Originally posted by Mr Pee
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Neigh, lad!!
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Originally posted by Mr Pee View PostDelius myth= Delia Smith. Not exactly Peter Cook, but better than most of AH's attempts at a joke.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostFrances, I know the FSA has been blocked by Tesco but if this article is to believed there will be some consistent labelling at some time this year (although it's disappointing to see it is voluntary)
A consistent system of front-of-pack food labelling will be introduced in the UK next year, the government says.
I don't go to stores such as Iceland but when I see the prices on their windows (£1.50 for a family sized lasagne for example) I really do wonder what recovered - is that the right word?- meat might be in it.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Anna View PostFrances, I know the FSA has been blocked by Tesco but if this article is to believed there will be some consistent labelling at some time this year (although it's disappointing to see it is voluntary)
A consistent system of front-of-pack food labelling will be introduced in the UK next year, the government says.
I don't go to stores such as Iceland but when I see the prices on their windows (£1.50 for a family sized lasagne for example) I really do wonder what recovered - is that the right word?- meat might be in it. The scandal is not products that contain horse, I have eaten horse in France, but not informing consumers that it's My Lidl Pony shows complete contempt for consumers
Mr. GG, I agree about wheeling out Macca but he is a National Treasure by Royal Appointment and the Nation's Favourite Vegetarian (also it helps him plug his late wife's range of frozen veggie food!)
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI do not make such attempts, so it can't be. No one other than Peter Cook could ever really quite be Peter Cook and I would certainly never seek to achieve any such accolade. I did once have a few lessons from someone with whom he worked, however...
He could teach anyone a thing or two
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Anna
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI agree that the scandal is not about horse although I wouldn't choose to eat it. It is the fact that they just don't know what is in these things. Seriously, I think that they should now take samples to see if there is earth, grass, sand, metal etc. I often buy ready meals and add a lot of salad and green vegetables to them but it has put me off buying them for now, even at Waitrose etc.
I went into Iceland sometime ago, for milk. As I was cooking a curry a pack of mini onion bhargis caught my eye, only 99p. When I got them home I saw "Produced and packed in China"! So I emailed Iceland querying their carbon footprint when bharjis could so easily be produced in this country. I got a reply that R&D would look into it. I felt uneasy about eating them and chucked them in the bin, being wary of hygiene and flying so many miles (No offence to the Chinese I must say!)
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Originally posted by Anna View PostThe BBC had a series of programmes, around 18 months ago, investigating MRM and the production of chicken kievs. I often used to enjoy a ready made kiev, after seeing the pink slime spun round in a centrifuge I haven't bought one since, if I want a kiev I make it myself with real chook from my butcher.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI agree that the scandal is not about horse although I wouldn't choose to eat it. It is the fact that they just don't know what is in these things. Seriously, I think that they should now take samples to see if there is earth, grass, sand, metal etc. I often buy ready meals and add a lot of salad and green vegetables to them but it has put me off buying them for now, even at Waitrose etc.
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Anna
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostSlightly off (or missing) the point, but I think M&S's kievs are made from an actual chicken breast.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Anna View PostDesinewed meat (DSM) has been banned I think by EU. Mechanically Recovered Meat (MRM) seems to be main compotents in sausages, chicken nuggetty shaped things, burgers. The BBC had a series of programmes, around 18 months ago, investigating MRM and the production of chicken kievs. I often used to enjoy a ready made kiev, after seeing the pink slime spun round in a centrifuge I haven't bought one since, if I want a kiev I make it myself with real chook from my butcher.
I went into Iceland sometime ago, for milk. As I was cooking a curry a pack of mini onion bhargis caught my eye, only 99p. When I got them home I saw "Produced and packed in China"! So I emailed Iceland querying their carbon footprint when bharjis could so easily be produced in this country. I got a reply that R&D would look into it. I felt uneasy about eating them and chucked them in the bin, being wary of hygiene and flying so many miles (No offence to the Chinese I must say!)
Your concerns are interesting. For all of their detailed surveys, I don't think stores understand the individuality of customers. They simply put them into their ideas of groups. In practice, people can be very specific on what they like and dislike in food.
For example, I've never been a fussy eater in occasional situations. If someone prepares a meal for me, I will eat it. I have happily had food from burger vans outside a football ground or at festivals. My only rule is that I find the ones that look the most hygienic and, having found two or three good ones, I go back to them. Actually, I quite like them. They are a part of the experience.
I am different when it comes to what I will eat routinely. I have higher expectations then of what I am buying. Taste and animal welfare become key issues so, for example, I won't buy an egg that isn't free range. At a B and B, I wouldn't worry about it.Last edited by Guest; 20-01-13, 19:06.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostYes, as are Waitrose's. I did not mean to smear all chicken breasts (for those who enjoy them) with contamination. I merely say, weigh up the product in your hand and ask, how can this family sized meal product be produced for a mere 99p without some skullduggery and sleight of hand? re ingriendents?
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostSir Arthur Streeb-Greebling perchance?
He could teach anyone a thing or two
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeRS-eOzH3Y
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostAbsolutely agree. One of the things I dislike about supermarkets is that they have encouraged people to believe that meat can be cheap, mainly because they sell stuff that's made from slurry stripped from bones or ground up hide & gristle, or because they have forced farmers into selling it to them at a loss.
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it seems that the meat trade is up to all sorts of tricks, and has been for a long time.
WITH every passing day, Ireland feels more and more like an episode from RTE's 'Reeling in the Years' circa 1987. Emigrants coming home at Christmas to tearful scenes at the airport. Rioters throwing petrol bombs in Belfast. A divisive debate about abortion in Dublin and another new album from David Bowie.
Stick to courgettes and nice veggies, I would.....I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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