Fred Meyer Says Cheese Is Not A Dairy Product
Go shopping for cheese at the Ballard Fred Myer in Seattle, and you'll learn an interesting new fact about your food:
The check-er-outer lady looked at it a while and said (without the slightest trace of irony),
“I don’t think cheese is a dairy product.”
Oh. Um. Well. Yes. Um. WHAT?
“No, they don’t consider cheese a dairy product.”
With that newly created fact, the cashier refused to apply a store coupon for dairy products to a package of cheddar slices. When the columnist for The Stranger asked her who "they" are, she replied, "Fred Meyer Corporation."
The columnist and his coupon-wielding friend saved the coupon for another day and purchased the cheese at full price, but we have a feeling a lot of our readers would not have let Fred Meyer off so easily.
"Cheese: The Totally Other Food Group. Apparently. Maybe From Space!" [The Stranger] (Thanks to everyone who sent this in!)
(Photo of tomato plant: Aine D)
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Comments:
According to Wikipedia, even processed cheese food is made from dairy products with the delightful addition of "emulsifiers, extra salt, food colorings, and/or whey."
Props to Stinkbug in the original Slog thread:
"You should have used your iphone to show them that their main corporate office mentions cheese on the dairy page:
[recipes.kroger.com]"
When you slice cheese, the dairy escapes.
I must remember to use this one day soon. It may take some practice to be able to do it with a straight face, though.
@TomCruisesTesticles: And if I run into enough people who don't know cheese is dairy, I may add food scientist to my resume
@MeSoHornsby: Actually, cheese is pretty low in lactose. So is yogurt. Two hours in the bathroom for accidental ingestion of cheese, which I'm guessing would mean a small amount, is pretty severe. Also, cheese tends to have the opposite effect on people if you know what I mean.
@Trickery: 99.999 % of the problems reported here are not from policy, but from ignorant and poorly trained monkeys trying to follow policy. A stupid cashier thinking cheese is not a dairy product, and then not applying a coupon towards it, is no different than a service rep not giving a refund to a caller.
@mariospants: You mean like a cheddar cheese-food byproduct? Like Cheez Whiz Slices? That is definitely not dairy.
Like those meat-food sticks they try to pass for jerky.
Perhaps we are being too harsh?
The OP may have planned to make a Cheese Brassiere from the chedder slices, in which case we are not talking a dairy product, but a stylish garment.
What might a Cheese Brassiere look like? [images.google.com]
@DashTheHand: Don't you worry about wikipedia! We'll change it when we get home; we'll change a LOT of things.
@DashTheHand: If you read the linked article, you'll notice the previous poster was likely referring to the referenced US court case that *legally* defined the tomato as a vegetable in the US.
I can't stop laughing at people who instantly dismiss information based on the source without bothering to read it first. Oh wait, yeah I can.
Well at least it was delicious dairy medium cheddar cheese. Had they been attempting to use the coupon for a pack of processed "cheese food" slices I'd say it's not dairy either. That's the stuff I feed to me cheese. And THEY wont even eat it!
If this moron cashier can declare dairy isn't dairy, I can declare her not human and there's nothing to stop me from shooting her.
@johnfrombrooklyn: It's a vegetable for tax purposes. But all its friends call it a fruit. Really, it's like how some people call me sir and some people call me bro. All about context.
SkokieGuy: Where is my cheese? Someone moved my cheese!
Oh God, not that stupid book again. :)
Our CEO mentioned that book to us like it was some kind of gospel, and when I read it I realized that he was just trying to tell us "Oh, by the way, there are going to be some huge changes here and you're probably not going to like them, but deal with it or find another job. "
Not that the book wasn't poignant, but man, did I ever feel like I was being talked down to. I can summarize everything that was said in "Who Moved My Cheese?" in one simple phrase:
Shit happens.
Giving everyone the benefit of the doubt, I think two different definitions of "dairy product" might be at work here. The most common definition is a food product that fits in the dairy food group. This is what the shopper had in mind and probably what most people think of when they hear the term "dairy product." Alternatively, "dairy product" could mean a product that is sold in the dairy section of the store. Perhaps this is the definition the store was going by, and the cheese in question was excluded--some supermarkets sell cheese in their deli section, for instance, in addition to the dairy section.
@Inglix_the_Mad: I could see a lot more than shock from them, Velveeta is practically a swear up there.
@Trickery:
So, you're saying they were right not to accept the coupon because the cashier was "stupid?"






























And in other breaking news a stocker at a Piggly Wiggly claimed that a tomato is not a vegetable, it's a fruit.