Gransnet forums

AIBU

Fresh produce

(22 Posts)
jane999 Sun 16-Jul-17 10:31:35

AIBU to expect fruit and veg bought on Friday morning in Tesco to still be edible today Sunday. Have just thrown away a punnet of apricots sell by date 17th covered in green mold, half punnet of cherries that were squishy, bananas that are already going brown that were green on friday. Last week I took back a large punnet of strawberries that Were still in date.

Do other gransnetters have the same problem with fruit and veg bought in supermarkets.

Chewbacca Sun 16-Jul-17 10:37:51

Take it back for a refund. I've stopped shopping at Tesco for anything perishable because it just doesn't keep well. I noticed that fresh strawberries were on display yesterday and several punnets had rotting fruit in them.

glammanana Sun 16-Jul-17 10:57:23

This is why I stopped shopping at Tesco the freshness quality is awful the worst of all the supermarkets,take them back and complain also complain about the time you have used returning the items and you should be given a gift voucher for your trouble,if you can't get to the supermarket in the next few days freeze the said item and telephone CS and make your complaint,the supermarkets should not be getting away with this kind of service its disgracful.

grannysue05 Sun 16-Jul-17 11:06:59

I often think this is to do with the shelf stocking systems.
In our local Tesco (and other big names), the fresh produce is brought out onto the shop floor from chilled conditions in the back of the store.
These trolleys are stacked high and often left for ages while the shelf stacker person does numerous other jobs.
The fresh stuff then warms up and is subsequently placed into the chilled display cabinets.
This is the quickest way for fresh food to 'go off' .

TriciaF Sun 16-Jul-17 11:18:50

It happens here sometimes too (SW France.). I bought strawberries on Friday and found the majority were inedible. And some not-ripe peaches which I put in the fridge to stop them going mouldy still developed mould underneath.
I usually check soft fruit as far as possible to see if it's ok before I buy it.
When I'm in the shop the lady in charge of the fruit and veg section is usually there, checking everything, which is good.They bag-up and sell over-ripe over-date stuff separately at reduced prices. It sells too.
I wonder if it's something to do with imported fruit and veg being treated with some preservative to delay rotting?
We're lucky because the majority of it is locally grown and freshly picked.

Jalima1108 Sun 16-Jul-17 11:19:28

I usually find the produce in Tesco to be OK but bought some lovely large lemons on a Friday recently and put one in the fruit bowl - by Sunday it was covered in mould!

wildswan16 Sun 16-Jul-17 11:56:28

I've stopped buying any fruit or veg in Tesco. The local Sainsbury or Asda are both reasonable but if I can't get to my local market I go to M&S where everything seems to last very well.

I do worry though as I wonder if the fruit/veg have been treated or sprayed with countless stuff so that they do last longer. I always try to buy organic rasps and strawberries as I know they absorb more of the pesticides.

I also always delve down to the bottom of the shelves in order to find the longest sell by date - which is maybe why all the older stuff gets left for other people to buy blush.

Hilltopgran Sun 16-Jul-17 13:10:48

It is not just supermarket fresh fruit that does not last, in the warmer weather I find that if I pick soft fruit like stawberries from the garden, they are only really nice and fresh if you eat them that day, which makes me wonder what treatment supermarket fruit gets.

Welshwife Sun 16-Jul-17 13:25:37

I too am in SW France and find that if I go to Grand Frais for my fruit and veg it lasts a lot longer than from anywhere else. They are a shop which only sell fruit,veg, meat,fish and cheese with some dry and tinned goods. The temp of the ehtire shop is cooler than most supermarkets.

I used to get good fruit and veg from the local market but that lasts no time now.

Would appear to be getting a general thing.

jane999 Sun 16-Jul-17 13:35:08

Over the last 5 weeks I have taken back strawberries, asparagus, courgettes, raspberries and fresh chicken. The staff on customer services just refund the cost of the items. At one time you could get all your fruit and veg from the market but the nearest market is 14 miles away. Will have to start going to the village shop and paying the extra, will be no dearer than going to Tesco which is 5 miles away.

