
The stock is building up though. Shall I put them in the recycling bin? What a waste of all that washing and drying. Or hang on a bit longer, till the soft fruit harvest begins?
Or has anyone got better suggestions?
I thought we'd covered this before..Annemieke wrote:I always wash, dry and save my screwtop jars and every so often offer them on Freecycle. They've always gone, but now no one seems to be interested. I know it's the time of year, but the new law that you can't sell jam in recycled containers does not help AT ALL. IDIOTS.
LinkDear Sir
There have been recent reports in some of the local and national press, that the EU is about to ban the sale of homemade jam in recycled jars.
I would like to reassure readers that there is no EU legislation, new or old, that would prevent an individual volunteer for an organisation like the Women’s Institute from selling homemade preserves in recycled jam jars at their local village fete or church fair.
The false impression seems to have come about after the Church of England advised parishes that the sale of jam in re-used jars breached food hygiene regulations, citing guidance they had received from the UK’s Food Standards Agency (FSA). However, the FSA’s guidance is issued for ‘food business operators’ and the Agency has stated that someone making jam for an occasional event like a local fundraiser would be unlikely to be considered a ‘food business’ and therefore not affected by the regulations. This has been confirmed by the European Commission.
The European Commission has already issued a full rebuttal of the story but sadly, as is often the case, the euromyth seems to have spread much further than the truth. I would encourage readers to share this news with friends and family, it would be a terrible shame for people who enjoy selling their homemade preserves to help their local community to stop doing so due to a misunderstanding.
Yours faithfully
Glenis Willmott
Labour MEP for the East Midlands
I did a bit more digging.. your lady with the jam stall should still be able to re-use clean jam jars that are in good condition. The EU responded to the story - link:Annemieke wrote:My best taker used to be a lady who sold homemade jam in a stall at the seaside every year. She definitely is not allowed to use recycled jars anymore, and now has to buy them in at great expense.
So providing the lady includes in her HACCP* plan how she makes sure that the jars aren't damaged and are sterilised, there's no reason why she can't use them. The only possible objection could come from her local environmental health officer - but that's where a solid HACCP plan should swing her case.Recent media coverage on reusing jars for homemade jams for sale at charity events certainly fired up the imagination of the headline writers: “EU elf ‘n safety tsars ban jam sales at fetes” and “anger spreads over EU fines threat for reusing old jam jars”, “EU fine for homemade jam makers”. This is all completely untrue. There are no EU laws, new or old, which ban re-using old jam jars for fetes. The EU also has no powers to fine people.
There is indeed a body of EU food safety and hygiene legislation – notably so that the UK and other countries can be confident that food imported from or bought elsewhere in the EU is safe and of high quality. But these rules apply only to business operators and not to those preparing food for charity events such as church fetes or school bazaars.
What is more, the rules do not anyway ban re-using clean jam jars: the European Commission is not aware of any risk from chemicals related to this re-use.
The Daily Telegraph to its credit reported this properly on 7 October, saying that the Church of England had issued guidance and quoting the UK Food Safety Authority explaining that the interpretation of the regulations was the responsibility of local authorities, who would decide what constituted a “food business” and adding that “an occasional event, like a fund-raiser… would probably not be considered to be a food business.”
The Express then span this into a ridiculous story about “meddling Brussels bureaucrats”. The Mail did at least mention that the FSA had said enforcement was down to individual local authorities…but left this until paragraph 7 of a story misleadingly headlined “Anger spreads over EU fines threat for reusing old jam jars.” The Telegraph then had another piece – at least it was an intentionally funny one – blaming EU Directives after all.
While BBC Radio 4 You and Yours covered the story sensibly, BBC Breakfast ran an item that assumed wrongly that the EU has banned jam jars.
None of the media who produced these seriously misleading stories contacted the European Commission first.
More misleading grist to the EU-bashing mill……