General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAt WalMart, food safety is their #1 priority. Ha ha ha ha ha! GOT you, sucker. Enjoy your beef.
I just went to the customer service area in WalMart and spied one of those shopping carts full of stuff that needs to go back on the shelves. In this one you can see what looks like a 2 pound "chub" of ground beef, plus a package of stew beef. When I moved up in the line I also saw a package of hot dogs. It is 101 degrees here right now and that meat is sitting in a shopping cart at room temperature.
hatrack
(59,592 posts)Wal-Mart - where the customer is always
Shampoobra
(423 posts)(For the record, I hate Walmart. This is not meant to sound like "everyone does it," like I'm defending Walmart. I'm not.)
When a freezer breaks in a grocery store, the contents melt. When the freezer is fixed, the contents re-freeze. If the freezer needs to be replaced, all that food can sit at room temperature for two days or more. Eventually, the problem gets fixed, and the inventory is re-frozen, and the customer has no reason to suspect anything. (After all, the "sell by" date is the only information at the customer's disposal.)
A call to the county health department is pointless. Since it's not a restaurant, the caller is told to contact corporate and explain his concerns to them.
Food is often (meaning, almost daily) purchased from anonymous sellers at the back loading dock, at prices far below wholesale. No one wants to know where it was stolen from, or how it has been handled in the time since it was stolen to the day it was purchased by the store.
Shoplifters are sometimes dragged behind the store's trash compactor and given a choice: take a severe beating from four or five shelf stockers, then be allowed to go free; or skip the beating, and let the police get involved. The shoplifter will usually choose the beating.
Working at a corporate grocery store is like working for criminals. On second thought, they're not like criminals, they're literally criminals.
A lot of people seem to think that because food is involved, the grocery industry is clean. The reality is, the industry attracts sociopaths because no sane person can continue working in such a place for very long.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)... any and all chilled and frozen foods following a freezer outage. So they're not all alike.
Agschmid
(28,749 posts)NightWatcher
(39,343 posts)And by rarely, I mean it never happened.
I did see the movie Casino where they did something like that.
MineralMan
(146,325 posts)I've never seen any of those practices at any chain supermarket. Document your claims, please, with examples.
Shampoobra
(423 posts)To do so here in the forum would be to give out personal details that I don't want made public. (It's for the same reason that my DU profile states "Puget Sound region" instead of the precise city I live in.) I've read enough of your posts that I feel I can trust you with these personal details.
As to what I've revealed so far: I wouldn't have believed it before I worked there, and I'm sure the reason it happens is because no one believes it could happen.
uppityperson
(115,678 posts)Shampoobra
(423 posts)Wikipedia redirected my search for "Top Foods" to "Haggen Food & Pharmacy" and I see that it's listed as an "independent grocery retailer" with 30 stores. I don't know if being "independent" means it's not corporate, so if I misidentified the nature of this chain, I apologize.
But there's so much more that happened in that chain than I even went into with my above post. All I set out to do last night was write about the constant food spoilage I witnessed firsthand, but I kept remembering more and more of the illegal things they did (and expected employees to do) while I was there.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)I would say that you have never worked at a corporate or chain grocery store.
elias49
(4,259 posts)beat up by shelf stockers? Come on...what is this? 19th century?
frankieallen
(583 posts)HAHAHAHAHA !!!!!!!
MineralMan
(146,325 posts)"Hey, buddy, I've got some steaks in the trunk. I'll give you a great price on 'em."
"Sure...back up to the dock, then."
pinboy3niner
(53,339 posts)MineralMan
(146,325 posts)at Tinos Italian Grocery in Santa Barbara back in the 60s. What a place that was! Sausages hanging from hooks. I used to go there for lunch about three times a week. "Make me something special!" I don't even know the names of some of the sausages I got on my sandwich, along with marinated roasted peppers, a variety of cheeses, all on a crusty Italian roll laced with olive oil and garlic.
I looked up the place, and it's now closed and gone, after the owner died. A pity.
I've never found anything like it since, and I try in every city I visit. It was a special place in my life.
Ikonoklast
(23,973 posts)How dare you.
