When I was living in Spain P, the menu del dia was €5 or less and usually included a drink.
This. I’ve made my lunches for most of my working life and will continue to do so! The idea of giving someone £6 and up for a sarnie i’m more than capable of making, using ingredients i’m 100% certain are first class doesn’t compute.
Can spend the money i save towards going out for a nice meal at the weekend!
When I was living in Spain P, the menu del dia was €5 or less and usually included a drink.
Can't buck inflation Dave, not even here, it's global, universal...death, taxes and inflation...it was a tenner when we first came, think always was drink included... if you were a couple and wanted the same colour wine we'd get the whole bottle, certainly at one oft visited place for sure...mind you that was early 2000's...exchange rate then was gratifying also.
Last edited by Passenger; 23rd May 2024 at 18:29.
Last edited by classics; 27th July 2024 at 00:43.
Ordered one too so +thanks from me.
Ok based on some of the posts here I tried out Aldi as supposedly it is as good as the M&S stuff, just cheaper.
Absolutely it is NOT better lol - the M&S standard eggs are far superior with orange yolks as opposed to the insipid pale yolks of the Aldi eggs. The meat is much better at M&S as well. Veggies there isn't that much difference.
I can save money by cooking my food instead of take aways but I'll not be getting the ingredients from Aldi as there is a marked difference there.
I don’t rate M&S eggs. Dutchy organic for eggs and unhomogenised full fat milk here.
We dont do the weekly shop in Waitrose but I do go in for two those. Always worth it.
There is no law that you have to go to one supermarket for your weekly shop.
And to compare M&S with Aldi is just ridiculous.
Nobody does their weekly shop in M&S, and even they know that. That is why there are barely any trolleys; just baskets.
It is for skimming some of the nice quality stuff they have as add ons to the weekly shop.
I'd disagree Ryan.
I think the Aldi's meat is pretty good but it's their Veg I find crap.
Buy my olive oil there too.
M&S for Deli stuff.
I think the orange yolk with eggs is just down to what foodstuffs the chickens eat.
I think it's an urban myth that they are somehow superior.
Happy to be corrected of course.
They feed the hens paprika
https://www.clarencecourt.co.uk/faqs/
You have no idea how people shop, you are basing this on how you shop, which is with a calculator; your flat bread / yeast bread pizza says all we need to know about how tight you are.
You skim reduced items like you do in Waitrose for Gail’s. Pikey.
The best option of them all, match to Tesco & the best delivery / logistics out there. I’m a huge fan, having used them all.
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That would bung you up for a week.
I saw a farmer before on instagram say birds/hens can’t taste/notice spice so an organic way of deworming is just to load up the feed with all kinds of spices which kill the parasites.
In nature the yolk colour depends on diet and is darker when eating insects and worms. The same farmer had a lamb which didn’t make it and gave the guts to the chickens and the next week the yolks intense.
It also works if you put cayenne pepper on the seeds you fill the bird feeder with if you have squirrels raiding it. The birds don’t mind, squirrels do.
'Against stupidity, the gods themselves struggle in vain' - Schiller.
I appreciate it’s very subjective and this is not meant to be in any way controversial so can I ask: are Aldi and Lidl any cheaper nowadays and is their food as good as or any better than the likes of Sainsbury’s/Tesco/Waitrose/M&S?
The reason I ask is because I am repeatedly informed by some friends and relatives that Lidl is excellent and so much cheaper than Sainsbury’s, which is currently where I do the majority of my food shopping. I’d therefore be grateful for an impartial (informed) opinion.
When I have popped into Aldi or Lidl for the odd one or two things, I do check a few shelf labels and see that most things are on par price wise with Sainsbury’s but haven’t ever done a full shop there, mostly because I don’t want the inconvenience at the moment of having to learn a new supermarket layout if that makes sense. I’m also not totally convinced they’re any cheaper overall.
As well as only a few niceties in the hope to reduce my paunch, it’s often only the staples I buy such as bread, milk, cheese, fruit (good quality is important), pasta, meat and fish etc.
I’d be very grateful for anyone’s thoughts on this.
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My view is Lidl have gone downhill, particularly stuff like fresh fruit and veg.
Waitrose essential stuff is better and doesn’t seem much more expensive.
For me it's not about the price, but the way it's produced, food that is.
I'd rather eat less and have sustainably produced food.
Some prices are ludicrous, somewhere in the chain someone has to suffer, and it's not the supermarkets.
Got a new watch, divers watch it is, had to drown the bastard to get it!
M&S can be very reasonable these days, for somethings
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Filet steak is buttery smooth but not very tasty on its own (the old adage "the taste is in the fat" is true, and is why tournedos have a band of lard around them). Ideally you want to have a nice pepper or mustard sauce with them (or a slice of warm foie gras if you really feel self-indulgent).
Ribeye, on the other hand, is one of the tastiest cuts of meat and almost on a par with filet for tenderness (is that the right word?)
'Against stupidity, the gods themselves struggle in vain' - Schiller.
A few years ago I did some deliveries into Lidl shops from one of there distribution centres by artic. Let’s say I’ve never stepped foot into one of there shops since.
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I found with a lot of their steaks, that they must have been par-frozen in a vertical sided shaper, then vac-packed in that shape.
When it came time to cook it - the shape was lost and the thickness was all over the place.
I think Aldi/Lidl/Asda - it can be a bit hit or miss.
All the chickens in Aldi have burns on hock burn from living life sat in their own urine. Wouldn’t be my choice of supplier.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-e...t-68406398.amp
Let’s say the packing and loading left a lot to be desired, the pickers were given pallets to load and the stock fitted at the bottom and was like an ice cream cone towards the top before shrink wrapping, pallets are that size for a reason as they just fit on wagons so WD40 was used to lube the pallets to slide them in so lots of damages and general crap lying about. So after that I’ve never been to shop there. I don’t buy frozen turkey as I’ve been in a place where they killed plucked and froze 47,000 a day in the run up to Christmas, that was minging.
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If you´re gonna have a Turkey for Xmas, for my money, personally speaking only get a fresh one. On the topic of Lidl, popped in and bought a Scottish single malt yesterday, just 11.99 euro a bottle, holy haggises!
Unfortunately the inevitable drop in welfare standards is as a consequence of the drive for ever cheaper chicken (and meat generally). The broiler sheds these birds are reared in are overwhelmingly awful and that is definitely not limited to Aldi's supply chain alone. Even 'free range' sheds are often so huge that the birds in the middle never go outside as they have no idea the doors are even open as the sheds are so crowded.
It is the same story for pork and other meats too.
We all just need to wake up and buy better quality, slow grown, high welfare meat and accept the higher price that comes with it, and eat meat less often, particularly if funds are tight. Until that happens these horrific broiler sheds and indoor-only raised crated pig systems will continue to be used.
The meat industry has become a race to the bottom and is a very sorry state of affairs, but is ultimately driven by consumer demand and corporate greed.
A chicken should cost far more than a couple of £'s.
Sorry, rant over.
Lidl still do fantastic pastel de nata though
https://www.lidl.co.uk/p/pastel-del-nata/p128974
Exactly this. Far better to spend the money on a properly reared bird and then use it properly - plenty of meat on the bones that is usually thrown away that can be picked off and used the next day in a stir fry etc so you can maximise the value. Plus it tastes much better than a £3 chicken.
£2.70 at Sainsbury's for a small bird
https://www.sainsburys.co.uk/gol-ui/...g-7987004-p-44