ChatterBank4 mins ago
Wonky Fruit And Veg?
15 Answers
Anyone else going to join Hugh F-W's campaign against food waste and encourage supermarkets to sell wonky fruit and veg? I definitely am!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by diddlydo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.How does selling wonky parsnips help the farmer? Supermarkets can only sell a finite amount of parsnips. The farmers on the show should not be throwing it away. They should be helped by the supermarket to find other buyers to make up all sorts of outlets, like animal feed. Better than throwing it away and the farmer would get some return.
ps I notice a lot of the stuff Hugh recovers has no food value, like jam.
ps I notice a lot of the stuff Hugh recovers has no food value, like jam.
While I absolutely agree with the no food waste message, I think HF-W didn't make a great job of the program. He was too scattergun in his approach and didn't make a good job of the filming in Morrisons. If shops are going to offer wonky fruit and veg alongside the perfect ones, there has to be an advantage to the customer to buying it, but its not easy to see how this can be achieved if the price to the supermarket of wonky veg is the same as for pretty ones. To me the ugly courgettes looked older than the pretty ones (Hugh did point this out) The Morissons men said that they had been through the same harvesting process, but I suspect they might have been left on the plant longer.
I think he should have made much much more of the changing of amounts ordered but I think the customer has to take the responsibility for that....customers don't take well to sell outs of what they want and if the supermarket over orders then they have waste and get a kicking for that. Is it possible for customers to go back to not minding if the fresh stuff they want is sold out? How will farmers deal with selling less?
I think he should have made much much more of the changing of amounts ordered but I think the customer has to take the responsibility for that....customers don't take well to sell outs of what they want and if the supermarket over orders then they have waste and get a kicking for that. Is it possible for customers to go back to not minding if the fresh stuff they want is sold out? How will farmers deal with selling less?