Debbie and Andrew’s Sausages – Warning – NOT GLUTEN FREE!

Debbie and Andrews Sausages are Not gluten freeThis is a perfect demonstration of something I’ve been telling people for a couple of years, maybe more. Manufacturers change ingredients without warning. Never trust what someone tells you is gluten free without checking for yourself.

Check the Label of Every Pack of mainstream products Every Time You Buy!

The last pack of Debbie and Andrews’ sausages I bought – after carefully checking the label – was gluten free. Then the other day, someone on Twitter said “gluten free sausages” and showed a pic of a pack of Debbie and Andrews’ sausages (with apple, a flavor I wouldn’t touch). So when I was in Tesco, I stupidly picked up another pack without checking the label. And this was a bad idea, because this pack is not gluten free.


Tesco Silky Sweet Luscious Clotted Cream Rice Pudding

Tesco does seem pleased with this pud!First off, let me apologise for the photo. The camera ran out of batteries and by the time I came to write this, I had already finished the pudding, so all I had left was the box (thought I’d already taken a photo of the contents, doh). Secondly, I know it’s a while since I did a review, mainly because I haven’t been trying much new stuff.

Tesco’s dessert/cream cake chiller cabinet is a dreadful place if you’re gluten intolerant… But I have found one item that, at least for the time being, is gluten free. They call it “Tesco Silky Sweet Luscious Clotted Cream Rice Pudding” – nobody would guess Tesco is a British company with all that puff for a simple rice pud! Blow their own trumpet? They just went out and got a full one-man-band outfit, from the looks.

So they’ve made a bit of a song and dance about how nice their rice pudding is. And, truthfully, it’s not bad at all, delicious in fact. Very similar to the rice pudding I used to make myself (not that I ever used clotted cream). And whether you heat it up in the microwave or bake it in the oven (a bit nicer), it’s very edible indeed.

This is the ingredients list: Milk, Clotted Cream, Sugar, Rice, Double Cream, Water, Modified Maize Starch, Flavouring, Nutmeg.

And here is the Allergy Advice panel: Contains milk [well, duh]. Recipe: no nuts. Ingredients: Cannot guarantee nut free. Factory: Before being prepared for manufacture of this product, the equipment was previously used to make products containing nuts.

So, the packet I bought was gluten free.

However, this is not a “gluten free product”, which means the recipe may change at any time. You need to check the label if you buy this yourself, to ensure that the rice pudding you are buying is also gluten free. Please remember that manufacturers change recipes all the time without any mention on the front of the pack. The only way to be sure that a mainstream product is gluten free (even if it was gluten free last time you bought it) is to Check the Label of Every Pack, Every Time You Buy!

The price for Tesco Silky Sweet Luscious Clotted Cream Rice Pudding at my local store is £2.15 for 500g. It’s supposed to be for 4 people, but in my view is only enough for 2. However, the pack contains 1060 calories, so it’s a rich and calorie-laden dessert! You could make it an occasional treat, but it’s definitely not something you should include in your diet frequently unless you’re trying to put on weight.


Mrs Crimble’s Large Jam Coconut Rings – Wheat- and Gluten-Free

Mrs Crimble's Jam Coconut Rings come in packs of 6I’ve never seen these on sale. They were a present from my niece, up from London for a visit, along with a few other things. And a very nice present they were, too.

Perhaps a little too sweet, but they are ideal for those moments when you’re dying for something sugary and nice. They consist of a ring of coconut with a jam center. There is a disk of rice paper on the bottom to hold the jam in place. Rice paper (in case you’ve never heard of it), is edible and is designed for this purpose. Don’t – as my niece did – try and peel it off!

When I was a child, I used to love eating rice paper just on its own. It’s strange stuff, which melts in the mouth and is faintly sweet. I always thought it was made of rice, but the stuff used by Mrs Crimble for this product is made of potato starch. Of course. How silly of me!

The individual cakes, or cookies, whatever you want to call them are quite large, about 8cm (3 inches) across, and the pack weight is 240g – which means that each weighs around 40g or about one and a third ounces. The product is marked as gluten free and wheat free.

Here is the ingredients list: Coconut (27%), sugar, fruit filling (13%) (sugar, glucose syrup, water, fruit (7%) (strawberries, elderberries), gelling agent, pectin, acidity regulator, citric acid, antioxidant: sodium citrate, flavouring, preservative: potassium sorbate), glucose syrup, egg white, dextrose, potato starch, eggs, rice flour, edible rice paper (potato starch, water, palm oil), sorbitol, raspberry flavouring, colour: beta carotene. Looking through this list, I can’t see any dairy products, so these should be fine for anyone on a gluten and dairy free diet.

I don’t know how much these were. However, I’m sure that they were priced reasonably, as are all the other Mrs Crimble products I’ve tried.

Recommended.


Tesco Free From Farmhouse Fruit Cake – Gluten Free

Disappointingly crumblyI have to apologize for the quality of the photograph. I opened the packet last night, and it wasn’t the best light for taking pics. I’ve brightened it up a bit, but it’s still not as good as I would have liked.

Tesco Free From Farmhouse Fruit Cake comes in quite a small packet, without excessive packaging. Just an open top cardboard box wrapped in cellophane, and the cake is in a sort of biggish cupcake-style case (only rectangular). It looks appetizing, with a sugar crusted top.

When you open the packet, you need to use the sharpest knife you can find to slice the cake, and even then it’s difficult to get a whole slice, as the cake is very crumbly. This is not a one-off. I’ve had this cake before, and it’s always like that.