Thanks for your replies. Perhaps sending complaints directly to HO will get more response than the local supermarket.

Caroline64 Mon 17-Jul-17 11:13:59

Hi, the current high summer temperatures are probably the key reason for this. Using the fridge or a cool store does help though make sure that mould spores are not left around by thorough cleaning. Soon it will be cooler

Witzend Mon 17-Jul-17 11:26:13

We also recently bought strawberries in France that were 90% bad by the next day, and they were expensive, too - 4 euros for a fairly small punnet! Why they should cost that much in a warm, rural area I can't imagine. Mind you I do find food in France expensive, even in the big supermarkets.

Cherries often do go off quickly, I find. I bought some really lovely, fat black English ones yesterday - Dh and I scoffed the lot last night.

Eglantine19 Mon 17-Jul-17 11:38:23

I think the supply chain has a lot to answer for. At best, picked on the farm, collected next day and taken to the packaging plant, packaged next day, taken to a central distribution the next day, distributed next day and delivered to supermarket, next day put out on the shelves. Five or six days from picking to buying, no wonder they go mouldy.
Lidl used to be good, but since they have expanded I have found the same problems. A bag of carrots went slimy and rotten in three days!

Welshwife Mon 17-Jul-17 11:43:59

Most fruit and veg in France is more expensive this year because of the weather we had earlier in the year. It ruined a lot of crops and the Bordeaux area is estimated to have lost about a million due to the damage to the grapes.

Jalima1108 Mon 17-Jul-17 12:06:25

I thought that most farms packed their own produce - with great care. Then taken by refrigerated truck and goodness knows what the distributors/supermarkets do then - all farmers will make sure that their produce is picked at the best point in time to get to market in top condition.

Jalima1108 Mon 17-Jul-17 12:07:45

A bag of carrots went slimy and rotten in three days!
Do you not take them out of the bag when you get them home? I put them in the veg/salad drawer of the fridge on kitchen roll.

Nandalot Mon 17-Jul-17 12:31:43

Bananas. It doesn't matter where I buy them. They look great on the outside but always seems to have brown squishy bits inside, usually at one end. This seems to have been a recent development. I wonder if the picking method has changed.

Eglantine19 Mon 17-Jul-17 14:05:41

Yes I took them out of the bag and put them in the salad drawer but the ends were all mushy and nasty before I could use up a bagful. One of the problems of living on your own.

whitewave Mon 17-Jul-17 14:23:14

My son was telling me yesterday that he purchase some pork from Tesco and before his wife stopped him he'd eaten a couple of mouth fulls He went on to have food poisoning, not terribly badly but enough for him to have to have a day off work.

Jalima1108 Mon 17-Jul-17 14:43:48

Oh dear Eglantine.
Can you freeze them if you have a freezer?

I must say I don't bother with all the boiling quickly, timing then plunging in iced water before freezing these days but I have got a steamer so steam them lightly, rinse under the cold tap and bag veg up to freeze.

whitewave I am always wary of pork, rarely eat it, and never eat it if it has been reheated. I know we have fridges/freezers these days but I always remember what my DM used to say 'Don't eat pork unless there is an 'r' in the month' - although September can be hot too!

jacq10 Mon 17-Jul-17 19:22:16

I buy all my fruit and veg from Aldi and Lidl's and try to base my menues on their 49/59p offers. They had beautiful ripe cherries last week and every one was okay. You have to watch some of the fruit like nectarines and peaches as, if they get bruised, they can get mouldy but they don't usually get a chance. I occasionally buy from Morrison's but NEVER from Tesco!!

alig99 Tue 18-Jul-17 12:17:23

Blimey, I wish we could get soft fruit and mushrooms to last more than a day in Sicily, And I think there is no chance of getting any money back if I take it back and complain!