Tesco's Fish - Avoid

quikshop

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I am a fan of Tesco. As a business it cannot be faulted but I will NEVER buy anything from the fish or deli counter again.

Having had to go to customer services to get someone to show up at the deli counter, while I was waiting for this less than enthusiastic employee I watched in amazement as a young lad spat into a bucket of water before using it to rinse the fish counter :eek:

If you find yourself in Tesco in Lewes, Sussex, AVOID THE FISH :mad::eek:
 
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Faevilangel

As Scott said, report it. Ring the store and speak to the duty manager. That is a major health and safety concern and the management will come down heavily on the perpetrator.

The number (for the superstore) is 0845 6779420. Duty managers are on 24/7 so you will be able to get this seen to asap.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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I'm a massive fan of Tesco (as you will see from the many Tesco bashing threads where I jump in to defend). Nevertheless I have never been a big fan of their butchery and fishmongers. I just don't have confidence in the counter staff that run these areas for these very reasons.

If I want fresh fish or unpackaged fresh meat I tend to go to a fishmonger/ butcher respectively.
 
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Scott-Copywriter

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I have contacted their customer services through tesco.com but I don't expect anything to come of it.

As Faevilangel said, contact the store directly and speak to the management. It's a serious health and safety issue and it needs to be knocked on the head very quickly. You can't give this person any opportunity to get away with it.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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I have contacted their customer services through tesco.com but I don't expect anything to come of it.

Tesco are actually pretty good at dealing with customer complaints and feedback. My dear mother-in-law (who likes to complain) sent off a comments slip from the store about how they package their 'rocket' leaves.

She had a hand written response within 5 days from head office stating that they would pass the message on to the buying team and enclosed a gift voucher.
 
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quikshop

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Tesco are actually pretty good at dealing with customer complaints and feedback. My dear mother-in-law (who likes to complain) sent off a comments slip from the store about how they package their 'rocket' leaves.

She had a hand written response within 5 days from head office stating that they would pass the message on to the buying team and enclosed a gift voucher.

Here's hoping, I'll post any response I get here.

Happy to offer more info to any Tesco rep who wants to respond to this.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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You see that and then come home go onto an internet forum and message tesco.com? If that were me I would have demanded to see the manager therer and then and bearing in mind what had happened a manager would have been there in less than a minute. Instant action which could have then been followed up by Tesco head office.

Perhaps it was one of those 'Did I really just see that?' moments where it takes some time to get your head around what has just happened and you only think about your next step when you get home.
 
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Faevilangel

reporting it will probably make no difference as it is just 2 individuals who know the truth, were there any other people who witnessed this?

Tesco stores have 24/7 recording cctv which is always pointed the counters / tills etc so it should have been caught if done on the shop floor.

Tesco take any complaint against a member of staff seriously, and especially when health and safety is involved.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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While we are on the topic of Tesco, have you seen this?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...uble-the-difference-in-Asda-price-battle.html

Just when it seemed that Asda would be the guarenteed cheapest supermarket Tesco come back fighting by giving double the difference on products you buy which are cheaper at Asda. So if you pay £10.00 for something at Tesco and it is £9.00 at Asda you will get £2.00 refund.
 
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What's that comment based on?

My inate sense of taste,allied to a strong sense of self preservation.

I suppose I am old enough to remember what food should taste like.

The web and media is full of the crap the supermarkets serve up to the great British Public.

If you put the food supply in a profit driven monopolies hands don't expect to eat well.:p

Earl
 
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I wouldn't advise a diet based around the Tesco value range but their standard and finest ranges are very good value for money.

Compared with real food I might have to agree.;)

As said in this modern age I don't suppose there are that many left that can remember what real food tasted like.

Hence the comparison is between tesco's best bangers and Asda's.:eek:

Best example is possibly to buy a tesco ready Indian meal,then have the same thing at a good curry house.;)

Earl
 
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Matt1959

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our store has gone to the dogs. Its about to redeveloped so perhaps thats the reason but we now use Morrisons and I must sat the difference is chalk and cheese. Hopefully how these 2 stores are in our local area is not representative of how Tesco is elsewhere but if it is, I would they they've slipped a bit. Tesco - dull, grumpy, lazy staff (not all) bread within sell by date is stale, vegtables are dubious quality most of the time, empty shelves, popular products out of stock. Morrisons - fresh, bright, buzzing and totally professional. No doubt someone will now say how crap their Morrisons is:)

I'm a big fan of Tesco too but our big local store is not good...
 
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While we are on the topic of Tesco, have you seen this?

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...uble-the-difference-in-Asda-price-battle.html

Just when it seemed that Asda would be the guarenteed cheapest supermarket Tesco come back fighting by giving double the difference on products you buy which are cheaper at Asda. So if you pay £10.00 for something at Tesco and it is £9.00 at Asda you will get £2.00 refund.

