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Local Food Trends Hit Home


Local trend hitting home in the last 5 years


Every year I sit on the judging panel for the Quality Food Awards . The Local Food category has  very strong entries but I know from the businesses I meet regularly  there are more great products that we don't see.  Products which truly capture the  meaning of 'local', using locally sourced ingredients or regional recipes to make winning products that offer quality and value to consumers.   The Food Network is collaborating with The Quality Food Awards this year to encourage more producers to enter this category,  We will be speaking to both producers and regional food groups over the coming months to help them identify  the best foods from their region and enter them.   The Food Network will be working with businesses to help them submit the right information and to select the best products to put forward.  Entries open for this year's QFA's in March , before then we will be speaking to the local producers and regional food groups and working to make sure you are well represented when judging begins in August .

Think what the publicity of winning a Quality Food Award could do for your business?

Now read the article below and it will help you understand how big the opportunities are in this category.

Interest in locally-produced food has mushroomed in the last five years, indicates a new survey that considers manufactured food as well as locally grown and raised produce.

According to IGD, which conducted a survey of over 1000 shoppers in the UK, designed to be a representative sample of the population, 30 per cent said they have specifically bought local food in the last month. The same survey in 2006, just 15 per cent gave an affirmative answer to the same question.

Of these, some 57 per cent gave their reason for pocking local foods as perceived freshness, as it has not had to travel so far.

But 54 per cent also said the wanted to support local producers (up from 28 per cent in 2006); 34 per cent wanted to support total retailers (up from 18 per cent); and 29 per cent said they wanted to keep local jobs in the area (up from 14 per cent).

A spokesperson from the market research organisation confirmed that the questions posed included manufactured goods, such a locally-made pie, not just fresh meat and produce. The survey was conducted at a range of shopping sites, from retailers to farm shops.

Some 31 per cent of respondents said they would like to see more local food available to them (up from 12 per cent in 2005); 20 per cent of people said they would like a farm shop to be established near them.

Joanne Denney-Finch, chief executive of IGD, was not surprised by the findings, even coming on the back of the worst recession since the 1930s.

“These figures prove what we have been saying throughout the recession – shoppers are looking for both value and values,” she said. “They are not simply looking for cheap food in tough times, they also expect the grocery industry to support their moral and ethical values.”

The survey also found swelling interest in Fairtrade goods, with 27 per cent saying they had bought it in the last month (up from 9 per cent in 2006), and 18 per cent reported buying products with high animal welfare standards (up from 12 per cent).

The full findings of the survey are published in the 2010 edition of IGD’s paid-for Shopper Trends report.

( from Food And Drink Europe by By Jess Halliday, 02-Feb-2010)

country life

Kathy McClean, California Market Bakery, Tandragee, Northern Ireland

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