logo
The best supermarket BBQ food revealed in blind taste test including burgers and bangers

The best supermarket BBQ food revealed in blind taste test including burgers and bangers

The Sun20-06-2025

THE best supermarket BBQ food has been revealed in a blind taste test.
1
A panel of experts blind-tasted more than 140 products submitted by 12 UK supermarkets across 16 categories.
All packaging is removed and the products are prepared by a home economist according to packet instructions.
This is to ensure the judging is fair and unbiased.
Bargain retailer Aldi won three awards, scooping best vegan sausages, BBQ meat hero, and best sharing bread.
Its Specially Selected Ultimate No-Pork Sausages, were crowned the best on the market and cost £2.49.
Lidl also came out on top after its antipasti platter, vegan burger, sausage rolls and quiche won were crowned the best in each category.
The German discounter and the Co-op both won four awards, the most compared to any other supermarket.
The member owned supermarket was a favourite for brioche buns, coleslaw and vegetarian picnic pastry.
Tesco was crowned the tastiest store to pick up sausages, with its Fire Pit 7 Jumbo Cheesy BBQ Pork trumping other contenders.
The UK's biggest supermarket and Sainsbury's were named joint winners for the best place to pick up burgers.
I have the easiest and safest way to clean your BBQ grill - after a few wipes, it will be ready to cook again
Meanwhile posh retailer Waitrose scooped the best award for hummus, while veggie burgers.
Lulu Grimes, managing editor of Good Food, said: 'It's fantastic to see so much variety and quality in this year's entries from all the supermarkets.
"The winning products really reflect the way people want to eat over the summer – with bold, punchy flavours and time-saving options, so you can spend more time outside enjoying the sunshine.'
Full list of taste test winners
Best Sausages
Tesco Fire Pit 7 Jumbo Cheesy BBQ Pork Sausages (£4.75/595g)
Best Vegan Sausages
Aldi Specially Selected Ultimate No-Pork Sausages (£2.49/270g)
Best Burger Buns
Co-op Irresistible Soft & Buttery Brioche Buns (£1.95/4 pack)
Best Burgers (Joint Winners)
Sainsbury's Taste The Difference Dry Aged Aberdeen Angus Burgers (£4.25/pack of 2)
Tesco Finest Wild Garlic Beef Burgers (£4.50/pack of 2)
Best Veggie Burgers
Waitrose Vegetarian Aubergine & Feta Burgers (£2.95/pack of 2)
Best Vegan Burgers
Lidl Vemondo Vegan Burgers (£1.89/250g)
Best Meat or Fish Kebab
Morrisons The Best Tandoori Chicken King Kebab
Best BBQ Hero for Entertaining (Meat or Fish)
Aldi Specially Selected Coronation Chicken King Kebab (£5.49)
Best BBQ Hero for Entertaining (Fish or Seafood)
Tesco Fire Pit Mango Coconut & Lime Fish Skewers (£3.75/6 skewers)
Best Coleslaw
Co-op Irresistible Deliciously Rich Coleslaw (£1.95/300g)
Best Sausage Roll (Joint Winners)
Co-op Irresistible Perfectly Seasoned Ploughman's Sausage Rolls (£3.50/4 pack)
Lidl Chef Select Sausage Rolls (£1.69/360g)
Best Vegetarian Picnic Pastry
Co-op Irresistible West Country Cheddar & Habanero Chilli Jam Pinwheels (£3.50/88g)
Best Picnic Centrepiece
Lidl Deluxe Quiche – Maple Bacon (£2.99)
Best Sharing Bread
Aldi Rosemary & Rock Salt Sharing Focaccia (£1.99/220g)
Best Antipasti Platter
Waitrose No.1 Italian Grazing Platter (£10/380g)
Best Hummus
Waitrose No.1 Extra Virgin Olive Oil Houmous (£2.75/170g)
How to save money on your food shop
Consumer reporter Sam Walker reveals how you can save hundreds of pounds a year:
Odd boxes - plenty of retailers offer slightly misshapen fruit and veg or surplus food at a discounted price.
Lidl sells five kilos of fruit and veg for just £1.50 through its Waste Not scheme while Aldi shoppers can get Too Good to Go bags which contain £10 worth of all kinds of products for £3.30.
Sainsbury's also sells £2 "Taste Me, Don't Waste Me" fruit and veg boxes to help shoppers reduced food waste and save cash.
Food waste apps - food waste apps work by helping shops, cafes, restaurants and other businesses shift stock that is due to go out of date and passing it on to members of the public.
Some of the most notable ones include Too Good to Go and Olio.
Too Good to Go's app is free to sign up to and is used by millions of people across the UK, letting users buy food at a discount.
Olio works similarly, except users can collect both food and other household items for free from neighbours and businesses.
Yellow sticker bargains - yellow sticker bargains, sometimes orange and red in certain supermarkets, are a great way of getting food on the cheap.
But what time to head out to get the best deals varies depending on the retailer. You can see the best times for each supermarket here.
Super cheap bargains - sign up to bargain hunter Facebook groups like Extreme Couponing and Bargains UK where shoppers regularly post hauls they've found on the cheap, including food finds.
"Downshift" - you will almost always save money going for a supermarket's own-brand economy lines rather than premium brands.
The move to lower-tier ranges, also known as "downshifting" and hailed by consumer expert Martin Lewis, could save you hundreds of pounds a year on your food shop.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Major high street retailer shuts another UK store after launching huge 50% clearance sale
Major high street retailer shuts another UK store after launching huge 50% clearance sale

