Thursday, 8 October 2020

Lidl Deluxe Vintage Cheddar Cauliflower & Spinach Pie




This was a proper Lidl meal - pie and veg supplied by Lidl. Oaklands is Lidl's brand name for fresh veg. The parsnips and cauliflower were from British farms and were fresh and tasty. Really good quality. The veg pie is £2.49 for a decent sized 450g. 


This is a really tasty pie. Creamy with a hint of cheese, the flavours blending nicely. Perhaps a tad sweet, but  that's a quibble, we all enjoyed this, and would be happy to buy it again. 


Date: Oct 2020  Score: 8 



Lidl Deluxe Peppermint & Liquorice

 




Intriguing balance of licorice and peppermint.  Refreshing and zippy with mint, and sweet ad earthy with the licorice. Nice one. 

Date: Oct 2020   Score: 8 





I love this. A perfect combination - the freshness and zest of the peppermint, with the dark, malty, earthy sweetness of the liquorice. Lots of companies are doing this combination right now, and I'll be interested to try the others, but from my experience of comparing peppermint teas, I suspect there won't be any significant difference, and I'll end up with the cheapest.


Date: Sept 2015  Score: 8

Wednesday, 7 October 2020

Lidl Maribel Strawberry Jam

 



Maribel is Lidl's brand name for jams and jellies. The strawberry jam is 50% fruit, 450g for £1.09.  Tesco Finest is £150 for 340g. We tried it against the Tesco Finest and it stood up well. 

Good taste of fruit, though it was a little sweeter and less fruity than the Tesco. However, for the price this is a good deal. 

Date: Oct 2020   Score: 6 



Monday, 5 October 2020

Lidl Nixe Tuna Chunks in Sunflower Oil

 


We did a taste test of Lidl Tuna Chunks in sunflower oil against the Tesco one. Lidl's brand name for tinned fish products is Nixe. They cost 75p while Tesco cost 79p. Tesco do a discount if you buy four, but the Lidl cans are larger, so the Lidl Tuna is slightly cheaper. But there's not a lot in it, and can be partly off set by the points collected if you have a Tesco clubcard. However, the Lidl can has a ring pull, which I prefer. And the tuna has larger chunks than the Tesco and looks much better - a deeper more attractive colour and texture. The Tesco tuna looks grey and mushy (cat vomit Chrissie says), and has smaller chunks. The Lidl so far is winning - cheaper to buy, larger tin, easier to open, and much better looking. However when it comes to the taste test two of us preferred the Tesco. I found the Lidl to have a moderate tuna taste which is somewhat dominated by the sunflower oil. If the tuna was in olive oil I wouldn't object to the taste of the oil, but sunflower is a slightly bitter tasting oil with a suggestion of corn. The Tesco was more clearly tuna flavoured, though the flavour seemed to have been enhanced by the salt. Indeed, Chrissie disliked it as she felt it was too salty. 



We then did a taste taste of the Lidl tuna against Princes Tuna Chunks in Sunflower Oil. £1.25 for a  145g (102g drained weight) tin, so considerably more expensive. The Princes tuna appears to be dry - it contains far les oil than the Lidl. And the appearance is closer to the Tesco, which surprised me, as I somehow thought that the Lidl tuna was processed by Princes. On tasting, the Princes won out on a 2 - 1, same as with the Tesco. The Princes tastes very much like the Tesco, so it seems likely that the Tesco tuna is processed by Princes. 


Date: Oct 2020.  Score: 5



Friday, 2 October 2020

Lidl Rowan Hill Raisin Brioche Swirls

 



This is not a fresh brioche, it's one of those long life things. This is branded Rowan Hill, which is Lidl's own brand for packaged bakery goods. It is exactly the same product as sold by Sainsbury's, Asda, Aldi, and was sold by Tesco (they have discontinued it). Made in France with rum soaked raisins, individually packed in plastic, and then sold in packs of six. Lidl and Aldi sell it for £1.09. Tesco used to sell it for £1.00 (would likely be the same price as Lidl if they were selling it today). The others sell it for a little more. So it's a fair deal on price if this is what you want. But it's not a great product. As with most of these long life products it simply doesn't taste fresh and natural. The rum soaked raisins give it a lift, and it is soft and creamy, but it doesn't taste great - it is sort of chewy and cardboardy at times. To be fair it is edible, just not entirely enjoyable. Nobody in the family liked these. The fresh morning goods by Lidl are much better. 

