I had the KR Festive meats last Xmas. Mine arrived on time, the turkey was nice but I have several observations:
1. Joint sizes were much smaller as represented on telly and could not possibly feed the number of people that is suggested unless they had no more than 2 very slim slices each.
2. The beef and pork joints were very underwhelming in flavour which suggests this is intensively farmed meat. The vagueness on QVC's regarding exact provenance and animal welfare standards is misleading. Showing rolling hills and pretty countryside scenes suggests that the meat is local, free range and reared with good animal husbandry. I now suspect the contrary is true but showing images of cattle, turkeys and pigs being production line reared in pens is hardly going to encourage sales is it?
3. Price. For meat that isn't free range or organic, it's mighty expensive. Perhaps QVC think if it's expensive we will be duped into assuming it's very good quality. It's average and it tastes like intensive
Y reared meat. I've had organic and free-range and there is a taste difference. I can buy better quality meat from my local butcher, where he knows the exact provenance of the meat and can tell me exactly where it comes from and how the animals are reared.
Will I be buying KR again. No. I felt duped last Xmas and will be sticking to my local butcher. The only appeal I can see to those who buy KR, and are unconcernd about provenance etc, is the 3 easy pays offered which helps "spread the cost of Xmas". Personally, we have been downgrading Xmas for th past few years as are fed up with the unrelenting hype and sales pressure to overspend at Xmas. So, the the idea of still paying for my Xmas dinner in February next years holds little appeal. it's just us this Xmas, no family. So I'll pop along to the butcher and treat us to a leg of lamb for Xmas dinner instead. That should set me back about £12 (only 2 of us as daughter is veggie) so that's dinner sorted.