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

Sunday, 5 March 2017

Apple Pie Taste Test




We love apple pies in our house, so this was a fun taste test. Bramley apple pies are fairly basic, so we weren't expecting much difference, and we didn't find much difference. Over several tastings the favourites would change, though one constant was that the two brand names, Lyons and Mr Kipling, both came out lower each time.

Eating any of these apple pies by themselves, and they taste fine. Even the lowest rated one, Mr Kipling and Lyons, are tasty pies, and eaten by themselves anyone would be happy enough, though its worth noting that both the Lyons and Mr Kipling has the lowest amount of apple, and both were more expensive than the others.

Nearly all the pies had some form of apple shape on top, except Lyons and Asda. Tesco is the neatest and most attractive. Asda we found the least visually appealing. Opinions were divided on the Lyons, which for some had a cute home-made look, while others found it looked nothing like an apple pie, and that it was too small.

On cutting them in half, some could be seen to be visibly fuller with apple than others. The two fullest looking are Tesco and Sainsbury's,  Tesco has the highest proportion of filling (50%) compared to the others, though Sainsbury's at 46% was just below average. Mr Kipling looked half empty, and had the second lowest apple content at 45%. Lyons looked reasonably full, but only had 38% apple. Lyons pies were also the smallest, and were the only ones not to use bramley apples.

When I reviewed Aldi Holly Lane Bramley Apple Pies last year, I commented on the fat and sugar content, based on information I got off the internet it appeared they had higher than average fat and sugar content. Well, on looking at the information contained on the boxes themselves, I see that Aldi is fairly average. The fat content ranges from 12% (Tesco) to 15% (Asda and Lyons), while  Aldi has 14%; the sugar content ranges from 24% (Sainsbury's and Lyons) to 27% (Tesco and Aldi). There's hardly anything in it.

Prices ranges from 69p for Aldi and Lidl, to £1.45 for Mr Kipling. The usual price was £1.00.

After several blind tastings it was Tesco which won as the most appealing and most tasty, though Lidl and Aldi were both very close behind, and on some tastings were top that day. The consistently low performers were Asda, Lyons, and Mr Kipling. 


Overall most appealing: Tesco
Overall most tasty: Tesco
Runners-up: Aldi and Lidl
Best value: Aldi and Lidl
Ones to avoid: Asda, Lyons, and Mr Kipling


Conclusion: There's really not a lot in it, but you can save money and have better tasting apple pies if you avoid the brand names and go for the supermarket own label (Rowan Hill is the own brand label for Lidl, and Holly Lane is the own brand label for Aldi). The budget supermarkets Lidl and Aldi have excellent quality apple pies at the lowest price, so we would say buy them with confidence. 


Date: March 2017 

Saturday, 19 March 2016

Lidl Morning Goods: Cheese Roll, Chocolate Twist, Pecan Plait, Pain Aux Raisins, Pain Au Chocolat, Apple Turnover





29p for a fresh and yummy cheese roll. Wow. The roll is the one at the far end of the dish. It was light and fluffy in side, with a pleasant cheesy crust and a good cheese flavour. Nice one. Excellent value for money.

Score: 7/10


The chocolate twist was 45p - that's the long narrow thing on the right. Good bits of chocolate inside, though I felt the pastry was a little greasy. Nice, but not awesome.

Score:  5/10

The pecan plait is on the left, opposite the chocolate twist. It's fatter and shorter than the twist. Same price, 45p. Nice taste, but like the twist, not overwhelmed, and again a little greasy.

Score:  5/10

The pain aux raisons was also 45p - that's the one at the front on the left, next to the pain au chocolate. A juicy and pleasant pastry. Good value for money.

6/10

The pain au chocolat was 39p and tasted authentically French. Excellent value for money.

Score: 7/10

The apple turnover is at the back, to the right of the upright cheese roll - it sort of looks like a cheese pasty. I was charged 39p, though I think that was a mistake, and it should have been more. It's OK. Not as flaky or as filled with apple as I would have liked, and lacking a bit in flavour, but OK, and if the price is 39p, it's cheap enough!

Score: 5/10




Lidl Morning Goods: All Butter Croissant









Baked on the premises so they are fresh (rather than the part-baked approach taken by Aldi which results in an old tasting product even when heated up in the oven) these are both tasty and cheap. The family enjoyed tucking into these for breakfast. I like my croissants, and the all butter croissant (in the middle of the dish) was very tasty.  It's not huge, but neither is it small - it's a decent size, and holds together well, only flaking slightly.  I used a Lidl jam on it and was very happy. It's rare to get a decent tasting croissant in the UK, and this does the job for me. Cheapest fresh croissant I can recall eating anywhere.


7/10



Lidl Hatherwood Gnarly Fox Lager





£1.25 for a 500ml bottle of 4.5% beer is decent value, and there's enough of the Kent weed (and American and Continental variations)  in this beer to lift this "lager" into decent drinking territory. Decent clean body - not thin at all, even though 4.5%, so I wonder just how lagered this beer actually is. There's enough residual sweetness to convince most people this is a standard blonde ale. Solid, pleasant, easy drinking and tasty beer. Impressed.



Score: 6/10