I bought a pack of to small microwavable sponge puddings at a supermarket recently. The were packaged in a cardboard sleeve so I could not see inside until I came to open them. One was fine but the other was a disgusting shade of green and black, quite obviously contaminated in some way. I did not remove the film seals on either pudding. The 'use by' is Jan 2015.
I do not want to return this purchase to the supermarket. They will just offer me another pack or give me a refund. I want these puddings properly examined for contamination. The supermarket would not have known that this product was unfit for consumption because the puddings were covered by the cardboard sleeve.
I e-mailed the manufacturers last Friday morning to make them aware of the situation. I offered to return both puddings (and the cardboard sleeve) to them for examination. I have heard nothing at all from them so I now want to take this further.
Last Friday, 7th Feb? No company seems to reply to an email in less than a week to 12 days...is there a telephone number?
Otherwise parcel them up and send them off.
Photograph them and the packaging and make sure the sell-by date is visible NOW. If people drag their feet the evidence will disappear. Any digital photos you take will have a date/time stamp hidden in the file, so make sure the date/time is set on your camera before you take the photos.
Contamination? It's almost certain that the problem is mould growth caused by faulty packaging...the film hasn't sealed properly, so that pudding was not air-tight.
There is no "contamination" (as such)...the product left the factory in good condition, but mould grew because of poor package integrity. It happens quite often when products aren't "sealed" properly.
Thank you all for your suggestions. I photographed the puddings on Friday along with the cardboard sleeve. All are sealed in an airtight container. The 'use by' date is clearly visible on the sleeve.
I would just take them back to the supermarket as your contract is with them. I took some turkey sausages back to a supermarket when I was really ill after eating them and they sent them to their laboratory for investigation. If there is a problem, the supermarket will make the manufacturer aware of it and they probably have more "clout" than you.