Date: Oct 2020   Score: 2 1/2 



Wednesday, 30 September 2020

Lidl Knightsbridge Camomile

 



Taste test against Tesco's Camomile tea. Pleasant flavour - there's a hint of sweetness, and a juicy fresh grassiness before finishing with a gentle bitterness. They are similar enough. Both the same price as well. 75p for 20 bags. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score:  8 



Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Lidl Hatherwood The Ginger Grizzly (Alcoholic Ginger Beer) No 6

 



This is made by Marston's for Lidl under the Hatherwood brand name. Hatherwood was first registered in 2007 for a variety of products, including alcohol, which is what it is mainly used for. The beers have been made by Marston's and by Shepherd Neame, and are currently brewed by Marston's. This is probably Marston's Loveday’s Ginger Beer, which hasn't been sold since Marston's have been selling it under the Hatherwood brand at Lidl. 

500ml brown bottle, filtered. A sweet alcopop. Some ginger warmth. This is a pleasant shandy type drink. There's something of a beer flavour, with some ginger ale (carbonated soft drink with a ginger flavour) mixed in. Easy drinking, but nothing really significant.


Date: Sept 2020  Score: 5 


Lidl Newgate Macaroni Cheese (In A Rich Cheese Sauce)

 


This is a fairly standard supermarket product, sold by Lidl under their Newgate brand, which was registered in 2003, and is one of Lidl's main brands, used for a variety of meat and processed products, often canned.  The recipe and price of 55p for 410g matches that of Tesco, and of Asda


We didn't like this. Very little cheese flavour. Indeed, it was closer in character to a milky macaroni pudding than a macaroni cheese. A little bit sweet and bland. Not a product I can see us buying again. Though it might be fun to do a taste test one day. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score: 3 



Lidl Ocean Trader 4 Smoked Haddock Fishcakes

 


A proper Lidl meal. We had the Smoked Haddock Fishcakes, Lidl potatoes and Lidl broccoli. Worked well. The spuds were creamy and tasty. The broccoli fresh. And the smoked haddock was a great success. Very savoury and tasty. Will certainly be buying these again. Not all the haddock is smoked so there is a good balance on the smoked flavour - it enhances the savoury flavour, but doesn't overwhelm. Really nice. 

Ocean Trader is Lidl's brand name for frozen fish products. It was first registered in 2013. They are £1.99 for 320g. Tesco do two own brand smoked haddock fishcakes: The regular 2 smoked haddock fishcakes at £1.50 for 270g, and the Finest brand 2 smoked haddock fishcakes at £2.50 for 290g. It looks like Lidl are positioning themselves somewhere between these two, and are opting for four small fishcakes in place of two large ones. 

Be fun to do a test taste one day. 

Date: Sept 2020   Score: 8 



Saturday, 26 September 2020

Lidl Sondey Soft Baked White Chocolate & Lemon Cookies



Sondey is Lidl's cake and biscuit brand, which they created in 2010.  They are 99p for 210g. We've eaten them all, and I can't remember how many were in the pack, but they were small, and I think it was around eight. Tesco do a pack of five white chocolate cookies for £1, and Sainsbury's do the same (though currently they are discounted to 80p). To do a fair price comparison we would need to do a side by side taste test, and look at the differences in size and weight, but on first glance they appear to be about the same price. They are soft baked cookies, and are quite sweet, with a delicate and attractive lemon flavour. They have more chocolate (29%) than Tesco and Sainsbury (both 19%), though the chocolate doesn't make a strong impression - it's mainly the sugar, flour and lemon. All in all, though, this is a tasty and attractive cookie I'd be happy to buy again. 