The Sun

time27 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Major high street retailer shuts another UK store after launching huge 50% clearance sale

A CITY centre shop has closed for the last time but the space has already been earmarked to be taken over by another retailer. Smiggle in Chapel Walk, formerly Crowngate, in Worcester has now ceased trading in the city. 1 The stationery store started advertising an end-of-lease sale earlier this month in an attempt to clear stock ahead of its closing. The store's last day of trading was June 25. It has been revealed that the shop unit will be refurbished and reopen under a new retailer, according to Worcester News. Further details though have not yet been released. Earlier this month, the Smiggle branch in Coney Street, York, also closed its doors for the final time. A 50% discount sale had been launched to help shift stock before the store closed for good. It was reported in YorkshireLive that the decision to close the children's store came after the landlord decided not to renew the lease. However it is not all bad news as a new Smiggle branch is set to open in York Designer Outlet this July. It comes as the Australian business has announced plans to close a number of other stores across the UK. A Cwmbran Shopping Centre will pull down its shutters for the final time in August. Why are so many shops going bust? Meanwhile two other branches closed in back in May. A store in the Eastgate Shopping Centre, Inverness, shut its doors on May 21. While a store in the Darwin Centre, Shrewsbury, closed on May 25. In January 2024, the brand also closed a site in Dundee, Scotland. HIGH STREET STRUGGLES Smiggle is not the only retailer struggling on the high street amid the surge of online shopping and weaker household budgets. Hobbycraft shut nine stores on June 21 after launching closing down sales. Dobbies has also closed a slew of garden centres across the UK this year. The Centre for Retail Research is predicting more than 17,000 retail shops will shut in 2025 too. The centre has forecast a rise in closures after a hike to employer National Insurance contributions and the national minimum wage which took effect in April. RETAIL PAIN IN 2025 The British Retail Consortium has predicted that the Treasury's hike to employer NICs will cost the retail sector £2.3billion. Research by the British Chambers of Commerce shows that more than half of companies plan to raise prices by early April. A survey of more than 4,800 firms found that 55% expect prices to increase in the next three months, up from 39% in a similar poll conducted in the latter half of 2024. Three-quarters of companies cited the cost of employing people as their primary financial pressure. The Centre for Retail Research (CRR) has also warned that around 17,350 retail sites are expected to shut down this year. It comes on the back of a tough 2024 when 13,000 shops closed their doors for good, already a 28% increase on the previous year. Professor Joshua Bamfield, director of the CRR said: "The results for 2024 show that although the outcomes for store closures overall were not as poor as in either 2020 or 2022, they are still disconcerting, with worse set to come in 2025." Professor Bamfield has also warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, predicting that as many as 202,000 jobs could be lost in the sector. "By increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumer's household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020."

James McAtee attracts interest from FIVE Bundesliga sides after £25m Man City starlet captains England's U21s to European Championship success
James McAtee attracts interest from FIVE Bundesliga sides after £25m Man City starlet captains England's U21s to European Championship success

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

James McAtee attracts interest from FIVE Bundesliga sides after £25m Man City starlet captains England's U21s to European Championship success

