A customer was reely taken aback when he discovered a bait hook floating in a tin of fish produced by a well-known model in Thailand. Luckily, he noticed the sharp hook earlier than chewing it.
Consumer protection Facebook web page “Phuboripok” (“consumers”) posted a photo of the offending tin of fish yesterday with the caption…
“A #consumer was about to eat tinned fish when he discovered a foreign object in the tin. He wrote a brief message saying “I do not forgive QC (quality control) 100 percent.”
“He’s already been in contact with the [brand’s] gross sales department who supplied to provide him two crates of tinned fish as compensation for the incident or 1500 baht in money.
“In response, the consumer requested, do you assume I need to eat this brand of fish after just having this experience?”
Netizens have been bewildered at how the hook managed to enter the tin, asking, are the fish not caught with nets? Is the fish not scanned with a metallic detector before being tinned?
Last week, a Thai girl discovered a rat claw floating inside jaew bla ra (chilli paste with pickled fish) that she purchased from a market in Prachin Buri province in central Thailand. Copy didn’t know what the “mysterious foot” was till netizens knowledgeable her that it looked like a rat’s foot.
In March last 12 months, a family from Prachin Buri discovered a poisonous centipede in a tin of fish. It’s not clear whether or not it’s the similar “famous brand” that sold the tin containing a bait hook.
In August final year, blood poured from a Thai man’s mouth after he bit right into a pork skewer (“moo ping“) with blades inside it in Samut Prakan province just south of Bangkok.
In January this year, a netizen mentioned they bit right into a Thai dessert called khanom keng to discover a plaster inside..