROZEN,
BONELESS CHICKEN BREAST
$1.99 / lb.

Other Items from the Butcher's Case:

Bone-In Iowa Thick Cut Pork Loin Chop / $2.99 lb.


Made Fresh at Harter House
Family Pack Extra Lean Ground Chuck
4 Pounds or more
$2.89 / lb.

USDA Choice Boneless New York Strip Steak / $8.99 lb.

Smart Chicken Whole Fryers / $1.99 lb.

Double Smoked Pork Chops / $3.99 lb.

HoneySuckle White Whole Smoked Turkey / $2.59 lb.



For more specials this week, click here to view our Weekly Ad Specials!

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Our Harter House Family

At Harter House, our employees are part of our family. So it's always sad when our family members move on to something new in their life. Gary Patton is retiring after working 11 years for Harter House, at 1500 E. Republic Road. Gary has over 44 years working in the grocery business. His expertise has always been produce, but Gary really did it all. He has been a "right-arm" for both Dale, our store manage and Mike, our grocery manager.
Gary intends to spend his time working on his farm. But don't feel too sorry for him, he has an air-conditioned tractor. And Gary is already planning his part-time return to Harter House in the fall, because he knows he will miss TOO MUCH!!
We wish you the very best, Gary. It will take two people to replace you!

Monday, July 18, 2011

4 Facts About Hee Haw and Marketing

Yesterday I spent my day researching Hee Haw (don't ask), as I did my usual Sunday routine (assassinating flies) and getting some extra work done for the coming week.  I'm in marketing and any textbook about the subject will tell you that the definition of marketing is figuring out what products people may be interested in, then strategize and communicate it to the customer.  Rarely do they tell you that often marketing is the act of researching a variety show from the 70's with pitchfork-holding farmers telling jokes to scantily-clad cowgirls in cornfields. This was a regular routine of my youth, between my father's forced marathon viewing periods of M*A*S*H and Star Trek. 
,
It was kind of like the flower ceremony on The Bachelor, only less embarrassing.

My problem:  How do you market a show that has been off the air for 20+ years for today's audience more attuned with the fast-paced action of CSI and the raunchy humor of South Park?  This then got me thinking about what I know about marketing and from there, I was on my way.

One of the first approaches a student learns in marketing is SIVA or, Solution, Information, Value, and Access.  In all honesty, it is basically the four P's (Product, Price, Place, and Promotion), renamed and focused towards the customer.  For giggles, let's discuss this using the test case of Harter House's Country Style Pork Loin Ribs.

1.  Solution requires their be a problem.  Marketers (i.e. Me) assume their is a problem, even if there is none.  We ask questions like:  Can we make it better?  Why are we not selling more?  Why will it not give people the power of flight?  Often we ask these questions when no problem exists, as in, the quality of Harter House's Pork Loin Ribs is perfect and the price is absolutely the lowest it could go, but that doesn't stop the marketer from attempting to create a campaign for the ribs.  This is exactly the same reason that multiple versions of Cheez-Its exist, even though they all taste the same. 

2.  Information is the easy part.  The key, is what information to share.  My life in marketing began at a bank, and we drilled people with words like trust, peace of mind, safe, and secure, all words that made the customer feel cared-for, while we raised APR's to 30% and offered high-risk home equity loans.  Needless to say, I eventually traded my high paycheck for a soul, and now I market for businesses I can feel good about, and I'm capable of sleeping at night again without waking up screaming covered in a cold sweat. 

So, when I'm telling you the Country-Style Ribs are delicious, packed with flavor, juicy and meaty, it's not that I'm using terms that I researched and felt more people would be motivated to buy....okay, it was but my research also involved TASTING the Country-Style Ribs and discovering they actually were delicious, packed with flavor, juicy and meaty.  

For extra relevance at this point, and to provide even more detail and INFORMATION the good marketer would include a picture, like this:

Look at that detail...

3.  We have provided you with the Solution and the Information, now we have to sway You, the customer, to make a decision.  PRICE.  Too high, and it doesn't matter how much time we spent and number of adjectives we used, no one will buy.  Too low, and then we create a sense of doubt in the product.  However, this is an easy situation with Harter House.

See, the beauty of Harter House is they have developed a reputation that is a pinnacle in our community.  The Bettlach family are some of the best people I know.  They are trustworthy, giving and would do anything for a anyone.  They also LOVE their customers, and they show this love in two regards:  unmatched quality and unparallelled price.

