Tooth from sausage, dumplings, and cakes...Would you trust this country's food and eat it?

Tooth from sausage, dumplings, and cakes...Would you trust this country's food and eat it?
The tooth (above) and the dim sum from the sausage. Photo Source = Weibo, South China Morning Post



Artificial teeth have been found one after another in food, raising concerns about food safety in China.

According to Hong Kong media South China Morning Post, a woman in China's Jilin Province reported on the 13th that she found three artificial teeth in a roasted sausage at an outdoor stall she purchased for her child. At first, the seller strongly denied this, but apologized when authorities launched an investigation.

On the same day, a famous local dim sum chain in Dongguan, Guangdong Province, claimed that a man found two human teeth while eating dim sum.




The company said all dim sum is supplied from the headquarters, but the source of the teeth has not been confirmed and an investigation is underway.

On the 114th, artificial teeth with metal screws were found in jujube and walnut cakes purchased at a large supermarket branch in Shanghai.

It is a member-based warehouse-type store with more than 50 locations in more than 20 Chinese cities, and is famous for its brand of high-quality food.




A branch employee insisted that "there can be no such problem with products produced in the factory.'

The customer visited the store again the next day and protested, and the store offered a reward of 1,000 yuan (about 200,000 won). The cake cost 27.8 yuan (about 5,500 won).

However, the customer has refused to compensate, pointing out that there is a problem with his attitude of not making a true apology.




According to China's Food Safety Act, companies that produce or sell food that does not meet safety standards must compensate 10 times the price of food or 3 times the amount of consumer damage, and if the compensation is less than 1000 yuan, the minimum compensation is 1000 yuan. Authorities have reportedly launched an investigation.

Chinese netizens" X-ray inspection at factories makes it hard to understand why this is happening again and again", "There is no food to buy and trust.", "We must be punished severely." be posting comments such as.





This article was translated by Naver AI translator.