Snack maker sorry for salted egg-coated lizard

Credit to Author: clopez| Date: Thu, 03 Jan 2019 21:40:34 +0000

SINGAPORE — Singapore-based food company Irvins Salted Egg is offering refunds for batches of its popular snack after a Bangkok customer found a dead lizard coated with salted egg in a packet.

Irvins Salted Egg, which has at least 13 outlets in Singapore, Hong Kong and the Philippines, manufactures all its products in Singapore. Locals and tourists often stand in line to snap up its products, which come with a “dangerously addictive” label on its packaging.

Jane Holloway, 38, who lives in Bangkok, said in a Facebook post on Saturday that her mother and brother had eaten half the bag of the snack before they discovered the dead reptile.

Describing it as “so disgusting,” she wrote: “How can this happen? This gecko was probably deep fried with the salmon skin by the looks of it. Eeeewwww!”

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Speaking to The Straits Times on Wednesday, Ms Holloway said she had bought the product in Bangkok in early November from the Villa Market at K Village in the Khlong Toei district.

Her Thai mother, who also lives in Bangkok, opened the packet last week to enjoy the snack with her Siem Reap-based brother, who was visiting them over the Christmas and New Year holidays. Her father is Australian.

Baby salmon

Her brother had initially thought the dead lizard was a baby salmon fish head.

Ms Holloway, who works at the Thailand Institute of Justice, said that she has bought the snack several times for her family and her colleagues. “It’s also really expensive here at 700 baht (S$29) a packet,” she said, adding that it was one of her favorite snacks.

In Singapore, a small packet of the salted egg fish skin snack weighing 105 grams retails for $8, while a big packet at 230 grams costs $16. The one Ms Holloway bought was a big packet.

On Wednesday, Irvins Salted Egg founder Irvin Gunawan said in a statement that the company was “shocked and devastated” to hear about the incident.

Sincere apology

“We really want to sincerely apologize to the customer and everyone affected by this incident directly or indirectly. We take full responsibility for the goods that we sell and everything in it,” he said.

He added that quality control is one of the most important aspects of the company and said that he has since personally contacted Ms Holloway about the incident and will also be keeping in touch with her.

The case has been reported to the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) and the company will cooperate fully in its investigations, he said.

“We promise to make the necessary changes in our production to ensure this will never happen again,” he added, noting that the company will also investigate the matter further as it does not have a full explanation on how the dead lizard ended up in the snack.

An AVA spokesperson said it has received feedback on the incident and is investigating.

Refund offered

In an e-mail response to Ms Holloway’s brother seen by The Straits Times, Gunawan had offered the family a refund for the snacks and the cost of any medical bills arising from the incident.

He also said the company, which started in a cafe in Jalan Leban, had in December moved to a new production facility, where “our hygiene and checking procedures are much, much stricter.”

The company’s new production facility is in JTC Food Hub in Senoko Drive. It did not say where its previous facility was located, when asked. Two addresses are listed on the packet containing the lizard: one in Admiralty Street, and the other in Senoko South Road.

While none of her family members had fallen ill from eating the snack so far, Ms Holloway said they are “definitely traumatized.”

She added: “Mum says she feels like throwing up when she thinks about it.”

In Wednesday’s statement, Gunawan said that customers with salted egg snacks expiring on Oct. 16 this year should e-mail feedback@irvinsaltedegg.com to return the product and receive a refund.

Customers who are uncomfortable eating any Irvins Salted Egg snack should do the same as well. All recalled products would be disposed of, he added. —THE STRAITS TIMES/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

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