News

Greens Become Trendy Thanks To Lockdown And The Vegan Revolution

News

Greens Become Trendy Thanks To Lockdown And The Vegan Revolution

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on email

They’ve been famously despised by kids down the ages but greens have finally shaken off their loathsome image thanks to lockdown and the vegan revolution, agues Tesco. Greens such as cabbage, spinach and even sprouts have become very trendy as homebound, lockdown Brits, with more time on their hands, return to scratch cooking. And the growing popularity of plant-based events such as Meat Free Mondays and Veganuary have also done much to encourage the eating of vegetables.

The trend is so pronounced that Tesco is now working with its UK suppliers in order to grow more to meet the demand. The highest increase is being seen with leeks and cabbage as well as broccoli and sprouts. Since the first lockdown in March 2020 Tesco has seen the following increases against the previous year:

Leeks – demand up by more than 30 per cent
Cabbage – up nearly 25 per cent
Broccoli – up 20 per cent
Sprouts – up 10 per cent
Kale – up 10 per cent
Spinach – up nearly 10 per cent

Tesco fresh vegetables buyer Ben Rowbotham commented “The popularity of greens is soaring right now and it’s down to a combination of the current plant-based revolution and lockdown which is giving people more time to cook from scratch and eat more healthily.

“Greens got their poor image from the post-war baby boomer generation schoolchildren who generally loathed them as they were always being told to ‘eat their greens’ for health reasons.

“Unfortunately many people used to boil them to death so that you were left with unappetisingly tasteless vegetables swimming around in green water.

“Now, with today’s kitchen equipment, people can easily steam, stir fry and even microwave them to bring out the best flavour and preserve the goodness.”

In the last year Tesco has seen demand for herbs and spices soar by more than 25 per cent as more Brits take to picking up their recipe books and cook from scratch.

TH Clements, based near Boston, Lincolnshire, are one of the UK’s biggest growers of greens such as sprouts, cabbage, broccoli and spring greens and have also seen demand rocket in the last year.

Like Tesco, the grower is also seeing major increases for broccoli and cabbage with increases of more than 50 and 30 per cent respectively in the last year while cauliflowers, sprouts and spring greens have also grown accordingly.

For more information visit tescoplc.com

Related News Posts

Tesco removes two billion pieces of plastic from its business

Tesco has confirmed it has now removed more than two billion pieces of plastic from its UK business since the launch of its 4Rs packaging strategy in 2019 (‘Remove, Reduce, Re-use, Recycle’). In the last 12 months, the supermarket has identified and removed 500 million pieces of unnecessary plastic.

Related News

Tesco removes two billion pieces of plastic from its business

Tesco has confirmed it has now removed more than two billion pieces of plastic from its UK business since the launch of its 4Rs packaging strategy in 2019 (‘Remove, Reduce, Re-use, Recycle’). In the last 12 months, the supermarket has identified and removed 500 million pieces of unnecessary plastic.

Get In Touch

Our team are on hand to discuss your business’s unique needs, balancing core business objectives and efficiencies with an expertise in environmental awareness. Contact us today on 01322 284455 or by emailing [email protected].

Get in touch
Our team are on hand to discuss your business’s unique needs, balancing core business objectives and efficiencies with an expertise in environmental awareness. Contact us today on 01322 284455 or by emailing [email protected]

Westpak Group Ltd, 2023   |   Bold Thinking, Reliable Execution

Contact Us

Terms & Accreditations

Social Media

Westpak Group Ltd, 2022
Bold Thinking, Reliable Execution