Austrian Times RSS FeedsLike the Austrian Times Facebook page!Follow us on Twitter!


Events for May
M T W T F S S
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3
Add your event FREE

Today

Polls

  • What would make you go to a restaurant?
  • show result

    all polls


Club Med


Food giants Heinz have been accused of fobbing off Austrian and German customers by selling half-baked tins of beans.

Heinz face anger over 58th variety

By William Green

Food giants Heinz have been accused of fobbing off Austrian and German customers by selling half-baked tins of beans.

Angry fans claim the tins contain fewer beans than British cans and are served in a thin, watery sauce.

Now a scientific taste test has proved that beanz meanz a rip off - and the firm that boasts 57 varieties is now struggling to explain what it meant with its 58th variety.

Baked beans meant for the British market have had a cult following in Europe for decades so Heinz began to produce "Gebackene Bohnen" for the German language market.

But tests carried out by the Austrian Times with 20 beans fans show the local tins have less beans than the UK version served in a sauce with less tomatoes.

Editor David Rogers said: "The readers were correct. We did a poll which found that many people felt the Austrian Heinz baked beans were substandard and when we tested them we had to agree.

"Our testers reported that the Austrian baked beans were a pale copy of the English original."

British student Susana Vega - one of the 20 strong taste test team - said: "If you shake the tins the contents of the Austrian tin sloshes around which it doesn't with the British tin.

"The sauce when you pour it out is a lot more watery and it's a much paler, watery looking colour than the thick tomato colour of the British beans."

Another taster Kathryn Quinn, 25, from Cumbria that now lives in Vienna said: "I lived off beans at University in Birmingham but the beans here taste horrible. It's a shame as they were cheap and good for you. It's just as well I can afford something better from the local cooking here."

According to the Heinz labels the British tin is more than half full with beans - while the Austrian version contains less than half.

And the British beans have five per cent more tomato in their sauce than the Austrians who have more water, sugar and salt instead.

British supermarket owner Johnny Szewczuk said: "When the local supermarket chains started selling these other Heinz baked beans we assumed that there wouldn't be much demand for the genuine British beans which we sell.

"But they have now become our best-selling item because many more people are aware of the product and the word has got out that British Heinz baked beans are far superior.

"Otherwise people wouldn't be coming here and paying more for imported Heinz baked beans. Some people come and take away whole boxes at a time."

Customer Hannes Bauer. 32, said: "My kids don't like the Gebackene Bohnen - it's Baked beans for us every time even if it costs a few cents more. The British ones don't run over the whole plate - they stay where you put them - and they taste better. My kids and I agree."

Austrian Times


Are you on Facebook? Like the Austrian Times on Facebook and win great prizes!


Write your comment to this article here

  • Robin Sharp wrote on 28. 09. 2009 from Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, UK about "Heinz face anger over 58t..."

    I was surprised to read about Heinz's cheap trick, as far as Austrian baked bean fans is concerned, in a recent edition of the London 'Metro' newspaper, following a report in the Austrian Times. I have been a recreational collector of baked bean labels for more than 25 years and I have a Heinz Baked Bean label in German in my collection, gathered some years back. This was obviously produced for the German (Austrian?) market, but on closer inspection of the label, I see that the beans were produced in Holland. So, I'm wondering which recipe Heinz used for the Dutch~German palate at that time? Robin Sharp (aka 'Mr Bean' - and, according to BBC Look East, An Authority on Baked Bean Labels') See http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article2330487.ece PS I don't suppose someone could let me have a label from an Austrian Heinz tin, to add to my collection?? Thanks!

    Reply



Related articles: quirky Austria

  1. Anti-truancy official for Vienna

    » General News 2012-03-23

    Horst Tschaikner has been named head of Vienna’s new anti-truancy office.

  2. Dog days for clumsy Arnautovic

    » Sports 2012-03-09

    Werder Bremen star Marko Arnautovic will be sidelined for more than a month after injuring his knee while playing with his dog.

  3. Unanimous praise for State Opera Ball

    » Panorama 2012-02-17

    Political leaders and showbiz stars had only kind words about last night’s (Thurs) Opera Ball.

more related articles tagged "quirky Austria"

Related articles: Austria & America

  1. Brodbeck criticises credit rating 'hysteria'

    » Business 2012-05-01

    A German economist has warned from "dangerous monopoly circumstances" in the global rating business.

  2. S&P concerned about banks' stability in serious crisis

    » Business 2012-04-20

    Standard & Poor's (S&P) analyst Alois Strasser has warned that a crisis worse than the most recent one could “totally demolish” Austrian finance institutes’ capital.

  3. Fitch approves Austria's financial trustworthiness

    » Business 2012-04-18

    One of the world’s leading credit rating agencies has confirmed the Austrian AAA.

more related articles tagged "Austria & America"


Tag cloud:
Bohnen  tins  supermarket  served  colour  customers  baked  kids  sauce  58th  British  Austrian  German  wouldn  variety  Gebackene  tomatoes  Baked  beans  fans


Latest News

 

Turks flattened by lone asylum seeker
A furious Nigerian went on the rampage at a refuge for asylum seekers in Leibnitz, attacking several people and damaging property.

Woman bites toddler
A woman who bit a two-year-old tot during a road rage row with her mother is being quizzed by police in Wiener Neustadt, Austria.

New Dany Boon comedy to be filmed in Austria
The French film star Dany Boon, one of the highest paid actors in Europe after his hit film "Welcome to the Sticks", is filming in Salzburg.

China meets Hallstatt
After a long time of speculation and anticipation the exact copy of Austrian world heritage village of Hallstatt-Dachstein in China will be unveiled, and there will be real-life Austrians present for the ceremony.

Skier in court after accident
A man from Graz is in court today accused of having inflicted negligent injury upon a five-year-old when skiing in Carinthia last year.

Two fires in Ottakring claim one life
Two fires started on Thursday evening in the Vienna district of Ottakring, one of which claimed a man’s life. Several people were evacuated as a result of the two blazes.

Cows zapped to death by lightning
Four cows were zapped to death after a lightning strike hit the barbed wire fence they were leaning on in Reith im Alpbachtal, Austria.

Wolf babies born in Schönbrunn
These cuddly Artic wolf cubs have got every right to look a bit frosty - after they emerged into the world for the first time in the middle of a 27 degree heatwave.

Cleaned Out
A Hungarian cleaning woman who stole tens of thousands of pounds worth of antique jewellery from an Austrian Countess and then sold it for "pocket money" unaware of its real value has been jailed by a court in Austria.

Great expectations for summer tourism season in Vorarlberg
The Vorarlberg tourism industry is currently riding high after a record breaking winter season, and the summer season is expected to follow that same trend.

 


Austrian Times Rieder´s Digests


music-school

Popular in Austria

The most popular stories –
last 7 days


Friends and Partners




CruiseDirect - Cruise Price Guarantee - Book Now