Brasi was Siciliano.
uppityperson
(115,678 posts)TBF
(32,086 posts)bluesbassman
(19,379 posts)Except they also let the baggers, floral department staff, and pharmacy techs get in on the action. Fortunately I had my cellphone on me and video recorded the entire incident and sued the shit out of those lousy bastards and now own my own grocery store where we have a strict non-beating policy for shoplifters. We just make them sit in a corner and read People magazine.
iwillalwayswonderwhy
(2,603 posts)That does not happen where I live.
upaloopa
(11,417 posts)None of that ever happened in any store I worked at. I doubt you ever worked in a grocery store
sabbat hunter
(6,834 posts)and never was someone given the choice of "getting severe beating by for or five shelf stockers or calling the police" or "selling food after it has melted and re-frozen" When we had freezers break down, if the product was melted, it was disposed of, the store got credit from the middleman. Or it was moved to other freezers that were working before it melted.
If we had perishable items that were not sold, they were immediately brought back and restocked on the shelves.
bunnies
(15,859 posts)If the coolers are down for more than a half hour, the doors are sealed, shelves covered in plastic and no one is allowed to open the cover or purchase the product. If the outage continues for 2 hours all perishables gets tossed in the garbage. This goes for any respectable grocery store. Even cream cheese found in the bread isle is thrown away due to not knowing how long its been out. Further... every single dumpster is completely sealed. And absolutely NOTHING is sold off the back dock.
As a vendor, I worked in almost every large chain in the northeast. Wherever the hell you worked is certainly not the norm. 'Round here, that place would be shut down in under a minute.
KurtNYC
(14,549 posts)We don't know how long it has been there. We don't know whether they reshelved it.
There are two main ways that meat spoils -- 1) growth of bacteria and 2) fat goes rancid. Wrapped ground beef is not going to have any significant bacteria growth because it has been processed with ammonia and all kinds of killer chemicals.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/04/us-food-ammonia-idUSBRE8331B420120404
For the fat in ground beef to go rancid it needs air.
USDA recommends no more than 2 hours at room temp and that is extremely conservative for wrapped beef that has had every living thing on it killed by two or more methods.
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)...I'm extremely paranoid about food safety. Meat sitting at room temperature for any period of time, unattended, is cause for concern on my part.
I would HOPE that by the time the WalMart employee grabbed that cart, the meat would have been tossed. There's nothing on the cart to indicate how long any of the items have been sitting there.
And while it was 101 here yesterday and the A/C was on in Walmart, you couldn't feel it in the Customer Service area, where this cart was sitting.
I understand everything you've posted here, but only on an intellectual level. If that meat sat around and got re-shelved (and yes, we have no idea if it did or not), there is nothing that would make me feel good about buying it, safe or not.
KurtNYC
(14,549 posts)Had to attend courses on the "sex life of pathogens" and take written tests. I have cooked over 100,000 hamburgers and have never, to my knowledge, served product that has made someone sick.
I understand concern about food safety because I have been sick on restaurant food.
At the risk of making your concerns worse I will add: hamburger is the oldest beef in most supermarkets. They take steaks that were thawed and that didn't sell within 2 days and they grind them all together, grade them by fat content and put them back out in fresh packages. Same for boneless skinless chicken -- because the fat (skin) on chicken is the first thing to spoil, they strip it off and rewrap the chicken several times -- while then quartered then skinless, then boneless & skinless -- marking the price per pound up each time.
If you want the freshest meats you should buy whole chicken (or on the bone) and grind your own single-source hamburger from chuck or round.
Hassin Bin Sober
(26,335 posts)What do you think about eating a piece of cooked cheese and sausage pizza that sat out over night?
We ordered pizza the other day and I forgot to put leftovers away. I ate a couple pieces the next day and the boyfriend had a conniption.
The boyfriend is the type who freaks out and throws away food on the sell by date and throws away OTC medicine on the use by date.
Me? I was raised by wolves.
KurtNYC
(14,549 posts)The same spoilage methods would apply -- growth of pathogens and fat going rancid. Once meat is cooked the original pathogens are dead so in a home you would only have the pathogens that already live there (the ones on you, your counter top, etc) and a quick nuke will kill those. Most of us can tolerate a fair amount of pathogens and the ultimate proof of whether it is safe to eat or not is whether it made you sick. The smell (has to be thawed or cooked) and the first bite are your best line of defense against eating spoiled foods.
