UNITED KINGDOM - Modern restaurants exult in parading the provenance of "pan-fried, line-caught seabass", "wild-foraged oyster mushrooms" and other elaborate or homely ingredients, but a swoop by trading standards officers has revealed that many of the descriptions are false.
Three-quarters of restaurant, pub and cafe menus were found to be making bogus claims for "fresh", "local" or "hand-made" dishes which turned out to be cheaper versions using factory farmed meat, frozen fish or cash and carry food.
Among the scams were "handmade" tarts bought from a wholesaler, defrosted "fresh mussels" and "fresh tuna steak", a "home-made" soup made from a dry-pack mix and "local" samphire vegetables imported from 3220km away in Israel.
The investigation took place this northern summer amid concern that fraud - which can include marketing ordinary olive oil as "extra virgin" or substituting Vietnamese catfish for cod - has tainted 10 per cent of the UK food system.
Trading standards officers from Lancashire County Council visited 41 randomly selected outlets, scrutinised the menu, checked food stores and invoices and found that 32 had been misleading diners. Of 816 dishes, one in seven - 127 - was incorrect or could not be proved by the business. Some 60 per cent of claims at one establishment could not be verified.
Many of the unscrupulous claims related to ordinary or catering food being passed off as artisanal: a "home-made" tart bought from a national wholesaler, "home-made" soup that was dry-pack soup mix with hot water added, "smoked" chicken breast that was not smoked, or even smoked flavoured, and "fire-roasted" vegetables cooked in an ordinary oven.
Other claims purported to supply local premium produce, such as "Ribble Valley" beef that actually came from Merseyside, and "Morecambe Bay" shrimps caught in the much wider north-east and north-west Atlantic. Freshness was a common scam: "Fresh mussels" and "fresh tuna steak" came from the freezer and "freshly made" meatballs from a wholesaler.
Some caterers sought to mislead diners over farm standards, using caged eggs for dishes ostensibly containing "free-range eggs" and ordinary apple for "British Farm Assured" apple pie. "Wild mushroom" came from a farm and other descriptions such as "organic" and "hand-picked" were applied to foods without justification.
Trading standards officers warned the restaurants, pubs and cafes that they faced prosecution if they were still misleading customers in follow-up checks. Jim Potts, Lancashire's chief trading standards officer, said people had the "right to expect that the meals they buy are genuinely described on the menus.
- Independent
Menu scams - for fresh read frozen
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