Towleroad Gay News
Last year, the Irish Supreme Court ruled that the “bread ” surrounding sandwiches made by the fast food chain Subway had too much sugar to meet the legal definition of bread. Now the restaurant chain is the subject of a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California targeting its tuna sandwich.
The Washington Post reports: “The star ingredient, according to the lawsuit, is ‘made from anything but tuna.’ Based on independent lab tests of ‘multiple samples’ taken from Subway locations in California, the ‘tuna’ is ‘a mixture of various concoctions that do not constitute tuna, yet have been blended together by defendants to imitate the appearance of tuna,’ according to the complaint.”
Subway’s tuna does not contain tuna, lawsuit claims, saying the ‘ingredients were not tuna and not fish’
Updated Jan 28, 2021;
Subway’s tuna isn’t actually tuna, in fact, it might not even be fish, two people claim in a federal lawsuit filed recently.
“We found that the ingredients were not tuna and not fish,” one of the attorneys representing the two plaintiffs in the lawsuit said in an email to The Washington Post.
The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, claiming that the company intentionally made “false and misleading representations about tuna being used as an ingredient.”
Subway
At this point, pretty much every fast-casual restaurant has a protein bowl on its menu and now Subway is getting in on the action. While protein bowls are often geared towards the health-conscious or those looking to pack a convenient meal into an easy-to-consume format, the sandwich chain is taking a different, decidedly ’90s Atkins diet approach, offering bowls that are essentially deconstructed sandwiches without the bread. Imagine the deli tray from the last school event you attended (whatever the year), add iceberg lettuce, and voila, you have a Subway protein bowl.
Seeing photos of the newly launched, cursed bowls which the chain assures customers are here to stay one can’t help but spiral as the questions pile up: Why use a mound of salami and pepperoni sitting atop unseasoned cucumbers and shredded lettuce as a stylized menu photo? Aren’t these protein bowls just a more aggressive version of a Subway salad, something that already exists, albeit served on a
The recent death of the notorious Soviet spy George Blake has reminded me of a documentary film I made many years ago with Sean Bourke, the Irish man who was responsible for springing Blake from prison.
Bourke had been befriended by Blake when they shared a cell in Wormwood Scrubs. Blake had been a high-ranking officer in MI6 and the information that he passed on to his Soviet handlers had resulted in the deaths of many British agents in Eastern Europe.
In 1961 he had been sentenced to 42 years in prison: one year, it was claimed, for every agent who had died as a result of his treachery.
Ír kéjgyilkos fordult az Európai Bírósághoz, mert személyes üzenetei vezettek a lebukásához 444.hu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 444.hu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.