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Sainsbury’s shoppers heartbroken as store axes ‘best’ coffee

SHOPPERS have been left disappointed after Sainsbury’s axed a popular coffee.
One frustrated customer got in touch with the supermarket after struggling to find the Taste the Difference Fairtrade Indian Monsoon Malabar Ground Coffee on shelves.

“Have Sainsbury’s stopped selling the Monsoon Malabar coffee?? Tried to find it in various stores but it is not available anywhere,” they said.
To their disappointment, Sainsbury’s confirmed the coffee variety had in fact been discontinued.
The Sun also searched for the coffee on Trolley.co.uk but it’s been listed as “currently out of stock in every store”.
The coffee had come in a 227g pack and was described as having dark chocolate, smoke and spice flavours.
A description on the website says the product was ethically sourced and laid on the Malabar coast in southwestern India during the monsoon season.
Shoppers on Trolley gave it glowing reviews.
One raved: “This is the best coffee that I’ve had in recent years and decent price.”
Another said: “This product is the closest to the coffee I drank in Goa and for me it is perfectly good.”
The Sun has reached out to Sainsbury’s for comment.
Coffee fans can still get their fix of Sainsbury’s Taste the Difference Fairtrade coffee though, as there are plenty more varieties still in stores.
There’s the Peruvian Machu Picchu Ground Coffee, which has a milk chocolate, caramel and almond flavour.
It’s from the Sacred Valley which is home to the ancient city of Machu Picchu.
Another option is the Colombian Coffee Strength 3, which is grown in the foothills of the Colombian Andes.
It has a smooth, sweet and nutty flavour.
Then the Kenyan Coffee Taste the Difference Strength 3 is from the high plateaus of Mount Kenya.
It’s described as having a zesty, citrus and blackberry flavour.
All are priced at £4 for a 227g pack.
How to get free cofee
Virgin Media O2 customers are cutting back on Greggs freebies including coffee.
But there are plenty of other ways to get a free brew. Sun Savers Editor Lana Clements explains..
Download the Greggs’s app and sign up to its loyalty scheme for the first time to get a free hot drink.
The offer includes tea, coffee and hot chocolate.
You’ll be able to collect loyalty stamps through the app, too, which add up to freebies.
Octopus energy customers can also get a complimentary hot drink every week at Greggs by signing up to the Octoplus section on the power provider’s app.
Pop into Ikea during the week to get a free cup of tea or filter coffee with the store’s loyalty card. It costs nothing to sign up to Ikea Family.
You can also bag a free hot drink at Waitrose if you’re a MyWaitrose member when you make a purchase instore.
Get a tea, coffee, cappuccino or latte with the deal.
And the purchase need not cost a lot – buy a piece of fruit or a cheap chocolate bar. Sign up at waitrose.com.
Plus, don’t forget about loyalty schemes at the high street coffee chains.
Starbucks, Costa Coffee and Caffe Nero all offer free drinks after a certain number of purchases — usually around nine or ten.
‘Eerie portal to a lost world’ that lies beneath council estate – network of abandoned tunnels left to rot for 60 years
A EERIE maze of tunnels left to rot under a council estate has been likened to a “portal to a lost world”.
They are buried deep beneath a quiet Greater Manchester housing estate, the 1,332-yard tunnel was closed over 60 years ago.


