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Here are 11 grocery items still getting slammed with tariffs after President Trump’s pause.

Whiskey

Pexels/Dana Tentis, Our Whisky Foundation

“Most of the soy sauce and rice stick noodle,” Bay Area importer Taylor Chow tellsCBS News.

“This rice stick, it’s coming from China.

Before 2018, it was selling for under a dollar.

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Peral River Bridge

Now, $2.39.”

“I don’t see a single person who can benefit from this.

Even the wineries in America will suffer badly because they’re all buying barrels and corks from Europe.”

Dom Perignon

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“By 2020, imports accounted for almost 90 percent of the domestic market.

“Spears emerge quickly in the springtime.

To get the most tender spears, workers harvest almost daily.

holding frozen fish in grocery store

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Each spear is hand-harvested and bundled by skilled workers using special knives.”

“Olive oil prices have gone through the roof,” food industry analyst Phil Lempert tellsNPR.

“They’re going to go even higher.”

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The Glenlivet

“It will push up costs for American households,” says Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

“This is why our government will not be seeking to impose reciprocal tariffs.

We will not join a race to the bottom that leads to higher prices and slower growth.

Papaya

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We will stand up for Australia.”

This means some avocados could be more expensive than others, depending on where your grocery store sources them.

Costco, for instance, carries both Mexican and Peruvian avocados.

Cucumbers

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Grilled asparagus

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Raspberries

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Bottle pouring virgin olive oil in a bowl close up

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Image of beef jerky, an American preserved food

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Grown and green avocados

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