In article <
WuGdnW2GRc-WSBXM...@bt.com>,
no...@needed.com
says...
>
> When we buy almost any item, be that a television, can opener, food
> processor, radio or whatever, if it goes faulty or if it is delivered
> faulty, we take it back - but what can you do with 'faulty' food?
Complain, and ask for a refund; just as you would in a supermarket if
fruit was bad inside, or bakery was stale when you opened it.
>
> My wife and I are both very partial to rib-eye steaks and we usually
> buy them from one of two places; one is a small chain of family-run
> supermarkets and the other is a local farm shop. Both premises have
> their own butchers who cut my steaks to order from the joint for me,
> and we've been using both places for years without any problems.
>
> My problem is that we sometimes get steaks that turn out to be very
> tough - and, of course, you don't know that until they're cooked and on
> your plate. It used to happen very rarely but it's becoming more of a
> regular occurrence these days and I'm getting a bit fed up of paying
> seven or eight quid each for steaks that end up being chucked away. I'd
> like to take them back as 'faulty' but you can't do that with cooked
> food - or can you? Would you do it?
I have done :-).It was the first Christmas dinner I cooked after we
married; I rang a butcher at home at 10 am on Christmas morning, in
tears, to tell him his turkey had gone off. It stank. He very kindly
came round to the house right away, agreed the bird was off, apologised
he had no more turkeys left, and presented me with a wonderful joint of
beef which his wife had been about to cook for their own Christmas
dinner.
Janet