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02-29-2016 01:33 PM
Aol story:
The plaintiff, Marc Moschetta, claims he was induced to purchase Great Value's "100% Grated Parmesan Cheese" at a premium price because he believed it was, indeed, 100 percent cheese. But it contains 7 to 10 percent cellulose -- a filler and anti-clumping agent derived from wood chips -- according to a complaint filed last week, which accuses the retail brand of deceptive business practices.
The lawsuit seeks a jury trial and alleges "material misrepresentations" under New York law and laws in 42 other states. The 8-ounce cheese costs $2.98 on Walmart.com.
"We know earning customer trust starts with high standards for the products we carry," Wal-Mart spokesman Randy Hargrove told CNBC. "We take this matter seriously. We will review the allegations once we have received the complaint and will respond appropriately with the court."
The case has not yet been granted class action certification, but attorney Jason Sultzer said others have expressed interest in joining the case against Wal-Mart.
"The case isn't about consumers getting sick," Sultzer said. "Regardless of the price of the product, people are still buying the product based on the label, and families are being put off. Imagine giving that to your kid with their pasta .... We're very confident that the case is going to move forward, based on the allegations in the complaint."
02-29-2016 01:52 PM
I saw the headlines last week, but didn't read the stories.
Was the wood pulp only Walmart or lots of brands of the grated cheese?
I actually think until these things hit the headlines, most people have no idea what they're buying. Why else would there be so much CHEESE FOOD sold in every supermarket when it's not really all cheese?
I know when I see the labels what I'm buying, but truthfully, when I have cheese served to me out of my own home, I have no idea whether I'm being given cheese food or real cheese!
02-29-2016 01:54 PM - edited 02-29-2016 01:56 PM
He won't win this. Cellulose is in all products of this type. Cellulose is just the plant structure in plant cells, any plant. He won't be able to prove the wood issue. This story has been circulating since the tread of scrutinizing everything on an ingredient label. Googling it pops up wood pulp first, but keep looking. It is in all plants and ends up in all products including OTC fiber.
02-29-2016 02:13 PM
Whether it is actually wood pulp or plant stalks, it should not be in parmesan cheese, unless it is clearly stated so the consumer knows it is there. Is it the powdered stuff rather than the grated kind? I have not read the article, but will do so.
02-29-2016 02:18 PM
There was an article in the newspaper last week about this. It featured six brands that have this ingredient. I imagine most do. I don't think this fellow will win his case.
02-29-2016 02:22 PM
02-29-2016 02:23 PM
02-29-2016 02:27 PM
While I'm not sure what all additives are acceptable, per se, I know that there are always additives to shredded cheese. I haven't purchased shredded cheese for as long as I can remember for this reason. Even with arthritis it's not that hard to grate some cheese. If it's problematic, then one can just run it through the food processor instead.
It wouldn't surprise me if Walmart got caught doing something unseemly. I remember when they got busted for putting chemicals/coloring in old meat to make it look 'pink' again and changing out the expired dates. IIRC, they got busted for this TWICE. I guess they figured the heat was off after the first time - or something.
02-29-2016 02:37 PM
02-29-2016 02:40 PM
@cotto22 wrote:Whether it is actually wood pulp or plant stalks, it should not be in parmesan cheese, unless it is clearly stated so the consumer knows it is there. Is it the powdered stuff rather than the grated kind? I have not read the article, but will do so.
I agree. If i pay for cheese I expect cheese and the thing is walmart brands is usually repacked name brand so I am sure it is in other cheeses we eat as well
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