Posted on 07/13/2020 8:13:57 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I don’t even like Mexican food, but I’ll buy some anyway.
I’m really tempted to make chili with Goya products now.
We occasionally buy Goya.
Now we will have more occasions..................
boycotts don’t work, it’s just fake news stories for the lazy media.
Goya, like Chick-fil-A, makes a quality product at a decent price.
Hard to sustain a boycott.
As long as they don’t cave like cfa did.
Get some of their Black Beans. Just plain yummy. I bought more last Friday.
Non-woke, not broke.
Goya rice is more expensive than some of the competitors, but it is tasty—goes great with chili or any other Mexican dish.
My local grocery store has one of those donate to the hungry things out front. Think I’ll go down and buy about $50 of Goya, etc and put it in the box.
You can find them in the aisle with the Mexican food.
Unlike Chick-Fil-A, their CEO is unlikely to brainlessly drool that employees and customers must shine black peoples’ shoes.
Quite an assortment available on Amazon.
Got Goya on my grocery list and heading out now.
This shows that radical lefties are far fewer in numbers than the treasonous gutter-crawling leftwing filthy media pretends.
RE:Who the hell is Goya? Never heard of them.
Well, you learn something new everyday, especially in FR.
From the Wikipedia page:
Goya Foods, Inc. is an American producer of a brand of foods sold in the United States and many Hispanic countries. It has facilities in different parts of the United States, Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic and Spain. It is under third-generation ownership of the Unanue family, and is headquartered in Jersey City, New Jersey, US.
Goya was founded in 1936, by Prudencio Unanue Ortiz (18861976) from Valle de Mena, Spain. Unanue immigrated to Puerto Rico, where he met and married Carolina Casal (18901984), also a Spanish immigrant; they later moved to New York City. Ortiz purchased the “Goya” name from a Moroccan sardine company because he believed that his last name was too difficult to pronounce for American customers and also liked the association to Spanish artist Francisco Goya.
Goya manufactures and distributes products from the Spanish, Puerto Rican, Caribbean, Mexican, Cuban and Central and South American cuisine. Their products are sold in stores and supermarket chains throughout the United States, Puerto Rico, and international markets. In 2006, Forbes ranked Goya 355th on its list of the largest private companies in the United States.
Between 2014 and 2016 Goya opened five new facilities including manufacturing and distribution centers located in New Jersey, Texas, California, and Georgia to meet rising consumer demand. Currently, Goya Foods is headquartered on a 40-acre (16 ha) lot in Jersey City, New Jersey.
Goya also operates a manufacturing facility in San Cristóbal, Dominican Republic, and a distribution center in Bayamón, Puerto Rico.
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