"Best before" dates are just a guess, usually conservative, of when the product will begin to show signs of age, not necessarily when it will go bad. I have seen it on bottled water !? Ironically for this thread, it was WALMART that got all the processors to put "best before" on their packages in readily readable format. They used to do it in a simple code. Theories are that Walmart wanted to hurt other grocery chains and leverage their ability to move product before it hits those dates when smaller stores may not be as able to do so.
Medicine is different because some will lose effectiveness and others may do something worse.
I love day-old pizza.
laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)where they tested all kinds of foods that had sat out for extended periods of time. Basically, cooked pizza didn't have significant bacterial counts after more than a day. After seeing that program, when our family used to go on trips, we would order a large order of pizza at night, and then the next morning we had a ready-made breakfast in the hotel for the kids (these were in the days before hotels served breakfasts regularly). Never once did I, my ex, or the kids get sick. I'm a big freak about food safety too....I've started to relax on some things though after seeing that program (it was some consumer program here in Canada that does a lot of investigative journalism about consumer issues, they also tested the validity of sell by dates).
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)...I'd learned them a while back but I am grateful to have them posted in this discussion.
The chicken thing, yeah...I hardly buy it any more but I always buy skin-on, bone-in chicken breasts. I do buy whole chickens occasionally but never, never, NEVER buy ANY kind of "boneless skinless chicken breast" products.
I am fortunate to own a Kitchen Aid mixer with the meat grinder attachment. I always buy chuck and grind it myself. I've heard some people say that mixing it with boneless short ribs results in a more flavorful end result, but the majority of times I buy it is when I am making meatballs or meatloaf, and I'm perfectly happy with straight chuck in both.
bunnies
(15,859 posts)ground meat has the most bacteria due to having the most surface area. Why people buy that shit is beyond me.
Ikonoklast
(23,973 posts)It gets marked down, and is doesn't sell, gets written off as a loss.
Ground beef is no longer all the unsold beef ground up due to the risks of one contaminated piece of meat ruining an entire run of grinds, and exposing the chain to massive liability.
It is purchased in bulk according to graded fat/lean ratio then run through a grinder and re-packaged.
HAACP ceritified, 25 years in the meat business.
panader0
(25,816 posts)NM_Birder
(1,591 posts)from the store to your home in 101 degree heat ?
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)101 peak heat happens around 3 PM. Mornings are usually in the high 70s to mid 80s on those days. I head straight home...I am about 3 miles away.
elias49
(4,259 posts)Ridiculous.
dballance
(5,756 posts)However, the policy of the store in which I worked was that food never, ever went back on the shelf if it was returned. It was always tossed. Perhaps this food is just waiting to be tossed.
My experience working in the sporting goods/auto section of the WalMart was one of the most horrible experiences I've ever had. It is a horrible, horrible company. During orientation they made it clear that there were hundreds of cameras watching our every move and that any time we could be called into the office if someone monitoring the cameras saw something, anything that needed to be explained.
During in-store training I was reminded by other "associates" that the cameras were always watching us. To always be busy. On break people would buy a soda or food and they'd tape the receipt to it to ensure they could prove they didn't steal it. Such was the environment at WalMart. "You're a fucking guilty slacker unless you can prove otherwise."
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)Your third paragraph:
Been there, seen that, done that...to the letter. It's not just WalMart. And the BEST part was that when I taped the receipt to my drink the woman training me ALWAYS yelled "YOU DON'T NEED TO USE THAT MUCH TAPE!!!" (The guy who owns the 4 markets in this little toilet of a desert town pulls down $3.2 MILLION a year, according to Dun & Bradstreet).
bunnies
(15,859 posts)It goes back to the department for disposal. You cant just toss meat in the customer service trash. Just sayin.
maced666
(771 posts)Then this pic proves nothing.
Scene one might see in any grocery store.
Miles Archer
(18,837 posts)Didn't see it put back on the shelf.
Didn't see them dispose of it.
Saw it sitting in that cart in the customer service area and without knowing what they intended to do with it, got concerned.
That's it.