Taste-wise, the cake is quite similar to Mr Kipling’s Country Slices, though not as moist and a lot more prone to fall apart. It’s definitely not the sort of cake you can eat without a plate. Even if you have managed to cut a slice, it tends to break up when you try to take a bite as well, so you end up with a plate full of varying sizes of cake crumbs.

Before I tried the Dutch Apple Cake made by Mrs Crimble, I assumed that all decent gluten free cakes would suffer from the tendency to disintegrate which is exhibited by this cake. Obviously, I don’t think that any more, though I am not sure what the secret is. The Tesco cake seems to hold together best around the fruit, so perhaps it is because Mrs Crimbles cake is made with lots of apple puree (as there’s no other obvious apple presence) that holds it together. Or perhaps Tesco’s cake could do with more xanthan gum (which is listed in the ingredients, though it doesn’t seem to be performing its function of replacing gluten particularly well).

I am not unhappy about eating crumbs, though it’s more difficult. But I couldn’t serve this to guests, for sure. I think, though, that this cake would make a good base for a traditional trifle. Sure, it has fruit in it, which is not normal for the sponge at the bottom of a trifle, but as trifle contains lots of fruit anyway, I think it would work fine.

Here’s the information on the label:
Sponge cake with sultanas topped with demerara sugar. Made with rice flour, potato starch and maize starch.
Free from – Milk, wheat, gluten.
Allergy advice – Contains egg. Recipe: No nuts. Ingredients: Cannot guarantee nut free. Factory: Before being prepared for manufacture of this product, the equipment was previously used to make products containing nuts. Suitable for vegetarians.
Ingredients: Sultanas (25%), Sugar, Sunflower Oil, Rice Flour, Water, Potato Starch, Humectant (Vegetable Glycerine), Dried Egg, Demerara Sugar, Maize Starch, Raising Agents (Disodium diphosphate, Sodium bicarbonate), Salt, Stabiliser (Xanthan Gum), Emulsifiers (Polyglycerol Esters of Fatty Acids, Mono- and Di-Glycerides of Fatty Acids), Preservative (Potassium sorbate), Flavouring.
Nutrition: 100g contains (typical composition): Energy 1620kJ/3900kcal Protein 3.1g; Carbohydrate 56.8g (of which sugars 21.6g); Fat 16.2g (of which polyunsaturates 9.1g); Fibre 1.0g; Sodium 0.3g; Salt 0.77g. Each slice contains the equivalent of 0.2g of salt. For guideline amounts, please visit www.tesco.com

I can’t find any weight specified on the packet. Once I’ve finished the cake, I will check more thoroughly, but in the meantime, I can tell you that the carton measures 5″x3″ or 12.5x9cm (the cake is very slightly smaller than this, due to the inner wrapper), and the cake is just under 2.5″ (6.25cm) high. It’s priced at £1.50 – which I would have reckoned a bargain before I found the Dutch Apple Cake previously reviewed.


Prewetts No Wheat Jammy Wheels and Tesco Free From Shortbread

Not RecommendedI haven’t written for a while, not having bought anything new for some time. However, I was in Tesco the other day, and took the opportunity to photograph a couple of products I’ve tried in the past – but I have no wish to buy them again.

Like me, you probably miss some favorites. In my case shortbread and Jammy Dodgers (in themselves a poor substitute for Crawfords Honey Creams, which are no longer available) are top of the list! So I was sucked in, I admit it, one day and bought a packet of Prewetts No Wheat Jammy Wheels and another of Tesco’s own brand Free From Shortbread from the free from shelf in my local store. And when I got them home, I wasted no time in tearing open the packet and making a cup of coffee to go with them.

As you can no doubt tell, I was disappointed. Both products were edible – barely – but both missed the mark in a big way.

Starting with the jammy wheels, the first disappointment was the fact that 90% of them were in little pieces. I know that it’s difficult to get gluten free products to stay together, but I still think a better stab could have been made of it. This, however, wasn’t the worst of it.

The biscuits having fallen apart in a big way, revealed a small button of “jam” in the center, which didn’t even attempt to fill the central part of the sandwich. The actual biscuit part had a very strange taste which was strongly flavored with bicarbonate of soda. Quite unpleasant.

I didn’t throw the rest of the pack away, though I was strongly tempted to do so, because I try not to throw food out if I can avoid it. They were priced at £1.49 for a 200g pack, which would have been quite good for a gluten free product if the biscuits themselves were nice.

I then opened the shortbread. I love shortbread – that crumbly buttery and not overly sweet biscuit which is just wonderful dipped in coffee or just eaten au naturel. I’ve often found (before I was gluten free) that even cheap shortbread is still very tasty, and it has always been one of my favorite treats.

It seems to me that shortbread shouldn’t be that hard to make with gluten free flours, but whether it is or not, the baker responsible for creating the Tesco Free From shortbread recipe didn’t even get close.

At least when you open the pack the contents are intact. The biscuits inside are a bit anemic looking, but that’s ok – there’s no need for shortbread to look particularly golden and inviting, so long as it tastes good. Unfortunately, it fails the test.

I took a bite, ready for the typical buttery crumbliness, and got a mouthful of dry, floury and faintly oaty but otherwise tasteless stuff. Nothing like shortbread at all. This was sad, but I thought it might be better if dipped in my coffee – which would surely get rid of that floury texture which sticks to the tongue so much – unfortunately, this had no real effect except to make the biscuit wet, even if dipped long enough to run the risk of losing part of it.

Again, I was reluctant to throw these away, and I managed to finish the packet over a period of 2 weeks, though it was much like a daily penance. The price for these was £1.25 for a 200g pack.

I won’t be buying either of these again.