logo
Pieminister pies recalled by Food Standards Agency over date error

Pieminister pies recalled by Food Standards Agency over date error

BBC News7 days ago

A range of pies has been recalled after being labelled with the wrong use-by date.The Food Standards Agency (FSA) said the pies, made by Bristol-based Pieminister Kitchens, were incorrectly labelled with a use-by date of 24 June 2026, rather than 2025.Pieminister's steak and ale, steak and stilton, venison, chicken and mushroom, and jackfruit pies are among the 10 products affected. The FSA has said the pies are "completely safe to eat" until 24 June this year, but customers can return the recalled pies to the store they bought them from for a refund.
Pieminister apologised for the error, adding: "We are working closely with our technical teams and have implemented additional measures to prevent similar issues from occurring in the future."The pies affected are:Pieminister Moo - British beef steak and craft ale piePieminister Moo and Blue - British beef steak and stilton piePieminister Kate & Sidney - British beef steak, kidney and craft ale piePieminister Deer & Beer - venison, milk stout, mushroom and thyme piePieminister Free Ranger - free range British chicken and ham pie with leekPieminister Fungi Chicken - free range British chicken, portobello and chestnut mushroomPieminister Wild Shroom - portobello and chestnut mushroom pie with asparagus and white winePieminister Mooless Moo - jackfruit 'steak', craft ale and black pepper piePieminister - goat's cheese and sweet potato filo pie with red onion and spinachPieminister - spinach and feta filo pie with kale, lemon and dill

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK backs advanced manufacturing, clean energy in ten-year industrial plan
UK backs advanced manufacturing, clean energy in ten-year industrial plan

Reuters

time9 minutes ago

  • Reuters

UK backs advanced manufacturing, clean energy in ten-year industrial plan

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - Britain aims to cut the electricity bills of thousands of companies from 2027, the key reform in its industrial strategy for the next decade, which it published on Monday, opens new tab. The main parts of its plan are below. Investment of up to 2.8 billion pounds ($3.76 billion) in R&D programmes over the next five years to spur innovation, automation, digitisation and commercialisation. Britain is targeting at least a doubling of current investment levels across the clean energy industries to over 30 billion pounds per year by 2035. Establish a 150 million pound growth fund and financial support for screen, music, and video games. Make Britain one of the world's top three life sciences economies through reforms and investment, including up to 600 million pounds for a Health Data Research Service to create an advanced, secure, and AI ready health data platform. The government said it was including the sector in a national industrial plan for the first time as it seeks to build on the UK's strengths in areas such as accountancy, legal services and management consultancy. It said it would help fund the adoption of artificial intelligence, negotiate with other governments for mutual recognition of professional qualifications to boost exports and launch five new professional business services hubs in England and Scotland. Britain wants to become one of the top three places in the world for developing technology businesses, promising reforms to boost R&D and skills, improve regulation and collaborate more closely with the private sector and other nations. It said it would prioritise frontier technologies such as advanced connectivity, artificial intelligence, cyber security, engineering biology, quantum technologies and semiconductors. Britain said it planned to cooperate more with the European Union on energy and carbon pricing to remove red-tape, making it easier for business to trade and enabling investment in projects in the North Sea. "We will both explore the UK's participation in the EU's internal electricity market and continue technical regulatory exchanges on new energy technologies," the strategy said. ($1 = 0.7437 pounds)

US billionaire John Textor sells stake in bid save Crystal Palace's European status
US billionaire John Textor sells stake in bid save Crystal Palace's European status

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

US billionaire John Textor sells stake in bid save Crystal Palace's European status

