Bought pandoro from tesco and it just tastes like heavily marked up brioche bread. Legit £2 for an amount of brioche you could get for like £0.20. Is tesco's just inauthentic or is that how it tastes
>>21772549It looks to me that you got what you paid for. The bread shouldn't be that "thick" (lacking a better term, like it shouldn't be so firm), it should be lighter than a brioche.
>>21772549>buy italian >get scammedSome races are heavily lean to being genetically criminal (especiale italianos) and that applies to their baked goods to. Not saying ALL of them are bad but yeah you got what you deserved by being sucked into by their fancy ethnic = good marketing
>>21772558>thinks tesco pandoro is italiandumbest poster on this board
>>21772575A stream from a spoiled source is by principle tainted. If anything the farther removed from being authentically Italian, the more likely OP would have been to get a non-scammy product by that anon's measure.
>>21772549Inauthentic and that goes for the panettones too. They are simple enriched bread so they stand by the quality of the ingredients used more than for most confections. The low tier shop versions are just in the 'style' of pandoro much like Greek 'style' yogurts. Having said that if you don't like enriched bread you're probably not going to like the higher tier pandoro versions either no matter the quality. Before you make up your mind try something from an online store like Loison, for e.g. Something mass produced but higher tier than the standard Tesco/Sainsbury's/Waitrose/Aldi/Lidl etc.
>buy panettone>it's just an overpriced potcakeshitalian pastries are scams
>and pandoro for the children