[Your Name]
[Full Postal Address]
[Email | Phone]
13 July 2025
To
The Quality-Assurance & Customer-Care Team
Vrutalay Dairy & Food LLP
63 Darbar Faliyu, Nr Aananddhara Soc., Abrama Chowk,
Mota Varachha, Surat-394 101, Gujarat, India
Complaint to the Company
Subject – Urgent Quality Complaint: Vrutalay “A2 Desi Cow Ghee” found adulterated with refined oil & animal fat
Dear Vrutalay Team,
On 13 July 2025 I purchased a 1-litre jar of your Vrutalay A2 Gir-Cow Ghee (Batch No. VG-130725) from a local retailer in Lucknow. The product is marketed as “A2 Bilona, pure desi cow ghee — no added colour, fragrance or adulterants.” Yet within minutes of opening the jar I observed several red flags that prompted me to perform basic purity tests recommended by the Food Safety & Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
-
Visual & sensory cues
- A slick, almost plastic sheen instead of the granular “danedar” texture promised.
- A faint but distinct odour of vanaspati/shortening, unlike the nutty aroma of true cultured ghee.
- Melting point noticeably lower than 34 °C—liquefied completely at room temperature (28 °C).
-
Simple home tests (per FSSAI outreach notes)
- Baudouin test – 5 mL ghee + 5 mL conc. HCl + 0.5 g cane sugar produced a deep pink ring, confirming the presence of sesame-seed oil or vanaspati.
- Microscopic chill-test – after chilling, the sample showed needle-shaped fat crystals typical of animal tallow rather than the spherical crystals of milk fat.
-
Taste & mouth-feel
- A waxy coating on the palate, again characteristic of hydrogenated vegetable oil and animal body fat blends.
Based on these results I strongly suspect that the jar contains a mix of refined vegetable oil and rendered animal fat rather than the 100 % cow-milk ghee claimed on the label.
Health, religious & legal implications
- Dietary trust breached: many households purchase A2 cow ghee for Ayurvedic or lactose-related requirements; adulteration exposes them to trans-fats and possible allergens.
- Religious sensitivity: consumers who avoid non-cow animal products for faith reasons are unknowingly ingesting them.
- Regulatory violation: Chapter 2.2 of the FSSAI Standards for Fats & Oils mandates that ghee “shall be free from animal body fat, mineral oil and wax.”
My demands
- Full refund of ₹ ___ against purchase invoice.
- Written explanation from your quality head describing how such adulteration cleared internal QC.
- Immediate product recall of the affected batch across Uttar Pradesh.
- Publication of independent NABL-accredited lab reports proving purity of future batches.
If a satisfactory resolution is not received within 15 days, I will escalate the matter to:
- FSSAI Food Safety Helpline – 1800-180-5533.
- The District Food Safety Officer, Lucknow.
- Consumer Court under The Consumer Protection Act 2019 for deficiency in service and unfair trade practice.
I urge Vrutalay Dairy & Food LLP to treat this letter as an early-warning alarm. Any further negligence will erode brand goodwill irreparably.
Kind regards,
[Signature]
Desh Deepak A P Singh Chauhan
Page 2 — Public Review for Fellow Buyers
Headline
“Why I Will Never Buy Vrutalay Ghee Again — And Why You Should Check Your Jar Twice.”
My experience in a nutshell
I picked up Vrutalay A2 Gir-Cow Ghee because the label promised lab-tested bilona ghee. What I opened at home looked like cheap vanaspati masquerading in a fancy glass jar. The colour was pale, the texture oily, and the aroma flat. Two quick FSSAI-approved kitchen tests (Baudouin & chill-crystal) screamed adulteration with refined oil and animal fat.
How you can spot fake ghee in 5 minutes
Check | What pure ghee shows | What my Vrutalay jar showed |
---|---|---|
Granules (danedar) | Evenly distributed; grainy | Oily sludge, no granules |
Aroma | Nutty, caramel | Plastic-like vanaspati smell |
Baudouin test | No pink colour | Dark pink ring |
Crystal shape after chilling | Round, smooth | Long needles (sign of tallow) |
Melting point | Begins melting > 34 °C | Liquid at 28 °C |
(Tests adapted from FSSAI Oils & Fats Manual)
Health & wallet damage
- Adulterated ghee often contains trans-fats that raise LDL cholesterol.
- You pay five to ten times the cost of plain refined oil but get none of the health benefits of real cow ghee.
What to do if you feel cheated
- Save the jar, receipt & a photo of batch details.
- Call FSSAI toll-free 1800-180-5533 or file an e-complaint on foodsafetyhelpline.gov.in.
- Email the manufacturer at mukeshdobariya46@gmail.com (as listed on JioMart) demanding a refund and lab report.
- Share your findings on consumer forums and social media — awareness is the best defence.
Final verdict
Score: 1 / 10 — Attractive packaging cannot hide a compromised product. Until Vrutalay publishes independent NABL-certified purity reports and tightens supply-chain controls, I recommend steering clear. Opt for established brands with a transparent procurement trail or buy directly from a trusted local dairy.
Stay informed, stay safe, and always test before you trust.
*Prepared in the public interest to uphold food safety and consumer rights.
Post a Comment