ingredient suppliers: pay us more bc inflation

restaurants: ok

property owners: pay us more bc inflation

restaurants: ok

CEO's: pay us more bc inflation

restaurants: ok

workers: pay us more bc inflation

restaurants: are you crazy? we'd have to raise prices! it would ruin us!

  • Hello_Kitty_enjoyer [none/use name]
    hexbear
    41
    4 months ago

    Misleading tweet

    he didn't mention the part where the burrito is now 1/2 the size

    so it's actually 8x the original price

        • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
          hexbear
          12
          4 months ago

          That's interesting. They got worse here. The solid version of watered down. So your 'made with 100% …' is no longer e.g. 100% wholewheat. It just means the wholewheat in the recipe is 100% wholewheat. The overall wheat content is lower, replaced by a percentage of whatever is cheaper at any given time. Or made with '100% beef', of which there will be some in there. But pork fat or horse gristle will be listed as a separate ingredient lol. It all changes from batch to batch. I'm surprised that doesn't happen in the US. Maybe it's always been like that, here and there.

          • RoabeArt [he/him]
            hexbear
            11
            edit-2
            4 months ago

            The other day I was trying to explain this "made with 100% whatever" concept to a coworker.

            A HFCS fruit drink might say "made with 100% real juice", but that real juice could be like 2% of the total recipe when the rest is HFCS, dyes and flavorings. It's one of those technically true things and it's enough to skirt FDA labeling requirements, and a lot of people are dumb enough to be taken in by it and believe they're drinking a real product.

            • @redtea@lemmygrad.ml
              hexbear
              9
              4 months ago

              Oh juice is the prime example! The other twist is 'made with 100% fresh juice'. Thank you very much for not adding rotten fruit into my long-life carton but don't you think it's a stretch to put a 'fresh' label anywhere near this thing that's been in your warehouse for a year and will sit in the back of my cupboard for another few months?