Our quest
to review every sausage on the planet (yes, it’s im possible) sometimes leads us
to large-scale retailers who can sometimes offer questionable sausages. This week Dad’s been to Iceland, where we
picked up a bag of FORTY sausages for TWO pounds. Yes, you read that correctly. Can a sausage that costs five pence really be
any good? You’d think not.
Iceland is
a massive chain of frozen goods shops selling low-cost products on a huge
scale. Also much beloved by celebrities. Well, "a" "celebrity". Kerry Katona.
Oh dear.
My tasting
notes, such as they are, read:
Meat
Content:
Is there
any?
Flavour:
Minimal. Like eating wallpaper paste.
Texture:
Mush. Skin hardens unpleasantly but encapsulates the
squishy crap inside.
There is
probably a worse sausage on sale somewhere (and if you know of one please tell
us) but it would have to be absolutely, utterly cosmically shite. The taste, such as exists, is all salt
with no other flavour discernible. The
texture is not texture as such, merely plop. And the meat content is
ridiculously, taking-the-piss low. The
worst sausage. Abysmal multiplied by
pathetic to the power of cack.
Shrinkage:
Average
weight uncooked - 33g
Average
weight cooked - 28g
Shrinkage -
14%
Weighed the
least, each, ever! By some margin. But then the main ingredient, namely “feck all”,
weighs next to nothing. The shrink
figure of 14% regretfully scores high in our famously idiosyncratic points
system, but the reason these bangers haven’t shrunk much is that there’s almost
nothing natural in them to shrink.
Value For
Money:
40 sausages
cost £2.00. Obviously I didn’t cook them
all, so here are the stats, intrapolated (is that the correct antonym of
extrapolate?)....
£0.40 for
eight sausages, weighing 265g - this works out as a price of £1.51 per kg, or 5p
per snorker.
Evan at 5p each this is catastrophically bad value for money. Avoid at all costs.
Through A
Child’s Eyes:
Junior
Sidekick didn’t taste this particular glimpse of hell but he can offer some
insight. He was at a friend’s house for
tea recently and bangers and mash was served.
On the way home I asked how it was and he wasn’t very positive....and
then he lowered his voice a la Les Dawson/Roy Barraclough old ladies sketch and
whispered “They were ICELAND sausages”, in that tone
which said “They were bloody awful Dad.”
The Imaginatively
Titled Next Day Cold Sausage Test:
The pics
show the Iceland embarrassments on the left alongside some real sausages. Please draw your own conclusions.
Opening
Hours:
If Sri
Lanka used to be Ceylon, and Myanmar used to be Burma, what did Iceland used to
be? Bejam.
Iceland is
open at the usual big retailer times, can’t be arsed to promote them and their disgraceful
excuses for sausages.
And
Finally, Esther:
If you want
to experience the Very Bottom Of The Sausage Barrel then buy some. If you are not a masochist then don’t
bother. Disgusting.
4 comments:
Oh, very, very good review. And very, very funny. Succinctly put good Sir. This type of sausage gives sausages a bad name. I have family members who eat Bad Sausages and I love to see the startled look on their faces when I dish up Proper Sausage from the Farmer or Butcher.
Taste The Difference?
Indeed.
Oh I remember having these a few years ago (or something very similar - I suspect Iceland's "value" range hasn't improved much since) and they were some of the worst sausages ever. No taste, no texture, and as I recall a strange, almost bread-like smell came from them as they cooked.
Thanks for a stomach-turning but otherwise entertaining review!
Even a greedy collie who eats anything - roadkill pheasants, badger, grey squirrel etc turned her nose up at these!!
To be honest, I buy these quite often and they are alright as afar as cheap, generic "meat" products go. They are a little bland, I'll give you, but cooked up in a tomato based sauce, or deep fried and chucked in a roll they are fine.
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