A friend of mine went to Sainsbury's today for some bananas. All the loose bananas were very green, no yellow ones at all.
Working on the principle that a banana is a banana he open up one of the packs of yellow Eric and Friends small bananas and stuck the contents in one of the plastic bags meant for loose bananas , paid and went back to work.
At work he checked what the price difference was online, as there had been no price tag for the Eric an friends small bananas in the store, was the difference....5p , 10p or even 20p.......
Online, Eric & F small bananas are showing as £1.38 for 8.
When weighed as loose bananas .....50p
So the robbing ba****ds are charging 88p to put a bunch of bananas in a plastic bag.
The world is going nuts ... or should that be 'nanas? Sainsburys is the supermarkets name. Should the apostrophe not be after the S? Why is it so complicated?
Not quite as simple as you suggest- for a start they were different bananas, different size and different ripeness.
And pre-packed anything is always much dearer.
I once did that with Sweet potatoes - they did not have any loose ones and wanted me to buy a bag - no chance - as I said to the woman when I went to the box underneath for the fresher ones - they are not giving them away are they
Susan,
The company is called J Sainsbury plc. This would mean calling it Sainsbury's is valid and this is how they refer to themself in their web-site.
And to clear up the confusion: the entire contents of the bag of Small bananas was placed in a new bag and bought. There were no spare bananas left afterwards to confuse shoppers or staff members.
So ... would it be acceptable to take the label off a small manky pineapple and attach it instead to a huge luscious premium one which you then buy for half the proper price?
Because that is effectively what you have done with the bananas?