Customers feeling raw after Tesco adds 25p to price of a meal deal

A picture


Tesco has put the price of its meal deal up by 25p, its third increase since 2022, as food prices across the UK continue to race higher.The meal deal now costs £3.85 for Clubcard holders.Customers who do not have a Tesco loyalty card will pay £4.25.

The latest official inflation figures, released this week, showed that the price of food and non-alcoholic beverages rose 4.9% year on year in July, from 4.5% in the 12 months to June.Some retailers have chosen to pass on the soaring costs of ingredients to consumers.Heatwaves and droughts in parts of Spain, Italy and Portugal, where the UK sources a lot of its fresh fruit and vegetables, have pushed up prices this summer, at a time when they would usually fall.

Beef, orange juice, coffee and chocolate were among the worst-hit products.Some shoppers expressed dismay at the price increase by the UK’s biggest grocer.On X, one user wrote: “Discovering that a Tesco meal deal will be £3.85 *with* a Clubcard from Thursday was truly devastating.”Another questioned whether it could still be termed a “deal”.

Tesco’s sandwich, snack and drink deal had cost £3 for 10 years before prices jumped in October 2022, in the depths of the cost of living crisis.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionHowever, Tesco is not the first major supermarket group to frustrate customers by raising the price of its meal deal.In June, Sainsbury’s increased the price of its standard offering from £3.75 to £3.95.

It was the second time Sainsbury’s had increased the price in under a year, after raisingit by 25p in July 2024.The Tesco deal still offers significant savings, depending on the meal combination.A shopper who selected a brie and smoked bacon sandwich with chilli jam, which costs £3.25 when sold alone, as the main meal, vegetable samosa for £1.75 as the snack, and a Naked smoothie for £2.

90 would save £4.05 with a Clubcard, and £3.65 without.The combination would cost £7.90 without the deal.

On Thursday, more than 60 chief executives of Britain’s biggest retailers, including Tesco, Sainsbury’s, John Lewis and Boots, wrote to the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, to warn her that further taxes on businesses in the autumn budget could contradict her plans to improve UK living standards.They suggested that food price inflation could hit 6% this year, arguing that they would not be able to “absorb” further tax rises, instead passing the higher costs on to shoppers.Retailers have repeatedly bemoaned the impact of Reeves’ increase to employer national insurance contributions, while an increase to the national minimum wage in April also raised labour costs.The retailers said in the letter, sent by the British Retail Consortium: “Labour’s manifesto made a clear and welcome promise to deliver good jobs and higher living standards but if future policy decisions lead to rising prices and fewer jobs, then those commitments are at risk.”
A picture

There’s a lot more to lettuce than salad | Kitchen aide

My garden has produced an abundance of lettuce (mainly butter lettuce) this year but there’s a limit to how much salad I can eat. What else can I use them for? Julian, by email“Start thinking of lettuce, and especially butter lettuce, as bread or a taco shell,” says Jesse Jenkins, author of Cooking with Vegetables, and happily this is a “highly adaptable” strategy, too. Sure, you could pile in grilled spicy pork belly and herbs, but this dinner fix also works well “with everything a big green salad does: a piece of nicely grilled protein, some sauce, a few pickled crunchy things, all wrapped in a big, beautiful green leaf”. But why stop there? “I also like to use butter lettuce to wrap cheese toasties,” Jenkins says. “It catches all the fatty goodness and acts as a barrier between the crunchy bread and the roof of your mouth

