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13 Kommentare

  1. Sure would be great if some federal regulatory organization would launch an investigation and make a public statement regarding this false advertising instead of turning a blind eye to something that is getting it’s 3rd wave of media attention.

  2. ArbainHestia on

    Could this be from that maple syrup heist from a decade ago? I don’t remember hearing anything else about that since then.

  3. Real Canadians do not buy from the chain stores. We get from the locals. If your lucky enough, you get it from a person rolling in a horse and buggy 🙂

  4. CucumberWisdom on

    I thought all syrup from Quebec was mixed and then sold? Since when are individual producers selling to stores like this

  5. We can’t even ensure maple syrup is real anymore.

    The land of zero consequences, this is what you get.

  6. Is it possible that this producer has sold his syrup abroad?

    I’m originally from Quebec, but have lived in the UK for the past 20 years. Something that’s become a running joke among my husband and friends here is that I’m a conspiracy theorist because I (only semi-jokingly) swear that the allegedly 100% Canadian maple syrup sold in UK grocery stores doesn’t taste right – specifically, less maple-y, as if it was cut with sugar syrup – and must have been sold to British grocers by organised crime figures responsible for the heist.

    A number of years ago, a Canadian former work colleague and I blind-tested syrup we bought from grocery stores in Edinburgh vs. what we had brought from Canada. We were correct every time, which seems unlikely if purely by chance. (Caveat: Our experiment was methodologically imperfect because we didn’t control precisely for the style of syrup). I would love to get some of what’s sold here tested to know if my suspicions are correct!

  7. I have can of L’Erabeille but there is no other label beneath the sticker. Is this unaffected?

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