part 2 of 2
Each individual part of the breakdown on some of the sandwiches means the ingredient is sourced entirely externally, they are creating a product for the fast food industry.. Getting pieces from here and there.
The more sources the more chance of cross contamination, ten factories making products to put in one sandwich?
you will now argue that you could get contamination of food from using a supermarket to buy bread butter ham and tomatoes to make a sandwich, but these ingredients are sourced from places that they have to have proof of safe working conditions,
A supermarket isn�t going to investigate everything that goes into everything they sell, just the immediate supplier, to remove any liability.
After all of the points I've made on sourcing of food, and preparation of the ingredients...
Why the hell would you want to pay �2.50 for 2 slices of bread and about 50p worth of filling, unless you were in a real hurry?
A home made pack up for work school picnics etc might as well be homemade
These additives didn�t exist 50 years ago, and how many people who are 30 -70 years old have been on picnics as children, bet they didn�t have allergic reactions to a fiftieth of the food reactions there are now, the things added to the food is the problem
The additives and preservatives that get added into food, are not there for customer satisfaction and enjoyment, they are there so that the creators of the food and the suppliers and the shareholders get more profit and less waste
Im dragging this on now and my spelling and typing are really crap, so ill leave it at that for today..
if however you wnat me to list the full ingredients list from a shopbought sanwich, and a homemade one, including a full list of the e numbers adn addative in both, then i will, afterall i have a day off work,