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Guest Poet

Revisited topic; Cadburys- creme eggs, free range or not?

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I am suspicious and on the outlook for eyewash tesco-style. Why can't they just meet the terms of the established Fair Trade rules? By running their own programmes they and other companies just confuse the public. It sounds and looks as if they are doing their bit but they may not be. I trust Fair Trade and if the label is on the packaging I feel confident. Why would Cadbury try to set up their own scheme? Surely only because it will be more to their business advantage that way.

 

If a company like Tate and Lyle can go completely over to fair trade, then they all can. Same as if Hellmans can change completely to free-range eggs, then all companies can.

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or maybe just don't care ethics, like Tesco woman last night! It makes me really mad :evil: because they have so much money they can afford to make the world a better place, to set a good example to the public and highlight a better standard of spending for us all.

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who's chocolate can we eat? The fair trade stuff in our co-op costs a fortune and it's dark chocolate, I hate dark chocolate.

 

If you can recommend someone else, I'll swap :D

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Co-op have their own range of Fair Trade chocolate - I didn't think it was too expensive.

 

I prefer Divine - it tastes more like Cadbury/Galaxy than G&B's and they do a coffee version. G&B do small bars and the butterscotch one is milk chocolate.

 

It is more expensive but I'd rather have a Fair Trade chocolate and eat less of it.

 

Edit - I only eat milk or white chocolate - the coffee one is a milk chocolate.

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I buy Co-op chocolate. They do dark and milk bars. They also do caramel filled ones and larger fruit and nut and biscuit pieces type bars too. Dubble bars are good too. Divine do some nice ones and Waitrose has quite a good range of its own fair trade chocolate.

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who's chocolate can we eat? The fair trade stuff in our co-op costs a fortune :D

 

I don't want this to sound rude Poet and I really don't mean it nastily at all - but maybe Fair Trade chocolate costs what it costs to produce - a fair price? Like free-range chicken costs more than barn-reared!

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who's chocolate can we eat? The fair trade stuff in our co-op costs a fortune and it's dark chocolate, I hate dark chocolate.

 

If you can recommend someone else, I'll swap :D

 

Wonder if you have an Oxfam near you that has choc? (Not all branches stock the full range)

We have loads of choice in ours, yum! I don't like dark choc much either. Glad we don't stock the butterscotch though, it sounds toooo delicious!

I never eat choc at work (or I'd eat the lot!) but feel obliged to product test the whole range so that I can recommend them!

Divine is divine! :D

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have a look at http://www.tescopoly.org/

 

plus they have refused to stop selling battery eggs or cheap chicken and they sell live turtles in their Asian stores for people to butcher at home, people who won't know how to kill an animal humanely.

 

I just loathe everything they stand for.

Hughs program sickenee me so Made me feel all churned up inside amd wanyed to burn ALL tesco stores. this has just made me even worse! need a panorama expose program on them AND cadburys!

I wonder re tesco that they are allowed to say one thing & do another, is that not against basic trading standards law, & misleading descriptions or something? guess not or some bright clever person would have taken them to court!

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okay, bought some co-op fair trade crispy milk chocolate tonight, 150g for £1.07 so not a bad price and it's very nice. Wish they did a whole nut version but you can't have everything! :boohoo:

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-----Original Message-----

From: consumer.relations1@csplc.com [mailto:consumer.relations1@csplc.com]

Sent: 26 January 2009 16:12

Subject: Re: 1508574B

 

Thanks for your recent enquiry regarding the very small amount of egg we use in our Crhme Eggs.

 

Last year we said we were committed to changing the egg ingredient to one from a free range source and that this change was in line with our broader sustainability agenda.

We have faced certain challenges to ensure consistency of product by switching supply but I am pleased to advise you that we are changing to free range eggs for all Crhme Eggs produced from later this year which means that eggs on sale for the 2010 season will be free range. They will also contain natural colours.

 

Thank you once again for taking the time and trouble to contact us.

Cadbury Consumer Relations Department

:dance::dance: Great news

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It's not nearly time for Easter Eggs as Easter isn't until April 4th. However, I was very surprised to see the little yellow chicks on sale in Waitrose this afternoon. Who could possibly want or need those right now?

 

But yes, I shall be interested to see what Cadbury does this year. I still won't buy them of course unless the chocolate is also fairly traded.

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