Firm fined after dead mouse found in loaf of bread

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A food production company was ordered to pay nearly £17,000 after a man found a dead mouse in a loaf of bread as he made sandwiches for his children.

Stephen Forse, of Kidlington, Oxfordshire, had already used some slices when he came across the mouse.

Mr Forse purchased the loaf online, through a Tesco branch in Bicester in January 2009.

Premier Foods was fined £5,500 and ordered to pay £11,109.47 in costs at Oxford Crown Court.

"Initially I thought it was where the dough had not mixed properly prior to baking. As I looked closer I saw that the object had fur on it”

Stephen Forse

In July, the company, which makes Hovis bread, Branston pickle and Bisto gravy, admitted to having failed to maintain acceptable standards at its British Bakeries site in London.

Mr Forse said he had already used some of the bread when he noticed "a dark-coloured object embedded in the corner of three or four slices".

"Initially I thought it was where the dough had not mixed properly prior to baking," he said.

"As I looked closer I saw that the object had fur on it."

Mr Forse said he continued to prepare some sandwiches for his children and their friends from another loaf of bread.

"I checked carefully each slice in turn as I felt quite shaken," he added.

"As I was feeling ill I couldn't face eating anything myself. I sat with the children as they ate theirs."
Tail missing

Mr Forse contacted Cherwell District Council and environmental health officers visited the family's home to collect evidence.

During the visit one of them identified it as a mouse minus its tail.

"Her comments made me feel ill once again as there was no indication as to where the tail was," added Mr Forse.

"Had it fallen off prior to the bread being wrapped or had any of my family eaten it with another slice of bread on a previous day?"

Stephen Forse describes finding the dead mouse in his loaf of bread

A spokesman for Premier Foods said: "We apologise profusely for the distress caused as a result of this isolated incident.

"As soon as this complaint was made we stopped all bakery production at that site and appointed an independent specialist contractor to conduct a thorough investigation.

"They confirmed this to be an isolated incident, affecting a single product.

"There was no evidence of mice within the bakery and no history of any similar issues."

The spokesman added that the council had agreed "the bakery was a well-managed site and that Premier Foods took its obligations for health and hygiene seriously".

BBC News - Firm fined after dead mouse found in loaf of bread
 
LOL he couldn't eat it himself because he felt ill, but sat and watched as his children EAT it!!! WTF!
 
You wonder though, did he put the mouse in the bread himself just to get a few bob? I mean, no evidence of mice in the factory anywhere and nothing like this ever happened before? You don't just get one mouse on its own.

Sorry, i'm a bit cynical lol
 
You wonder though, did he put the mouse in the bread himself just to get a few bob? I mean, no evidence of mice in the factory anywhere and nothing like this ever happened before? You don't just get one mouse on its own.

Sorry, i'm a bit cynical lol

More like some employee dropped it in the doough for a laugh.

I used to work at a frozen vedge factory years a go and i would be on the lorry feeding the conveyer with the bean harvest. Sometimes you would find a pheasent or a frog in the beans..dead ofc.

So one day i dropped the pheseant onto the processing line for a laugh you should have heard the guy scream at the other end when it dropped on to the conveyer belt LMAO.
 
LOL he couldn't eat it himself because he felt ill, but sat and watched as his children EAT it!!! WTF!

thats what i thought when i read that line

_49267251_mouse_003__2_.jpg
 
LOL he couldn't eat it himself because he felt ill, but sat and watched as his children EAT it!!! WTF!

straight to the top of the good parenting list.
 
It's not the mice they find you have to worry about.

All mice have bladder problems and can't stop peeing everywhere they go. So as they crawl about the tins and surfaces at nite they leave their pee everywhere.

The tins that are to be used for baking the bread are washed before production and stacked up over night, well at least they were are Rathbones in Wigan (now owned by Morrisons). The mice then proceed to do their stuff and then tins are then used for baking with.

The same thin happens to cans of pop in pubs, supermarkets and warehouses. Which is why I always wipe the top of a can before opening it.

There was a story last year about a firm making malt loaf in Antrim.

_45896170_mouse.jpg
 
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