In this case, we are talking about Grill Ready Country-Style Pork Loin Ribs for $2.49 a pound.  Hello?  Why are you still reading this?  Shouldn't you be at Harter House picking up about 10 pounds of ribs about now?

4.  Then comes promotion.  This can be done in a multitude of ways:  Commercials, Print ads, Billboards, or blogs where I randomly start by discussing 70's variety shows, move to marketing concepts and then wrap it up with a loose tie-in to Country-Style Pork Loin Ribs at $2.49 a pound.  Honestly, the options are limitless. 

Well, I hope you learned something today.  Tomorrow, I will attempt an article in which I tie together 80's, Eric Estrada-fueled, television favorite CHiPs, service dominant logic, and 16 ounce packages of Best Choice Bologna for $1.59 each, but until then I recommend going out, cooking some amazing Country-Style Pork Loin Ribs and having some good old-fashioned fun watching Buck Owens and Roy Clark host a classic episode of Hee Haw.

Since the title of the article is four facts about marketing AND Hee Haw, here are four things you might not have known about the show:

1.  Hee Haw was on CBS originally for one season until it was dropped by the network during it's "Rural Purge" along with The Beverly Hillbillies, Mayberry RFD, and Green Acres because they felt the audience was becoming to "rural and less affluent".  I'm hoping this may occur again someday with the network as the "Idiot Purge", by getting rid of "Big Brother".

2.  Hee Haw ran in syndication from 1969 to 1992!  In fact, before cancellation, to update to a modern audience they introduced sets like a SHOPPING MALL and city street. 

3.  The concept of the show actually came from Canada.  The shows creators, Frank Peppiatt and John Aylesworth were from Canada and most of the concept was based off the already popular "Canadian" The Red Green Show.

4.  Elvis Presley loved Hee Haw and wanted to be on it, however his manager felt that it was bad for his brand.  Colonel Tom Parker did think it was okay for him to wear white sequined jumpsuits though.
Hee Haw, bad idea.  That suit, good idea?

Friday, July 15, 2011

Potter-Mania!

With the final film of the Harry Potter saga upon us, and Harry Potter and the Death Hallows Part 2 sitting at 97% (Fresh Rating) on the Tomatometer on Rotten Tomatoes, it looks as if at least half of all Harter House customers will be spending some time in a movie theater this weekend.  The reviews have ranged from "...an emotional roller-coaster ride." (Dallas Morning News) to
"It's wonderful. Epic and heartbreaking and just as grand as it needs to be." (New York Daily News), I doubt many of Harry's fans will be disappointed, and will most likely see it more than once.

But how do you prepare for your trip to see the conclusion of an 8-Part epic (Part 7 was split into two halves.)?    Harter House presents:  How to prepare for the finale of Harry Potter!

1.  Don't drink anything the day of your viewing.  The movie is 2 hours and 10 minutes long.  With trailers and commercials, you are looking at 2 and a half hours of your day spent capturing the epic grandeur of Harry Potter.  You certainly don't not want have to get up and leave for the restroom missing an important or moving moment within the film.  Plus, the theater will be crowded (to capacity) filled with 14 and 15 year olds who have no problem speaking their overly-opinionated mind.

2.  Watch the trailer.    Trailers today leave very little to the imagination and will pretty much give you the entire movie in short snippets (check out Transformer 3's trailer for proof, and then thank yourself that you don't actually have to go see it.)  However, the trailer for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 feels as epic as the movie, and will definitely get you in the spirit.  I would recommend watching the entire series again, but that would take all day Saturday and Sunday to complete, leaving you no time to actually see the new film.



3. Make snacks. Not that $100 for an ounce of popcorn isn't reasonable, but this is a movie about magic. You need something extra special for this occasion. Try the following recipes and think of ingenious ways to sneak them in....not that we condone that sort of thing.

Acid Pops
Adapted from The Leaky Cauldron

12 lollipops (I recommend using sour ones—these are acid pops!)
3-4 packages pop rocks (any flavor of your choosing)
1/4 cup honey

Unwrap the lollipops. Place the pop rocks into a shallow bowl.

