I wish other grocery stores with their own brands start doing this!

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.caOP
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    7 days ago

    No, they definitely contain some imported product per the company’s own definition.

    Their definition says: “Prepared in Canada are products that have been entirely prepared in Canada from domestic and imported ingredients, or imported ingredients only.”

    They aren’t importing the product, only ingredients. And the percent of imported ingredients could be a very small amount of the final product.

    As a quick example from one of the items at the top of their list “Farm Boy™ Original Taralli” contains “Enriched Wheat Flour • Water • Canola Oil” and is listed as “prepared in Canada”. It’s possible that the wheat and canola oil are imported, but both wheat and canola oil are easily available in Canada, so it could very well be a product that’s 90% made from Canadian ingredients. Even if all the ingredients were imported, the final product was made (i.e. prepared) here.

    Yes, it sucks that they can’t just use a Made in Canada for those items, but I’ll defer to my possible explanation in my previous reply.

    My only concern is making sure consumers see this labeling for what it is: trying to glom onto the pro-Canadian bandwagon without meeting the only legally protected standards for labeling Canadian foods there are. Your decision as to what is worth supporting is your own, but you may think you’re supporting a team of x number of employees when in actuality one guy slapping the sticker on the box itself meets their definition of ‘prepared in Canada’. Meanwhile actual Products of Canada or Made in Canada foods are potentially losing out on your support.

    I do agree, and there is cause for concern when you have labels being misused or misinterpreted.

    Public education and further standards are needed. It’s pretty impressive how far we’ve already come in the last month, so I’m sure things will get better as the industry adapts.

    My preference is still to seek out Products of Canada from Canadian brands. And as long as American ingredients and products are kept off my shopping list, I’ll still be happy to support “Prepared in Canada using imported ingredients” when they are the only option.

    • Cephalotrocity@biglemmowski.win
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      7 days ago

      They aren’t importing the product, only ingredients

      That’s what I meant. An American product, like say concentrated orange juice, gets used as an ingredient, in say bottled orange juice. I’ll edit to avoid other reader’s confusion.

      Public education and further standards are needed. It’s pretty impressive how far we’ve already come in the last month, so I’m sure things will get better as the industry adapts.

      So much this.