John Textor has sold his stake in Crystal Palace in a bid to meet Uefa 's rules and ensure the club's participation in the Europa League next season. The US billionaire has sold his 42.9 per cent stake to controversial tycoon Woody Johnson for around £200m, subject to approval from the Premier League. This should clear the path for Palace to keep their place in Europe next term, satisfying Uefa that the FA Cup winners are not in breach of multi-club ownership rules. The Independent understands that an official verdict from the European football governing body is expected in the coming days. The Eagles' first voyage into continental football was under threat due to Textor's position at the club, due to the fact he also owns a 77 per cent stake in Ligue 1 outfit Lyon - who akin to Palace are competing in next season's Europa League. To prevent collusion, Uefa does not allow multiple clubs under the same owner to compete in one of its competitions, and in the case that two teams under a multi-club model qualify for the same tournament, the side that achieved the better finish in its domestic season gets priority. Lyon finished sixth last term and qualified via their league position, while Palace finished 12th. Palace's failure to adapt their shareholdings structure prior to the Uefa deadline of March 1 meant they were in breach of competition guidelines and could have been expelled from the Europa League. Palace argued that their historic FA Cup triumph and subsequent Europa League qualification were achieved on their own merit rather than via the benefits of a multi-club system, and that the response to eject them from the competition would be disproportionate. They also refuted that they operate under such a multi-club model - something Nottingham Forest wrote to Uefa to express concerns about - with Textor previously holding just 25 per cent of the voting rights. It appears the club have now addressed the issue, with contentious New York Jets owner acquiring Textor's stake. The Jets faced scrutiny last year after reports of 'controversial and dysfunctional practices' under his watch. Textor's sale means the businessman is fully out of the Palace picture, losing all influence previously had at the club.

Nigel Farage's Robin Hood-style tax policy for non-doms that would benefit low-paid Scots
Nigel Farage's Robin Hood-style tax policy for non-doms that would benefit low-paid Scots

Scotsman

time13 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Nigel Farage's Robin Hood-style tax policy for non-doms that would benefit low-paid Scots

The proposals would see non-doms paying a one-off fee to avoid paying taxes in the UK. Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Nigel Farage is poised to announce a new Robin-Hood-style tax policy that would offer non-doms the chance to avoid paying taxes by paying a one-off fee. Under the proposals, non-doms would pay £250,000 and the revenue generated would go directly to the lowest-paid workers. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The party says the move would favour workers in Scotland where the base line pay is lowest and there is a larger share of low-paid jobs. Nigel Farage MP Non-domiciles are UK residents whose permanent home is abroad. If they pay this fee they would be given a Britannia card which would allow them to avoid paying tax on any wealth, income or capital gains earned overseas, and avoid paying inheritance tax. They would be allowed to renew their Britannia card every 10 years at no extra cost. Non-doms would still be charged tax on any UK-sourced income and gains. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mr Farage said all revenue generated from the payments would be transferred by HMRC directly to the bank accounts of the lowest-earning 10 per cent of full-time workers. This would be tax free and transferred within 90 days of the end of each financial year. It is estimated around 2.5 million workers across the UK whose full-time salary is less than £23,000 would be given around £600 if 6,000 non-doms paid for a Britannia card. This amount would change annually depending on how many non-doms take up the offer. Mr Farage said the policy would reverse the exodus of wealthy individuals. He points to a study by Oxford Economics, which found the non-doms it had surveyed had invested £8.4 billion in the UK, with each individual investing an average of £118m. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Reform UK leader said: 'We are going to encourage those that have left to come back. They are entrepreneurs, wealth creators and big spenders. We are going to repair the social contract.' Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and Deputy Leader Richard Tice at a press conference in Aberdeen last week (Picture:) This is the latest announcement from the party that bids to set out Reform's economic credentials, in the event it formed the next UK government. Chancellor Rachel Reeves is considering watering down Labour's plans to scrap the non-dom tax loophole amid concerns about the exodus. However, a spokesperson for the Labour Party said the Reform policy would be a "return to the chaos of Liz Truss'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The spokesperson said: 'Nigel Farage can brand this whatever he wants - the reality is his first proper policy is a golden ticket for foreign billionaires to avoid the tax they owe in this country. 'As ever with Reform, the devil is in the details.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store