Do people really go and claim that stuff. I think you would have to be a bit of a tight arse.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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Compared with real food I might have to agree.;)

As said in this modern age I don't suppose there are that many left that can remember what real food tasted like.

Hence the comparison is between tesco's best bangers and Asda's.:eek:

Best example is possibly to buy a tesco ready Indian meal,then have the same thing at a good curry house.;)

Earl

I agree, a proper curry cannot be substituted by a Tesco carry-out but that goes for any restaurant where food is freshly prepared for you. But if you were to eat at a restaurant three times a day every day you might find yourself in a cardiac ward quicker than you can say 'where's my tongue spray martha?' :D Restaurant food tastes so good for two reasons, salt and butter.
 
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Compared with real food I might have to agree.;)

As said in this modern age I don't suppose there are that many left that can remember what real food tasted like.

Hence the comparison is between tesco's best bangers and Asda's.:eek:

Best example is possibly to buy a tesco ready Indian meal,then have the same thing at a good curry house.;)

Earl

What., Bread and dripping :D
 
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But if you were to eat at a restaurant three times a day every day you might find yourself in a cardiac ward quicker than you can say 'where's my tongue spray martha?'

Not as quick as a couple of tesco's ready meals according to the latest.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...rnings-Sunday-roast-linked-heart-disease.html

The average ready meal is twice as bad for you as fish and chips.

You are what you eat and I ain't related to E42,E20 or sodium glutamate.

Let alone all the other cheap fillers they stuff in there garbbage.:)

Some of there meat products are supposed to be older than queen Victoria,but slap a bit of lippy on them.;)

Trouble is that for many people there is no alternative if they are struggling to bring up a young family or on limited means.

We are lucky I suppose that we can source our meats from a local supply,and don't risk meat older than ourselves ,same goes for vegtables local greengrocer.

Down the road from us is Thanet earth where they have the growing lights on all night to force the tomatoes.

No wonder they look so tired on the supermarket shelves.:)

Earl
 
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LicensedToTrade

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You are what you eat and I ain't related to E42,E20 or sodium glutamate.


Earl

E42 and E20 don't exist as a food additive and I'm pretty sure E20 is the postcode for Albert square :D

Sodium Glutamate might not be an essential nutrient but it is just a naturally occuring amino acid. There haven't been any respected scientific claims of any harm being caused by low levels. It should be viewed in the same way as salt, a little won't hurt but don't have a mug of it :)

E numbers are also misunderstood generally, they are just a coding system for food additives.
 
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E42 and E20 don't exist as a food additive and I'm pretty sure E20 is the postcode for Albert square :D

Sodium Glutamate might not be an essential nutrient but it is just a naturally occuring amino acid. There haven't been any respected scientific claims of any harm being caused by low levels. It should be viewed in the same way as salt, a little won't hurt but don't have a mug of it :)

E numbers are also misunderstood generally, they are just a coding system for food additives.

I know its a tv program but take a look at this.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00yrvhg/The_Big_Fat_Truth_about_Low_Fat_Foods/

Earl
 
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Naughty Vend

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Don't you mean, "Tesco at that branch, look out for that employee and now that I reported it and the management did nowt that store - if now applicable." rather than avoid Tesco's fish as a general broad brush statement...

Anyway, a bit of spit diluted in a bucket of water with no doubt anti-bacterial in it is nothing compared to the sea these fishies were swimming around in an consuming their short perilous lives. A few decades ago the thing would have been kicking about a dirty floor and handled by fishermen covered in guts and bird ****, you'd have taken it home to your house which is probably manky (but you do not realise it) and placed it on a board to cut its head off and then with a good sprinkle of bacteria consumed the bugger.

I get your point but actually, it's not that big a deal although the employee should definately be removed from their position.
 
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LicensedToTrade

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Don't you mean, "Tesco at that branch, look out for that employee and now that I reported it and the management did nowt that store - if now applicable." rather than avoid Tesco's fish as a general broad brush statement...

Anyway, a bit of spit diluted in a bucket of water with no doubt anti-bacterial in it is nothing compared to the sea these fishies were swimming around in an consuming their short perilous lives. A few decades ago the thing would have been kicking about a dirty floor and handled by fishermen covered in guts and bird ****, you'd have taken it home to your house which is probably manky (but you do not realise it) and placed it on a board to cut its head off and then with a good sprinkle of bacteria consumed the bugger.

I get your point but actually, it's not that big a deal although the employee should definately be removed from their position.

You should have seen what the git did to the crabs...
 
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RadiusBPO

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Devon at the moment.
When I made trifles we had a complaint from a major shareholder of BA. She complained there were too many E numbers in them but we had to, they specified; vegetarian, long life, low fat, rich colour. Fat is what stabilized whipped cream, so replaced with powders, gelatin was replaced with powders, little red bug colouring was replaced with powders - Cant have everything.