Known as Lydgate Tunnel, this Victorian-era passage runs between Grotton and Grasscroft in Saddleworth, and was once part of the infamous Delph Donkey line on the London and North Western Railway.
Opening in 1856, the tunnel was hailed as a triumph of engineering.
The West Yorkshire Advertiser called it “firmly built” with “scarcely any vibration” as trains thundered through. But its construction came at a cost.
Just a year before opening, labourer Luke Crossby, 31, tragically plunged to his death down an 85-yard shaft.
In 1855, the Manchester Courier described how he “missed the tub” and fell headfirst.
His body was found “much shattered” and the coroner returned a verdict of accidental death.
For nearly a century, the tunnel echoed with the sound of steam engines, until the Delph Donkey line was axed in 1955, part of the controversial Beeching cuts that destroyed Britain’s rail network.
Freight trains rolled through for a few more years, but by 1964, Lydgate Tunnel was sealed off and left to the elements.
Now, this creepy time capsule lies hidden beneath homes, fenced off from the public – but that hasn’t stopped urban explorers from sneaking in and sharing spine-tingling photos online.
Images posted to the Disused Railway Tunnels UK Facebook page show a haunting scene.
The tunnel’s eastern entrance is bricked up, only accessible through a locked steel door or shuttered window.
Despite six decades of abandonment, the brickwork inside is well-preserved.
One explorer described it as “a portal to another long-lost world”, while another claimed mist “hovered in layers… very eerie.”
Comments flood in calling it “spooky,” “atmospheric,” and a “forgotten gem.”
Local residents shared memories of walking through the tunnel as children.
One said: “I was born just 30 yards from the Grotton end.
“Walked it from the age of eight. The alcoves were there to shelter from oncoming trains.”
Others slammed authorities for allowing such a “stunning piece of Victorian craftsmanship” to fall into obscurity.
“All we had to do was maintain it, but instead we abandoned it,” wrote one user.
Martin Zero, a content creator with a fascination with derelict buildings shared a video from the depths of the tunnels which has already been watched over 26,000 times.
There are growing calls to bring Lydgate Tunnel back to life – not for trains, but for people.
Martin pointed out the ventilation shafts and the refuges, which were where railway workers could hide for safety when a train passed through.
Describing these refuges, Martin said: “I think it’s impressive. It’s quite scary because when you look at that, you get the impression of what you’re going through, what surrounds us, and what they’ve had to tunnel through to get here.
“You get the impression of what they were faced with when they were coming through the tunnel, just rock. I find it quite daunting, to be honest.”
One YouTube user commented: “I travelled on the Delph Donkey every day with my mum to Glodwick Road station in Oldham, where she worked. My dad also caught the train to Platts.
“I was born in 1951, and on one occasion mice, bred in Delph for research, and dispatched by the Delph Donkey, escaped from their cages, and caused chaos amongst the passengers.”



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Top holiday resort approves huge fines for public sex and nudity in major crackdown on badly-behaved Brit tourists
A TOP holiday resort has approved huge fines for public sex and nudity in a major crackdown on badly-behaved Brit tourists.
The Algarve party resort of Albufeira has gone to war against boozy tourists and slapped new rules to curb alcohol-fueled debauchery.




Enraged City Hall officials on Friday approved huge new penalties of up to £3,375 for holidaymakers flouting a strict new “good behaviour” code.
Hefty fines will now be imposed for everything from urinating in the street to getting naked.
The rules will kick in within weeks, in time for the summer season, aiming to curb anti-social behaviour.
And locals hope they will turn the tide, with nakedness, vomiting in the street and having sex in public all now coming at a heavy price.
Badly behaved tourists who go starkers in public, or get caught bonking or simulating sex, face paying anything from £1,685 to £3,375.
Spitting or urinating in the street will be punished with fines of between £125 and £630.
And entering bars and other businesses topless could lead to a £1,250 levy.
Bars and cafes which let customers in without the proper dress code will also be fined.
Brit tourists were first warned about the new get-tough rules in February when Albufeira’s mayor Jose Carlos Rolo announced the “Code of Conduct” plans.
Last summer, a group of partying Brit tourists put on a shocking display of public nudity, leaving the locals fuming.
Footage of their drunken antics, showing them starkers on their knees in a line on top of a bar counter, went viral.
Rolo called the display “deeply negative” and said he would call for police reinforcements.
He said last night: “Tourists who fall down drunk aren’t needed here at all.”
Predictably, Albufeira is fast becoming the go-to spot for young revellers looking for a boozy break.
During The Sun’s investigation into tourist revelry in the town, we saw how cops and medics are already patrolling the mile-long strip — nicknamed “The Chaos” by locals — to keep a firm eye on the crazy, drunken antics of holidaymakers.
Little wonder some end up in a terrible state, as girls are plied with free drinks at many pubs in a bid to lure in paying lads, while every bar offers shots from £1.70.
Local taxi driver Guilherme, 25, told The Sun: “Stay here more than one night and you’ll see tourists having sex in the street. Sometimes it’s groups of naked men on balconies. It’s shocking.”
Furious locals decided to bring in the new code of conduct after a group of British louts got naked on a bar top and proceeded to crawl around in broad daylight last year.




It comes as a 21-year-old Brit was found dead at the foot of a set of steps in Albufeira’s old town last Wednesday.
Cops are said to believe booze is behind the tragedy.
The news, which emerged on Saturday, came days after reveller Greg Monks, 38, from Glasgow, was found dead in a ravine near Albufeira.
He was there on a stag do and had left the party early to return to his hotel when it is thought he jumped over a wall while drunk, unaware there was a steep drop on the other side. He was missing for a week.
The fatalities shine an unwelcome light on the more dangerous and seedier side of the Algarve resort.
Once marketed as a family-friendly getaway, now a much younger crew of holidaymakers is descending on the cobbled streets, turning it into a nocturnal party town.