Place the honey in a small bowl and heat in the microwave for 20-30 seconds. The hotter the honey is, the thinner the consistency of the honey will become (and we want thin honey!). Coat the lollipops in the honey and roll in the pop rocks. If the honey thickens, heat it up again. Set the lollipops on wax paper until dry.

Assemble these as closely as possible to the serving time as the pop rocks will absorb some of the moisture in the honey and lose some of their "pop."

Cockroach Clusters

Yields 12 clusters

1/2 cup chocolate chips
1/4 cup butterscotch chips
1 1/2 cup dry chow mein noodles

Heat up the chocolate and butterscotch chips in a double boiler (or microwave) and stir until smooth. Mix in the dry chow mein noodles until evenly coated.

On a baking sheet covered in wax paper, drop a spoonful of noodles to form small clusters. Let cool completely and store clusters in an airtight container at room temperature.

Licorice Wands
Adapted from Betty Crocker

6 ounces vanilla-flavored candy coating (or white chocolate)
24 licorice twists (any flavor)
Sprinkles

Melt the candy coating in a small bowl. Coat 1/3 to 1/2 of the licorice twists in the candy coating (I filled a tall, 2 ounce shot glass with the candy coating which made it much easier to dip the licorice twists and get a clean edge). Sprinkle with sprinkles and place licorice twists onto wax paper to dry for at least 1 hour to set the coating.

Chocolate Frogs

Tempered chocolate, melted
Frog chocolate mold

Fill an ungreased chocolate mold with melted chocolate. Hit mold against hard surface several times to level out the chocolate and rid the chocolates of air bubbles. Freeze chocolate for 3-5 minutes (if you leave them in longer, the chocolate will lose its glossy sheen). Remove from freezer, flip over mold, and hit it against a clean surface until chocolates fall out.

Good luck with sneaking chocolate into a theater with temperatures reaching over a hundred this weekend. (tip: do not put them in your pocket)

However you decide to spend your weekend, make sure to stop by your local Harter House to pick up what you need for whatever you have planned. We have Quarter Pound Ground Chuck Patties 10 Count for $6.99 that would be perfect for any barbeques you might have after you are forced by your children to take them to Harry Potter.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Top Ten Worst Foods in America

I always love reading Eat This, Not That published by Rodale publishing.  I think of it as my survival guide when I go out to eat.  Unfortunately in Missouri, like most places in the United States, it is rare that a restaurant or fast food joint has to disclose exactly how much calories and fat you are putting into your body.  I remember my shock recently on a trip to California, when I looked at the menu at McDonald's and saw what the numbers of a Big Mac Extra Value Meal actually were.

My friends often tell me that I over-react when it comes to food.  "Why don't you just live a little?" they often demand.  Here's the thing:  Is that really living?  What food I put into my body defines the life I live?  I refuse to think that it is careless disregard that it is the sign of a good life.  At 40, I think that not paying attention to my diet is more likely going to lead me to an early and miserable grave.  Diabetes, heart disease, cancer, and a myriad of diseases have been linked to poor eating choices, but rarely has eating healthy been described as bad for you.  Yet, on a daily basis I am told I should just eat pizza, or a greasy burger, or a piece of cake, or hot wings.  They won't sway me because here's the secret:  I remember the people I cared about the most, the people I see every day, and my own past.   I watch as the individual in the motorized cart attempts to get the fried wings at K-Mart that were just a little out of reach the other day.  I feel empathy for the man who tries with all his might to fit in his seat on the airplane and has to ask for an extension for his seatbelt.  I remember my grandmother who died from cancer.  I remember my father who died from heart disease.  I remember my own embarassment when I was 300 pounds and I would leave my shirt on when I would go swimming.

Obesity numbers continue to rise in the United States.  It's not about vanity.  It's about living the life you want to live.  A life not defined by food or eating.  A life defined by the way you affect the world versus how we take from it.  Eating is not bad, and should never be looked at as that.  EATING IS GOOD.  We are a grocery store after all.  But as Harter House, we want you to be a customer for a long, long time.  We love our customers.  We have been a part of this community and have become close friends with many of you.