I'd agree supermarket food is generally poor. Local farm shop selling only Devonshire produce is much nicer!
 
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Bit of a read but interesting stuff.



It said that the processed food industry is: The transformation of livestock and agricultural products into products for intermediate or final consumption.
Transformation. And apparently we needed this transformation? Because Nature didn't do such a good job?
The price tag for this transformation is over $500 billion dollars each year!
And that doesn't even include restaurants.
It doesn't include transportation. Because the food we eat wasn't grown anywhere near where we live.
This is just "transformation" costs.
And this is just in the United States. Worldwide, this industry zooms past a trillion dollars.
In any grocery store here you'll see tens of thousands of boxed, bagged, jarred and canned items begging for your attention with brightly colored packaging, pictures of cartoon characters and even celebrities or professional athletes.
The food industry routinely uses 2,000 different food additives in their processed creations, but the total number of available additives has been estimated at nearly 8,000.
These include vitamins, minerals, emulsifiers, buffers, artificial flavorings and colorings, and enormous amounts of the two biggies -- salt and sugar.
The average American eats nearly 150 pounds of food additives each YEAR!
This is broken down as follows:
* 130 pounds of sugar
* 10-15 pounds of salt
* 5-10 pounds of "enriched" vitamins, flavors, preservatives and colored dyes

Some people in the world don't even consume 150 pounds of FOOD in a year--and yet the average American sucks down that much in chemicals alone.
Now, there's one big, glaring problem here and it's this:
Your body isn't designed to ingest 150 pounds of additives (see the list above).
Or even ONE pound.
The human body doesn't have a way to deal with these chemicals and it cannot metabolize them. So they end up as acidic wastes, accumulating in your blood, organs and tissues and making you toxic, sick and fat. The liver and kidneys simply can't handle that much poison. This is the primary reason why the US leads all other countries in the number of people with major diseases.
So if you feel bad, are taking medications and are overweight (be honest now), then it's very likely because you are taking in a lot of food additives.
Right?
The truth is, our bodies were only designed to consume REAL food -- fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and lean meats, poultry and fish. That's what our bodies depend on for nourishment, proper digestion, elimination of wastes and maintaining a good acid-alkaline balance.
Anything else is, well, poisons that overload the liver, kidneys' ability to keep the blood and the body clean.
So now the obvious question is: Why the heck does the processed food industry use all these chemicals and additives, knowing that they make people sick?
Never fear -- the almighty food industry has six rationalizations for explaining away the fact that they knowingly make people sick in the interest of profits.
Here they are the so-called reasons we "need" food processing:
1) To improve shelf life
The original idea here was to help get food to more people and prevent waste and spoilage. Early examples are vacuum packed canned vegetables and dried fruits.
But now we've gotten to the point where things like breads are literally "embalmed" with chemicals. Great for the manufacturer's bottom line, but deadly to the consumer.
2) To make food more available
Again, an originally good intention gone awry. It's great that food is available to those that need it, but how much do people really "need" a TV dinner, microwave meal or cake mix with confetti colored candies in it?
3) To increase nutritional value
This is the funniest one of all...
Because food manufacturers process out most or all of the naturally occurring nutrients in the real foods that their products start out with. So they sprinkle in synthetic vitamins and label the product "enriched."
But there are two things wrong here.
For one, the manufacturers don't add back in everything that was lost. For example, vitamin B6, chromium and zinc are destroyed during the processing of whole grains and flours, but they are NOT added back into the final product.
And even if they were, the synthetic nutrients are not the same as what was provided by Nature. Nature doesn't just plop vitamins and minerals into food. Rather, they are woven into the organic structure of the plants. Food is whole, and its structure is matched to how your digestive system utilizes it.
4) To improve the flavor of foods
Processed food companies rely heavily on sugar, salt and artificial flavors to make their mashed up, reformed concoctions tasty. Billions are spent in labs where chemical flavorings are developed that taste amazingly delicious.
But there's another thing happening here. These sugary, salty or artificially flavored products are also very...addicting. How convenient. These chemicals are drug-like in their effects, after all.
So the more you gotta have that drug -- I mean food -- the more you buy and the greater the stock value of the drug -- I mean food -- company.
5) To make foods easier to prepare
Food manufacturers giggled with glee as more and more women began working outside of the home over the last several decades. That gave them a new angle for marketing -- convenience and speed. After working all day, isn't it nice to pop dinner into the microwave and eat in 5 minutes?
No matter to these manufacturers that those 5 minute dinners are practically dead, nutritionally speaking, and make you sick and fat.
6) To improve food's appearance
This is the scary one because the chemicals used to maintain a food's color or prevent discoloration are often toxic substances.


Earl
 
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