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😮 ghastly 🎄 supermarket party food.

(297 Posts)
FriedGreenTomatoes2 Mon 16-Dec-24 11:36:29

Ultraprocessed foods in boxes with sell by dates weeks ahead. Weird desserts - Do we need, in fact, any of the mad options now available to us on supermarket shelves? Waitrose has spent a lot of money this year on an advert featuring Matthew Macfadyen and comedian Joe Wilkinson, starring a pudding called the No 1 Red Velvet Bauble Dessert, which looks a bit like a Viennetta. At Sainsbury’s, you can buy a “Christmas Carol-Mel and Brownie Cheesecake”, which is apparently a cheesecake with brownie cubes, salted caramel sauce, chocolate mousse and “bronze lustred” chocolate curls. Tesco has a “Showstopper Macaron Tower”.

Probably all a bit yuk?
I’m hoping for a ‘less UPF Christmas’. Food my grandmother would recognise.

What about you?

cc Tue 17-Dec-24 11:53:04

It's become increasingly difficult to buy a really nice Christmas dessert.
There are loads of cheese cake type things but we find that they're a bit too rich after a heavy lunch. Most of my family don't enjoy the traditional Christmas Pudding so I often make trifle.
Last year I bought what was described as a "Snowy Winter Yule Log" from M&S last Christmas for a change and was really disappointed. The ganache was really sickly and rather like eating margerine, very little of the promised passion fruit sauce, solid sponge and so sugary that nobody managed to finish their portion.
This year my family have requested boiled jam roll and sticky toffee pudding, with real custard.

Cateq Tue 17-Dec-24 11:55:58

We’re having AS1 along with DD and her partner on Christmas Day, so it will be home made soup, some ramen dish for DD as she doesn’t like soup. Turkey without the Brussels sprouts as again no one except me eats them and can’t be bothered for one portion and dessert will be panna cotta and chocolate Yule log from M&S with the option of home made clottie dumpling. On Boxing Day it’s AS3 and family coming for roast beef Yorkshire pudding and a home made trifle DGD’s favourite. And on 29/12 having all 4 ACs their partners and DGDs for a buffet lunch which DH is making his fish pie specially for DGD’s a lasagne and I’m on charcuterie board duty. Not yet decided on dessert, but it will be something from M&S.

Not too fussed about the UPF as like most posters it’s not something we eat very often.

ReadyMeals Tue 17-Dec-24 11:57:44

What I have most problem with is Christmas food with a short sell-by date, and I've found postponing buying it until nearer xmas results in finding a lot of stuff sold out. I grew up eating chemical food - in my younger day you didn't have to keep chutney or ketchup in the fridge, it lasted forever, opened, in the cupboard. So anyway I'm not gonna cry over long-life food now.

W1chhada Tue 17-Dec-24 11:59:05

It’s one thing to need rest or change from cooking; another to buy vast amounts of unhealthy foodstuffs (as supermarkets apparently anticipate).
Halloumi and apple - just the ticket for cuisine fatigue.

GrammaH Tue 17-Dec-24 11:59:52

"They're all yuk" - is that right Sago? How many have you tried? As the saying goes, don't knock it til you've tried it! I'm not impressed with many of the superior attitudes expressed on this thread. 😤

cc Tue 17-Dec-24 12:01:33

Witzend

From experience, the good old retro classics always go down very well - cheese and (fresh) pineapple hedgehogs, and sausages on sticks. Because there happened to be some that needed using up (I’d used frozen packs as ice packs en route) - I once served a load of sausages on sticks as canapés at an al fresco lunch at a chateau in France - guests of BiL who owned the place were mostly French neighbours.

The Ss on sticks all vanished within a couple of minutes!

Yes, if you go to a buffet it's always the sausages and little sausage rolls that vanish first. Personally I love the little M&S pork pies, halved so they're easier to eat.

cc Tue 17-Dec-24 12:03:45

petal53

Nobody in their right mind makes puff/flaky pastry these days. The bought version is so good, just why would you?

That's so true, I made a huge chicken pie the other evening for my daughter's birthday dinner and the bought puff pastry was absolutely delicious and looked perfect.

TeeGee1 Tue 17-Dec-24 12:07:24

An overabundance of often sickly desserts and foods with 50+ ingredients doesn't excite me but each to his own. I've just been watching a vlog where potatoes are tossed in olive oil (in which fresh rosemary, thyme, chopped garlic plus lemon and orange zest are infused) after parboiling and shaking to rough them up. They looked pretty good and, according to the cook, tasted Christmassy.

Allira Tue 17-Dec-24 12:07:29

Another place I ordered a beetroot and butternut squash en croute vegetarian dish.