Date: Sept 2020    Score: 7 


Lidl Deluxe Chilli Flavour Hot Chocolate

 


This is a hot chocolate from Lidl's "Deluxe" range, which is equivalent to Tesco's "Finest", Sainsbury's "Taste The Difference", etc.  It's £1.85 for 350g. It's not an instant hot chocolate - this is cocoa powder to which you add hot milk, but it does have sugar included, so is termed hot chocolate rather than cocoa, and costs less than cocoa because it has less chocolate. Sainsbury's do a hot chocolate - £1.60 for 300g, and Tesco's is £1.95 for 400g. But neither of these are equivalent, as they are not the "finest" own brands. The top own brands don't have chilli, but are the best to price match: Sainsbury's Belgian Hot Chocolate is £3.50 for 280g, and Tesco's Santo Domingo Hot Chocolate is £2.50 for 250g. At first glance it appears that Lidl's Deluxe range is better value, but if Lidl's Deluxe is more equivalent to the standard supermarket own brands, then the price is roughly the same. A taste test would be needed, but this does taste a little thin on the chocolate, which is somewhat compensated for by the chilli, but it's more of a pleasant chilli enriched milky chocolate drink than a rich and smooth chocolate drink. It has 39% cocoa compared to Tesco's 52%. Despite the "Deluxe" brand, this actually sits between the standard supermarket own brands and their finest brands, and so the price is roughly equivalent, though edges in favour of Lidl. 

On the whole I really like this. Easy drinking with a pleasant chilli warmth that gently nips rather than bites deep. I'd like a bit more smoothness, and a bit more chocolate, and a bit less sugar, but I like it enough that I think it highly likely I'd drink it again. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score: 7   



Thursday, 24 September 2020

Lidl Duc De Coeur Creusois Cake

 


Sponge cake with hazelnut and butter flavouring. Very pleasant - part of Lidl's Duc De Coeur (Duke's Heart) range of French influenced products. £2.49 for 320g. Difficult to price comparison this product as I don't think there is an equivalent in the UK. This is a French regional speciality from Creuse in central France. The recipe is old, but was only discovered recently, and is starting to become popular in France. Understandably popular, as this is a very pleasant cake. Easy eating and delicate, yet richly flavoured. It's good as an after meal desert, as part of breakfast, or with a cup of tea in the afternoon. 

I can see us buying this again - though I suspect this is one of those dishes that Lidl may produce occasionally or just the once rather than offer regularly. Get it while you can! Will keep for around three months unopened, after which it is best consumed within a few days. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score:  8 



Lidl Duc De Coeur Fish Bake Provencal Style





Duc De Coeur (the Duke's Heart) is Lidl's brand name, registered in 2013, for French style products. A frozen fish bake is an everyday French product, similar to the British boil in the bag fish. It's something you'd buy for a midweek meal, not something you'd have for special occasions, nor would you offer it to guests if you wanted to impress. It's a low cost everyday family dish. Soft, easy to eat and comforting. It uses the milder/blander tasting pollock rather than cod, and costs £1.99 for 380g, which compares with top brand Youngs Mediterranean Tomato Fish Bakes of £2 (Tesco clubcard price / Asda regular price) for 340g, which also uses pollock. So, not a lot in it (though you get clubcard points at Tesco).

It's a comforting, easy eating dish. Nothing outstanding, but that was to be expected. It tastes pretty much as similar products we've had in France served by Chrissie's mother. The sauce is mildly sweet tomato with some herbs. Quite pleasant. We split it between the three of us, though our 11 year old daughter left hers. 




It's an OK dish, but lacks oomph. I prefer the British cod in butter sauce products. They are cheaper to buy (£2.20 for 552g) and cook (5 minutes in the microwave rather than 35 in the oven), and I find them much more flavoursome.  Though inoffensive and gently likable, I can't see us buying them again too often. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score: 5 


Tuesday, 22 September 2020

Lidl Mushy Peas

Lidl's mushy peas are in an unbranded tin simply named "Mushy Peas". On the back, in small writing as usual, is the Lidl name to mark this as a Lidl own brand. But also given is the address: Princes Ltd, Liverpool. Princes make Batchelors Mushy Peas, which contain exactly the same ingredients and colouring. The Lidl Mushy Peas are 23p, while the Batchelors are 55p. Being listed with the same ingredients doesn't necessarily mean they are the same quality, because Tesco's Growers Harvest Mushy Peas (the Tesco rival to Lidl)  have exactly the same ingredients and colouring as Tesco's British Mushy Peas, but with difference in price: Growers Harvest are 23p, British Mushy Peas are 30p. While they may use the same amount of peas, salt, sugar and colouring, the quality and/or treatment of the peas may be different.  It would be fun to do a blind taste test of different mushy peas one day. 