A picture

José Pizarro’s recipe for sweetcorn, chorizo and piquillo pepper fritters

It’s easy to forget that ingredients such as corn, peppers and even the pimentón in our chorizo all came from the Americas in the 15th century. Many of them first took root in Europe in Extremadura, where I’m from. In La Vera, peppers were smoked and ground into what became pimentón de la Vera and is now part of our food culture. These fritters, which are simple, quick and full of flavour, bring together all these ingredients with long journeys behind them and a solid place in the modern Spanish kitchen.Prep 10 min Cook 30 min Makes About 12125g cured chorizo, skinned and finely diced75g jarred piquillo peppers, drained and finely chopped2 corn cobs, kernels shaved off with a big sharp knife125g plain flour 1 tsp baking powder Sea salt and black pepper 2 large eggs, beaten 160ml whole milk Olive oil, for fryingPut the chorizo, peppers and corn in a large bowl, add the flour and baking powder, and toss to coat

A picture

‘They’re not chic!’ How did BuzzBallz become the undisputed drink of the summer?

Reef, Hooch and Bacardi Breezers are back in favour with gen Z – and BuzzBallz are the biggest hit of all. Why are they the essential alcopop at this year’s picnics, parties and festivals?When Merrilee Kick invented BuzzBallz in 2009, she was a 47-year-old teacher from Texas who needed to make some money fast. “I was about to get a divorce and was terrified of becoming homeless,” she says. “I was a high-school teacher not making enough money to survive, much less put two sons through college.” She had the opportunity to do an MBA through a teacher-enrichment programme, and came up with the idea for BuzzBallz one hot afternoon while marking homework

A picture

Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for charred corn salad with halloumi, broccoli and black beans | Quick and easy

This is my version of a chopped salad, and I love the textural contrast of the crisp broccoli against the soft black beans and squeaky halloumi. The lime-and-spring-onion dressing makes everything sing, while the slightly bitter note of the charred corn keeps things interesting. A filling rainbow salad for warm days.Prep 15 min Cook 15 min Serves 2-32 tbsp olive oil300g tin sweetcorn, drained225g halloumi, cut into ½cm slices200g Tenderstem broccoli, cut into ½cm pieces400g tin black beans, drained and rinsedFinely grated zest and juice of 1 lime20ml extra-virgin olive oil1 tsp flaky sea salt 3 spring onions, trimmed and finely slicedPut a tablespoon of oil in a large, heavy-based saucepan on a high heat. When it’s almost smoking, add the sweetcorn (stand well back!), then fry, stirring occasionally, for five minutes, until charred all over (stand back when you stir, too, because it’s going to try to pop at you like popcorn)

A picture

Mitch Tonks’ sardine recipes, both fresh and tinned

Sardines are one of our most underrated fish, even though UK stocks are healthy and the fishery in Cornwall is certified sustainable. They are caught by seine netting at dusk just a few miles from shore, and the way they are fished means they’re in perfect condition when landed. My favourite way of eating them is left whole, guts in and heads on, topped with a healthy sprinkling of coarse salt and then grilled – they’re wonderful eaten just with your hands or on bread, but today I offer up two alternatives ways with sardines.You will see these delicious cicchetti, or snack, in bars all over Venice, where they sit piled high on the counter, ready to be served with a glass of wine or on top of a slice of bread. They make a great starter or light supper, and it’s a very good way to preserve the fresh fish for a few days, because the flavour gets only better with time

A picture

The power of pulses: 15 easy, delicious ways to eat more life-changing legumes

Want to consume more gut-friendly fibre, as well as minerals, vitamins and antioxidants? Like the idea of a more sustainable diet? Here is the answer - and baked beans are only the startWorried about rising food prices, your diet’s carbon footprint or whether you’re eating healthily enough? Believe it or not, there could be a magic bullet: pulses.According to a study by the University of Reading, published in the European Journal of Nutrition in March, adults who eat more pulses – dried beans, peas and lentils – have a higher intake of nutrients including fibre, folate and vitamins C and E; minerals such as iron, zinc and magnesium; and a lower intake of saturated fat and sugar. Similar results have been found in American, Australian and Canadian research.The UK study also found that eating pulses was associated with a more sustainable diet. In her book, Pulse: Modern Recipes with Beans, Peas & Lentils, Eleanor Maidment explains that growing pulses has a positive effect on the environment