It's about the small changes.  The little things we can add or take-away.  With this in mind, the following is reprinted from the Eat This / Not That blog.  The 10 Worst Foods in America, along with the substitutions they recommend:

10.  Outback Steakhouse Baby Back Ribs (full rack) 

 

2,012 calories
160 g fat (59 g saturated)
2,600 mg sodium
Keep in mind that this caloric heft comes without the addition of Aussie Fries, which will invariably adorn most of the plates at Outback. Nor does it take into account the free brown bread and salad that comes with every entrĂ©e order. For all that you can factor in an extra 800 calories or so, bringing the total damage dangerously close to the 3,000-calorie threshold. That much energy will add nearly a pound of fat to your body, which means if you start eating this meal once a week, one year from today you’ll have 41 extra pounds of baby-back body fat hanging from your midsection.

Eat This Instead!

Outback Special (9 oz)
445 calories
23 g fat (11.5 g saturated)
610 mg sodium



9.  Denny's Smokin' Q Three Pack 

 

2,020 calories
110 g fat (22 g saturated, 3 g trans)
3,570 mg sodium
Okay, technically this is three burgers, but the idea behind the mini-burger is that the restrained vessels will help you knock off some calories from the hulking mothership burger that inspired them. Rarely, though, does it actually work out that way. In fact, after searching high and low, we still haven’t found a single slider or mini-burger safe enough to order. Skip them all, but these especially, which up the caloric ante by crowning the not-so-mini patties with both bacon and onion crispers. They may look harmless, but this trio will knock out your entire day’s caloric allotment.



Eat This Instead!

Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato Sandwich
520 calories
35 g fat (8 g saturated, 0.5 g trans)
620 mg sodium


8. Cold Stone Creamery PB&C Shake (Gotta Have It size, 24 fl oz)

 

2,030 calories
131 g fat (68 g saturated, 2.5 g trans)
153 g sugars
A couple years ago, Baskin-­Robbins’ milk shake line could have easily claimed the top five worst drinks in America, but when it decided to reel in some of the caloric excesses, Cold Stone’s PB&C was left exposed as the biggest bully on the block. And the damage is severe: This blended peanut-butter-cup concoction makes it possible to slurp down a day’s worth of energy with a mere 10-minute straw session. We hope Cold Stone decides to follow Baskins’ lead and downsize this atrocity, but if not, we’re happy to keep doling out the negative publicity.

Eat This Instead!

Sinless Oh Fudge! Shake (Like It size, 16 oz)
490 calories
2 g fat (2 g saturated)
44 g sugars

7. IHOP "Big" Country Breakfast

 

2,040 calories
55 g saturated fat
159 g carbohydrates
4,500 mg sodium
Here’s the anatomy of a breakfast disaster: Take a 12-ounce steak, bread it, fry it, and then cover it with gravy. Then, on the side, drop three eggs and three buttermilk pancakes. Does it not occur to IHOP that this is actually three full meals? And that two of those meals—all but the eggs—are the sort of indulgences that should be eaten only in extreme moderation? If this is the first thing you eat in the morning, don’t even bother getting out of bed.

 

Eat This Instead!

Turkey Bacon Omelette for Me
470 calories
25 g fat (11 g saturated)
890 mg sodium

6. Baja Fresh Charbroiled Steak Nachos 

 

2,120 calories
118 g fat (44 g saturated, 4.5 g trans)
2,990 mg sodium
If the full day of calories doesn’t get you, then the 2 days of saturated fat will. If that saturated fat doesn’t bring you to your knees, then the 2 days of trans fat surely will. If the trans fat doesn’t wreak total havoc on your system . . . we could go on like this for days. Is it just us, or is it slightly disturbing that you could eat eight full steak tacos and still take in fewer calories than what’s found in this plate of cheesy chips? Stick to two tacos and save nearly a half pound of body fat in one sitting.

Eat This Instead!

2 Original Baja Steak Tacos
460 calories
16 g fat (4 g saturated)
520 mg sodium

 

5. Outback Steakhouse Kookaburra Wings 

 

2,145 calories
185 g fat (75 g saturated)
3,711 mg sodium
Outside of Outback, a kookaburra is an Australian bird that makes a noise like a chuckling human. Inside Outback, “kookaburra” denotes a piece of fried chicken that’s been lacquered with egregious amounts of fat and sodium. Even if you have two other victims to help defray the damage, you’ll still wind up with 715 calories and well over a day’s worth of saturated fat. It would be easier on your gut if you just skipped the appetizer and instead wolfed down a Burger King Whopper on your way to dinner.
 


Eat This Instead!