Anyway. The colour of these peas is rather too bright for me. They look slightly ill. And slightly artificially coloured. The colouring isn't natural. 

The taste is fairly neutral - not too sweet nor too salty, though toward the end I found them a little bitter. However, they did have a proper pea taste. Consistency is fairly dry and firm. They do feel and taste like proper home made mushy peas, and of better quality than 23p.  I wasn't blown away by them, but I did like them rather a lot. 


Date: Sept 2020    Score: 7 


We have now done a taste test with Lidl's Mushy Peas against Tesco Growers Choice, and Batchelors. The Batchelors mushy peas won, though were very close to Lidl in appearance, texture and taste. There's not a lot in it, but Batchelors was preferred by all three of us.  The one we disliked was the Tesco Growers Choice. The appearance was probably the most natural - it didn't have the vivid rather artificial green of the other two - but looked the least appetising. The taste was rather bland, and the texture was a little lumpy. I think people will differ in their taste appreciation, and there will be many who would prefer the more naturally flavoured and more natural looking and textured Tesco Growers Choice, but for us, we all three were happier with the colour, taste and texture of the other two. For the price, the Lidl mushy peas has to be the winner. 

Date: Oct 2020  Score: 8 

Friday, 18 September 2020

Lidl Newgate Express Speedy Noodle Spicy Curry Flavour (cup)

 


Everything about this looks cheap and nasty. In colour and appearance it's an attempt to cash in on the awesome Pot Noodle brand, but lacks the humour, the professionalism, and the slaggish class of Pot Noodle. The lid is thin and tore as I was trying to open it. You look inside at this miserable looking heap of dried noods with barely any powder. Just this small, insignificant dried lump of yellow huddled in a corner of the white cup. And where's the mango sauce? Well, that was hidden inside the noods. I poured on the water and stirred before I found it. And it was a joyless unmarked and uncolour plastic sachet. No cost saving unturned.  My hopes were not up. 

Then I started eating.  I'd had these nods before, and have reviewed them twice before under slightly different names: Vitasia Speedy Noodle Spicy Curry. And I remembered that they are way tastier than you expect them to be. It just works. Not too spicy. Not too sweet. A good balance. And they have that comfortable gooey sticky mouthfeel that is so typical of the best British noods. Asian style noods are either watery or dry. British noods are thick, moist, comforting. 

I like these noods. To be honest I'm not a huge fan of Lidl. I think their products can be good, but they can also be bland or overly sweet - simply going for the cheapest, easiest, most commercial product that is going to appeal to most people. They head downwards for the lowest common denominator. They are not looking to make distinctive, interesting, challenging, exciting food products. They just want products that are going to appeal to the most people. If what you want is the bland, slightly sweet, everyday familiarity, and are not interesting in trying something unusual, unique, interesting, with complex and fascinating flavours, then Lidl is your bag. And just sometimes, as with these noods, the familiar and the comforting is just what I want. 


Yes. This hits the spot. 


Date: Sept 2020   Score: 8 




Monday, 20 April 2020

Lidl Knightsbridge Gold Tea Bags




Gold teas are made from premium tea leaves. They tend to cost a little more. If you prefer them to the standard red teas is a matter of subjective opinion. I tend to find most mainstream blends to be fairly boring, with the main difference being the strength or robustness. Most teas I drink without milk, but the mainstream blends I always use milk. I'm just looking for a basic tea to drink with my fish & chips or cheese sandwich. If I'm having a cream tea I will go for a single estate or "speciality" tea, rather than a brand blend.

Anyway, this is a fairly robust and straightforward tea - I suspect it aims to match Yorkshire Gold. For me it is better than Yorkshire Gold as it is stronger and cleaner.


Date: April 2020   Score: 5
***

Lidl Tea & Coffee