Bundesliga heavyweights are battling to land James McAtee after the attacking midfielder captained England 's Under 21s to European glory against Germany. With only a year left on his contract, McAtee is set to leave Manchester City permanently this summer and any deal will include a buyback clause, which wasn't inserted into Cole Palmer 's move to Chelsea two years ago. The 22-year-old, trusted with the armband by Lee Carsley and man of the match in Saturday's European Championship final, is valued at more than £25million. Five Bundesliga sides are monitoring his situation – including Borussia Dortmund, who are selling ex-City academy star Jamie Bynoe-Gittens to Chelsea for £55.5m. RB Leipzig, Frankfurt and Stuttgart have registered interest in McAtee, while Bayer Leverkusen are long-term admirers. McAtee will become the latest in a long line of young City talents to go for a sizeable fee and his departure would take them close to breaking the £400m mark for selling academy players over the last decade. Scoring seven goals in 27 appearances last season, McAtee's route to more games under Pep Guardiola will be blocked by the capture of Rayan Cherki and Oscar Bobb's return from a fractured leg. McAtee's form at the Euros vindicated the decision not to travel with City for the Club World Cup as Guardiola's squad embark on the last-16 stage against Al Hilal in the early hours of Tuesday morning. Weather predictions suggest the clash with the 19-time Saudi Pro League champions at Orlando's Camping World Stadium could be interrupted by thunderstorms. City's pre-season friendly against Barcelona here was delayed by 80 minutes due to storms last summer. The meeting also presents several reunions. Portuguese defender Joao Cancelo left City under a cloud after disagreements with Guardiola in January 2023, while Al Hilal's chief executive Esteve Calzada is formerly the City Football Group's chief commercial officer. Marc Boixasa, Al Hilal's chief performance officer, was previously confidante to Guardiola's stars for the first five years of the Catalan's reign.

Another fake Net Zero market that nobody wanted is set to collapse
Another fake Net Zero market that nobody wanted is set to collapse

Telegraph

time42 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Another fake Net Zero market that nobody wanted is set to collapse

This week came news that UK bioethanol producer Vivergo Fuels is once again on the brink of closure – this time as a result of the UK's trade deal with the US, which removes tariffs on cheaper American bioethanol imports. Its rival, Ensus UK, faces a similarly uncertain future. Vivergo produces enough bioethanol to supply about 30 per cent of the UK's bioethanol needs for low carbon road fuels. Government rules require a percentage of bioethanol to be blended into petrol before it can be sold in order to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions associated with transport – considered to be one of the hardest to abate sectors. This is not the first time that Vivergo has faced closure. Back in 2018 it shut down for four months due to uncertainty over government support. It only reopened when the Government created a subsidy scheme known as the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO), which forces fuel suppliers to sell renewable fuels. Bioethanol producers earn RTFO certificates, which they sell to fuel suppliers to help them meet their quotas. And that's the heart of the issue: the UK bioethanol industry wasn't created to meet any actual consumer demand – it exists to satisfy a policy target: the use of green fuel in transport. Now it faces extinction thanks to a different policy priority: that of securing an advantageous trade deal with the US. American bioethanol is cheaper to produce. If it now enters the UK tariff-free, it will almost certainly displace UK-made bioethanol. But once the emissions from transatlantic shipping are factored in, much of the carbon benefit from the RTFO is wiped out. In 2023, the UK as a whole emitted 375 million tonnes of greenhouse gases, about 0.7 per cent of global emissions. Road transport accounted for roughly 100 million tonnes. Using UK bioethanol cuts transport emissions by around 82 per cent, but switching to US imports halves those savings. The impact on global emissions? Negligible – effectively defeating the purpose of the policy. This is a textbook example of how net zero policies can create artificial markets that collapse as soon as political winds shift. Bioethanol was never commercially viable on its own, it was simply created to tick a box. And now, it's likely to be sacrificed for the greater prize of trade access – a goal with arguably broader economic value to the nation. There's no easy compromise here. If the UK wants its trade deal with the US, it's unlikely to be allowed to impose carbon border taxes or other constraints on US ethanol without breaching the deal. But any industry that only survives because overseas competitors are excluded isn't genuinely viable. Unless there's a clear national interest – such as energy security – consumers shouldn't be forced to pay higher prices to prop up policy experiments. The public didn't ask for biofuels, they were pushed into using them by renewable fuels mandates. And now the protections that insulated the UK bioethanol industry from international competition are being lifted, the future looks bleak for the sector. But then, the emissions savings were so paltry on a global scale that it's difficult to see the point of the complex system of mandates, certificates and subsidies that prop it all up. Worse still, both Vivergo and Ensus run on wheat, and together consume up to 15 per cent of UK wheat production when operating at full capacity. Their closure would deliver another blow to a farming sector already reeling from successive policy missteps. This is a cautionary tale. When governments create fake markets, they distort industries, misallocate capital, and raise consumer costs – all for gains that may prove illusory. There are very good reasons why we don't have a centrally planned economy, and it's time ministers stopped pretending we do.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store