Grilled Shrimp on the Barbie
315 calories
21 g fat (9 g saturated)
561 mg sodium


4. Uno Chicago Grill Classic Deep Dish Pizza (individual size)

 

2,310 calories
165 g fat (54 g saturated)
4,920 mg soidum
In all the years we’ve been putting this list together, this pizza from Uno’s is the only item to never budge from the hyper-caloric countdown. While a number of burgers, salads, and pastas battle it out for the dubious distinction of being America’s worst, there is simply no competition for this nightmarish creation. With a day’s worth of calories, more than 2 days’ worth of sodium, and nearly 3 days’ worth of fat, bread, cheese, and sauce have never been stretched to such extremes.

Eat This Instead!

Cheese and Tomato Flatbread Pizza (1/2 pizza) and a house side salad
495 calories
22 g fat (8 g saturated)
1,065 mg sodium

 

3. Cheesecake Factory Crispy Chicken Costoletta

 

2,494 calories
85 g saturated fat
1,677 mg sodium
Here’s the secret to stuffing more than a day’s worth of energy—mostly from fat—into a plate of chicken and vegetables: First, pound the chicken until it’s paper thin. That provides the most possible surface area on which to attach oily breading. Then, cover the whole plate with a layer of butter. In this case, Cheesecake uses what they call “lemon sauce,” but don’t be fooled. You don’t get 4 days’ worth of saturated fat from lemons. To complete the caper, toss on a few token asparagus spears to make them think they’re eating healthy. Yeah, right. Nice try.

 

Eat This Instead!

The Factory Burger
737 calories
15 g saturated fat
1,018 mg sodium


2.  Uno Chicago Grill Mega-Sized Deep Dish Sundae

 

2,800 calories
136 g fat (72 g saturated)
272 g sugars
Uno Chicago Grill has a dangerous obsession with deep dishes. Not content merely serving the worst pizza in America from those calorie-collecting troughs, they use the same vessel to dish out the worst dessert in the country, too. The crust is replaced with an enormous cookie, the tomato sauce with a thick river of molten chocolate, and the cheese with a mountain of vanilla ice cream. The only thing keeping this from the bottom slot in our Worst Food countdown is the fact that Uno’s encourages sharing, but even if you split this dessert four ways, you’ll still take in more than twice as many calories as you would with a hot fudge sundae at McDonald’s.

Eat This Instead!

Mini Hot Chocolate Brownie Sundae
370 calories
16 g fat (8 g saturated)
38 g sugars

 

1. Cheesecake Factory Bistro Shrimp Pasta 

 

2,727 calories
78 g saturated fat
1,737 mg sodium
The troubling truth is this entire list of America’s Worst Foods could be fueled solely by the Cheesecake Factory’s atrocious fare. No restaurant combines elephantine portion sizes with a heavy-handed application of cheap cooking fats more recklessly than the Factory folk, resulting in dishes like the 2,582-calorie Chicken and Biscuits and the 2,455-calorie French Toast Napoleon. But it’s a relatively healthy-sounding plate of shrimp pasta that wears the tainted crown, delivering to your bloodstream more saturated fat than you’d find in three packages of Oscar Mayer Center Cut Bacon and as many carbs as you’d slurp down from 1½ cases of Amstel Light. Gross.



Eat This Instead!

Grilled Mahi Mahi
237 calories
1 g saturated fat
364 mg sodium

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Springfield Sale Items July 13 - 19

USDA CHOICE BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
$4.99/Lb!


USDA CHOICE BONELESS RIB EYE STEAK
$8.99/Lb!


COUNTRY-STYLE PORK LOIN RIBS
2.49/Lb!


MADE AT HARTER HOUSE!!!
 Quarter Pound Ground Chuck Patties
10 Count
$6.99

Diet Lean 
Ground Round
$3.29/Lb!

OTHER SPECIALS THIS WEEK AT HARTER HOUSE:


  • Super-Trimmed Pork Steaks - $1.99/Lb.
  • Farmland Baby Back Loin Ribs - $3.99/Lb.
  • USDA Top Round Family Steak - $3.39/Lb.
  • Family Pack Smart Chicken Wings - $1.99/Lb.


WANT TO SEE WHAT OTHER GREAT SPECIALS WE HAVE THIS WEEK AT HARTER HOUSE?

VISIT HARTER HOUSE SPECIALS ONLINE!