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From: Adrian on 23 Feb 2007 08:03 cupra (NOcupra.sSPAM(a)gmail.com) gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying : > Yep - visit a dairy too and you'll see the same milk going into > 'premium' and 'economy' brands! Really? Even the Organic or Jersey milk? How about the goat's milk?
From: cupra on 23 Feb 2007 08:08 Adrian wrote: > cupra (NOcupra.sSPAM(a)gmail.com) gurgled happily, sounding much like > they were saying : > >> Yep - visit a dairy too and you'll see the same milk going into >> 'premium' and 'economy' brands! > > Really? Even the Organic or Jersey milk? How about the goat's milk? Normal cows milk, same bottles but different supermarkets....
From: Adrian on 23 Feb 2007 08:13 cupra (NOcupra.sSPAM(a)gmail.com) gurgled happily, sounding much like they were saying : >>> Yep - visit a dairy too and you'll see the same milk going into >>> 'premium' and 'economy' brands! >> Really? Even the Organic or Jersey milk? How about the goat's milk? > Normal cows milk, same bottles but different supermarkets.... Ah. But I've never seen multiple brands of "normal cow milk" in the same stores... Not like baked beans.
From: Steve Firth on 23 Feb 2007 08:10 On 23 Feb 2007 04:24:15 -0800, conkersack(a)yahoo.com wrote: > Lidl's a great supermarket, the products they have are good quality, Drivel. Lidl have been caught passing off products in the past and I doubt that they have given up their ways. For example Lidl sell what they claim is Italian olive oil at less than the cost of producing the oil. How can they do that, I wonder? Well Der Feinschmecker a German magazine, discovered that it was because what they sell isn't Italian and isn't extra virgin olive oil as claimed. "This is an olive oil from Spain. The oil was treated after pressing and does not qualify under EU Standards as Extra Virgin Olive Oil." The "treated after pressing" is particularly telling because the treatment is designed to make an inferior olive oil pass the basic test of acidity applied to determine if an oil is an EVOO. However Lidl got caught out when testing improved to detect the use of steam, vacuum and alkali processing of oil in order to remove foul odours and reduce the acidity. You may well wish to buy industrial lubricant in a bottle and consume it, I certainly don't.
From: cupra on 23 Feb 2007 08:28
Adrian wrote: > cupra (NOcupra.sSPAM(a)gmail.com) gurgled happily, sounding much like > they were saying : > >>>> Yep - visit a dairy too and you'll see the same milk going into >>>> 'premium' and 'economy' brands! > >>> Really? Even the Organic or Jersey milk? How about the goat's milk? > >> Normal cows milk, same bottles but different supermarkets.... > > Ah. But I've never seen multiple brands of "normal cow milk" in the > same stores... Not like baked beans. Yep - brand meaning market not product.... |