AgileMyth wrote: » Low fat milk is just full fat milk with a drop of water. Semi-skimmed is just low fat. Its the worlds largest conspiracy. All the dairy farmers are in on it.
Degag wrote: » I think Jacobs make alot of the own brand biscuits.
tallaghtmick wrote: » Dunnes and tesco brand butter is made by Dairygold.....how do I know this?I worked as a manager and found a creepy hybrid carton of butter with a Dunnes and tesco cover on it:pac:
Pace2008 wrote: » Doubt that's right. I have both low-fat and whole milk here in my fridge - the low-fat has a higher protein and sugar content, so it wouldn't make sense that it's just a watered-down version.
baraca wrote: » On Kellogs boxes it says we don't make our product for anyone else.
crotalus667 wrote: » Avenmore and Premier milk come from the same dairy/factory
The company which supplies Aldi’s steaks and its fresh burgers is AIBP Meats. The same company supplies meat to Londis, Tesco and Superquinn. Premium fillet steaks in Superquinn cost €9.99, or €49.95 a kilo. In Aldi, the same fillets from the same animals cost €13.99 for 400g, or €34.97 per kg. Aldi’s Snackrite Okey Dokeys Crinkle Cut Crisps cost €1.99 for twelve 25g packets. The crisps are made by Largo Foods, better known as the makers of Hunky Dorys crisps. A six-pack of identically-sized Hunky Dorys was selling last week in another major supermarket for €2.15 – or over 100 per cent more expensive. Well-known relish and jam makers from Cork, and artisan producers of yoghurts and bread also make products for Aldi which sell for less than their own branded products. This begs the question why more Irish people are not hunting out these supermarket-branded products.
andala wrote: » Sometimes, due to increased demand, a famous lighting company whose name starts with P buys bulbs from China and repacks them to sell as their own brand