ladbible homepage
ladbible homepage
  • Home
  • News
    • UK
    • US
    • World
    • Ireland
    • Australia
    • Science
    • Crime
    • Weather
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV
    • Film
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • Netflix
    • Disney
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Originals
    • FFS PRODUCTIONS
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Citizen Reef
  • Videos
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content Here
  • GAMINGbible
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • Tyla
  • FOODbible
  • UNILAD Tech
People are feeling cheated after discovering what 'e' symbol on food packaging means
Home>Lifestyle>Food & Drink
Updated 15:43 4 May 2024 GMT+1Published 14:45 2 May 2024 GMT+1

People are feeling cheated after discovering what 'e' symbol on food packaging means

Shoppers said the symbol is such a 'joke'

Jess Battison

Jess Battison

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

There’s plenty of things we see every single day and don’t really pay any attention to, meaning we usually don’t even know what they mean.

Like features in our cars that we haven’t really bothered to understand or in this case, a symbol on the back of our food packaging.

Often found on packaging like bags of crisps, people have been feeling cheated after discovering what a certain symbol 'e' means that is found on plenty of products.

One woman took to Facebook after deciding it was allowing supermarkets to charge more for less.

Advert

She discovered the ‘true’ meaning of the symbol after buying a packet of crisps from an Aldi in Australia.

The woman fumed about her crisps packet. (Getty stock image)
The woman fumed about her crisps packet. (Getty stock image)

Weighing the 230g bag of crisps, she did the petty thing that none of us can ever really be bothered to do (despite often moaning about it) and found that there were just 139g of crisps inside the pack.

The mum shared a snap of her findings and wrote: “How is this okay at all? [We] try to save money by buying from Aldi, but we don't even get the amount on the packet!"

She added: “More than two-thirds of the packet was air - hence why I decided to check it... I put the whole bag with chips in it on the scales first and it was 157g.”

While the details of the symbol might differ in various parts of the world, the ‘e’ mark is explained by the Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences by The University of Reading.

The symbol is found on food packaging (University of Reading)
The symbol is found on food packaging (University of Reading)

“The 'e' mark is used on a label to indicate that the product has been packed according to the requirements of the European Union's average weight rules,” it says.

The symbol is typically found directly next to the weight, so it tends to read: “300g e.”

“Originally specified by EU legislation, the shape is now specified by the Weights and Measures (Packaged Goods) Regulations 2006 and the relevant image is given here,” the food labelling material continues.

“It shall be at least 3mm high. It shall be indelible, easily legible and visible in normal conditions of presentation and be placed in the same field of vision as the indication of nominal quantity.”

But shoppers on Facebook aren’t happy either way, as one wrote: “Not getting what you pay for is a joke and being so far off the 'e' weight is just ridiculous."

Featured Image Credit: LADbible/Getty Stock Images

Topics: Facebook, Food And Drink

Jess Battison
Jess Battison

Jess is a Senior Journalist with a love of all things pop culture. With a specialism in entertainment, she's covered the updates live at major events from The Brits in London to Disney's D23 in California. Jess covers the latest breaking news stories across the UK and the globe as well as interviewing your favourite faces including the likes of Dwayne Johnson, Stephen Graham, Aubrey Plaza and Chris Hemsworth. She graduated with a first in Journalism from City, University of London in 2021.

X

@jessbattison_

Recommended reads

Comedian almost dies after being crushed by 600lb fridge in freak accidentInstagram/lauracleryDisturbing risks exposed as men are undergoing leg-lengthening surgeriesWannabetallerExperts issue severe warning against frog poison detox trend as British man, 40, diesFacebook/Kristian TrendBoy, 11, who vanished for six years in different country explains what the worst part of it was(BBC)

Advert

Choose your content:

15 mins ago
2 hours ago
3 hours ago
5 hours ago
  • Wannabetaller
    15 mins ago

    Disturbing risks exposed as men are undergoing leg-lengthening surgeries

    Leg-lengthening surgery can be a highly painful and expensive procedure

    Lifestyle
  • Getty Stock
    2 hours ago

    ‘Kivin method’ is the new bedroom technique women are swearing by

    Just one little tweak and you'll get 'more intense pleasure' in the bedroom

    Lifestyle
  • Getty Stock Images
    3 hours ago

    Six signs you're an alcoholic, from a former alcoholic

    Writer and journalist Bryony Gordon said recovery from alcoholism saved her life

    Lifestyle
  • (TikTok/Tiannmolnar)
    5 hours ago

    Woman issues warning over serious side effects of 'most powerful weight loss jab ever'

    The TikToker was taking retatrutide, a GLP-1 medication not currently licensed for use

    Lifestyle
  • People are only just realising what Boxing Day actually means
  • Heart surgeon issues warning against food eaten by millions daily ‘destroying your heart'
  • More and more people are getting the 'chicken ick' when it comes to eating food
  • People are just finding out what McDonald’s Grimace actually is