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The Incredible Shrinking Roses/Quality Street tins



studio150

Well-known member
Jul 30, 2011
30,211
On the Border
What makes it worse is that back in the 70s Christmas used to start on 13th December, not before. Now it starts mid-October so the buggers have got 4 times longer to sell this stuff, so making a shedload more profit.
And a lot of stuff now on sale (mince pies Xmas slices etc) have best before dates that are well before Christmas Day.

But I suppose they have to get rid of the Xmas stock just before Xmas to make room for The Easter Eggs
 




Cotton Socks

Skint Supporter
Feb 20, 2017
2,144
And a lot of stuff now on sale (mince pies Xmas slices etc) have best before dates that are well before Christmas Day.

But I suppose they have to get rid of the Xmas stock just before Xmas to make room for The Easter Eggs
Surely though you'd not want mince pies that lasted for months? The filling can last for ages but pastry isn't supposed to last for months.
 




Official Old Man

Uckfield Seagull
Aug 27, 2011
9,073
Brighton
About 6 years ago we went to Bookers wholesalers for some bits for our shop. It was just after Christmas and they had pallets of mince pies selling for 5p a box. Not one to miss a bargain I purchased about 30 boxes and shoved them in the freezer. Following years out they came as required and they were perfect.
Cleaned out the freezer last month and found a final box right at the bottom. Defrosted they were still perfect.
 


vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,262
About 6 years ago we went to Bookers wholesalers for some bits for our shop. It was just after Christmas and they had pallets of mince pies selling for 5p a box. Not one to miss a bargain I purchased about 30 boxes and shoved them in the freezer. Following years out they came as required and they were perfect.
Cleaned out the freezer last month and found a final box right at the bottom. Defrosted they were still perfect.

So, we now face four years of Trump and it seems that other than Cockroaches, only Mince Pies will survive.
 








Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,251
As a society we know obesity is a problem, so a 2-month lead into Christmas and Easter when the shelves are stacked with various sugar products is really not helping.

For a 2-month period you have to be incredibly strong-willed to keep walking past a stack of Quality Street every time you pop into the supermarket for a loaf of bread or a pint of milk.

If they can restrict trading on a Sunday then I'd like to see them restrict 'Festival Creep' to 2 weeks before Easter and Hallowe'en, 4 weeks before Christmas. This would then have the added bonus of not reducing every calendar event to a mere corporate opportunity.

Some might say this is a 'killjoy' attitude, but for many Christmas means putting on weight they will struggle to shift after New Year, with rinse and repeat on an annual basis.
 














Dick Swiveller

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2011
9,520
Just been poking around Google about this and the tin from the 70s that everyone reminisces about that used to cost £4.99 would now cost £30. It was 2.6kg. That is a lot of chocolate by anyone's standard. No wonder they have got smaller and cheaper
 


BevBHA

Well-known member
Jan 23, 2017
2,415
And a lot of stuff now on sale (mince pies Xmas slices etc) have best before dates that are well before Christmas Day.

But I suppose they have to get rid of the Xmas stock just before Xmas to make room for The Easter Eggs
funny you say that, I reviewed my stores merchandising calendar today and my first allocation of Easter eggs is on the 4th Jan!!

Also, our first two pallets of celebrations and quality streets came in this year on 20th August. First year I’ve ever seen it hit the shelf before mid September.
 






Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,166
Withdean area
Forever including the 70’s it was 2lb of sweets in a nice tin. Now 1.3lbs in a non-descript container.

IMG_2024-11-07-231454.png
 


The Wookiee

Back From The Dead
Nov 10, 2003
15,377
Worthing
Its just a sneaky way of doing it though, you don't see packets of Butter/pints of Milk/crumpets etc shrinking.

Although I saw something the other day about bagels, apparently the circumference and depth is the same but they have just made the hole bigger - that’s sneaky !
 


El Presidente

The ONLY Gay in Brighton
Helpful Moderator
Jul 5, 2003
39,989
Pattknull med Haksprut
Only nine McVities Jaffa Cake in a packet yesterday, there used to be twelve…AND they’re smaller too.

#BarberOut
 




Dick Swiveller

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2011
9,520
Forever including the 70’s it was 2lb of sweets in a nice tin. Now 1.3lbs in a non-descript container.

View attachment 192111
As I posted above, that is a false memory. They were 2.5KG - Over 5lbs. And would now cost £30 with inflation.

quality.PNG


And you are not forced to buy the smaller, plastic tubs. If you want to pay a bit more than the inflated price would have been, you can.

 


Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,851
As an aside: can you put the plastic tubs in the recycling? There are mixed messages on this, some say you can, some say you can't. Anyone know what the rules are in Brighton?
 


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