It amazes me that a restaurant we used to go to were offering beet en croute one Christmas and charging the same as they did for beef en croute.

cc Tue 17-Dec-24 12:09:05

Cateq

We’re having AS1 along with DD and her partner on Christmas Day, so it will be home made soup, some ramen dish for DD as she doesn’t like soup. Turkey without the Brussels sprouts as again no one except me eats them and can’t be bothered for one portion and dessert will be panna cotta and chocolate Yule log from M&S with the option of home made clottie dumpling. On Boxing Day it’s AS3 and family coming for roast beef Yorkshire pudding and a home made trifle DGD’s favourite. And on 29/12 having all 4 ACs their partners and DGDs for a buffet lunch which DH is making his fish pie specially for DGD’s a lasagne and I’m on charcuterie board duty. Not yet decided on dessert, but it will be something from M&S.

Not too fussed about the UPF as like most posters it’s not something we eat very often.

That all sounds delicious, I'm the only one who eats sprouts here too, though I do cook a small pack of the tiny ones.
We particularly like a characuterie board - my grandchildren call it a "picky lunch" and it makes a great starter too. I've got ready to bake ciabatta waiting in the freezer!

jenpax Tue 17-Dec-24 12:11:30

Goodness me! I would definitely be buying some of these and without food snobbery! Yes UP food is bad for you as is alcohol! But once in a while will not hurt!

NotSpaghetti Tue 17-Dec-24 12:14:53

MissAdventure I have read the kindness thread but didn't want to contribute (for my own reasons).
The number of contributors doesn't necessarily mean nobody is reading, or thinking deeply about the item.

It's easier to comment on "bland" things I think.

Newdawn Tue 17-Dec-24 12:15:32

Can't wait to try Brussels sprouts pate...yeuk

NotSpaghetti Tue 17-Dec-24 12:18:58

boiled jam roll and sticky toffee pudding, with real custard.

This sounds heavier than a Christmas pudding to be honest. grin

Fattyboomboom Tue 17-Dec-24 12:20:20

Well it's called choice we either want to buy it or not.

MissAdventure Tue 17-Dec-24 12:22:25

NotSpaghetti

MissAdventure I have read the kindness thread but didn't want to contribute (for my own reasons).
The number of contributors doesn't necessarily mean nobody is reading, or thinking deeply about the item.

It's easier to comment on "bland" things I think.

smile
It's not a criticism.
Just an observation. (That's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!)

TeeGee1 Tue 17-Dec-24 12:23:24

Jam roly poly and Birds custard. My kinda pud.

LadyGaGa Tue 17-Dec-24 12:30:11

Im with you GrammaH. Christmas shouldn’t be a competition to see who stuffs the most mushrooms or grinds their own flour. It’s about spending time with people we care about - and if that’s over an M and S sickly, ultra processed pud, Paxo stuffing and Bisto, then so be it!

MissAdventure Tue 17-Dec-24 12:32:25

👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

Chocgran Tue 17-Dec-24 12:48:29

Quite agree- I completely ignore all the dreadful "picky bits" and over the top desserts etc which rarely live up to the hype in terms of flavour. We tend to stick to good quality ingredients with a few special Christmassy treats. Classic dishes live on for a reason- they taste nice! Each to their own but these ultra processed offerings don't appeal to me at all.

Soniah Tue 17-Dec-24 12:49:02

Anyone tried the Yuka app? Hold it on the barcade and it tells you fibre, sal, sugar, carbohydrate, additive content with a traffic light system, means you can easily compare various, say, biscuits and chose the least worst ones! Maybe leave it until after Christmas but I find it useful in the supermarket if I'm trying to decide between products

wibblywobblywobblebottom Tue 17-Dec-24 12:55:12

Supermarket chains produce this sort of "food"at this time of year because they know their customers are morons, who will buy anything called party food.

MissAdventure Tue 17-Dec-24 12:58:20

Where does your food come from then?
Slaughter your own turkey, do you?

MissInterpreted Tue 17-Dec-24 13:01:44

MissAdventure

Where does your food come from then?
Slaughter your own turkey, do you?

Raise and slaughter their own turkeys, make their pigs in blankets from their home-reared pigs, home-grown roast potatoes, carrots, Brussels sprouts etc etc etc...
As I say, these threads always bring out the food snobs.
Meanwhile, I'm away to weave my own tablecloth for the xmas table...

NotSpaghetti Tue 17-Dec-24 13:05:08

Ha ha! LadyGaGa
When we lived rurally and had 5 young children we did grind our own flour!

I think we all have different phases in our lives. For us that includes what we eat.