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Ops see what I started by just mentioning PRINTERS at Lidl…!
Whatever I have ever tried from Lidl is of the lowest possible quality...
Have you tried their Blackcurrant Jam? Delicious.
Probably because Lidl is somewhat better, Maybe…Interesting, in the price comparison they omit Lidl.
Here's another fallacy: things being made in the same factory are necessarily the same. They may very well not be the same, even if they use the same ingredients. Sometimes I hear people complain about this or that being made in China or even the same factory. A supplier factory has the processes to provide the same product in many different qualities and with very different quality assurance. It depends on the customer.
Getting this out of the way, I hardly see why I should be brand conscious about the inks of my printer but not the things that touch my palate. Whatever I have ever tried from Lidl is of the lowest possible quality... Let alone the dubious management and terrible working conditions. On the other hand you're right that it might not be that different from other discount retailers, which I rarely use anyway.
Probably because Lidl is somewhat better, Maybe…
In the USA, the above are not the only situations with food manufacturers. Brand name overruns may be sold to or distributed by other brands, whether they are subsidiaries or 3rd parties I cannot say. Additionally, even though the same plant is used to make the food, a non-brand name may use same or similar ingredients but must have some significant difference in ingredients or quantitative mixture or else risk litigation, ie it cannot be the same.You are mistaken. Food WHICH IS WHAT YOU TALKED ABOUT is made up of various ingredients, and i can assure you as an example the flour used to bake a branded loaf in certain factories will be the exact same as what is going in the non branded loaf. The same workers will chuck the ingredients into the same large scale mixing device, there is no difference, costs are different based on other factors a couple of examples being...
1) Packaging both who packages the food and what quality the package is. Your posh loaf may come in a nice foil wrapped bag with multiple pretty design pictures, where as your own brand cheap loaf will be in a common clear plastic bag with basic print.
2) Cooking method. The posh loaf may be baked longer for example to give a crustier crust compared to the cheaper loaf. Costs are thus saved in time to manufacture and the cost (IE energy used to cook the loaf).
This makes no difference to what you end up putting in your mouth. THE FOOD (IE the important bit) came from the same place. Its the same ingredients.