Tom stumbled across this product where they sell broken biscuits and rejects and mix them up and it's pot luck what you get. Some are chocolate biscuits. Do they deliberately break them or is this some sort of scam. They appear much cheaper but has anyone looked at this in depth? |
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By *nnCeeWoman 28 weeks ago
East of Eden, West of Hell |
No Tom. This is a proper product.
The biscuits which do not meet 'standards' or get broken on the production line are popped into bags/boxes and sold to those who don't care if their snack isn't pristine.
It saves food waste, and the bickies are just as tasty as their whole counterparts, just cheaper, and perhaps a bit dustier (Biscuit dust).
Have a go! |
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I’m glad you’ve brought this up, Tom. Biscuit factory workers often succumb to what’s known in the trade as “biscuity blackouts”. There’s extraordinary footage online of them suddenly ripping off their hairnets and flinging biscuits at each other with wild abandon. It’s thought to have something to do with the exposure to so much deliciousness. The biscuit companies obviously don’t want this getting out so they package up the breakages and sell them on at a cheaper price.
Do your own research, people.
Mrs TMN x |
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By *batMan 28 weeks ago
Alicante, Spain. (Sometimes in Wales) |
"If you break a biscuit then it suffers calorie leakage, so they don't count...so i was told "
Same goes for foods of the same colour. Eat a piece of raw mushroom and you can eat as much white chocolate without any calorific intake at all.
It SHOULD BE all over the news.
Gbat |
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