Double down on your chips!



With potato farmers and processors struggling, Belgians are being urged to eat more chips to offset a slump in demand during the coronavirus pandemic.

Belgium is the world’s largest exporter of chips and other frozen potato products, its processors converting 5.3 million tonnes of potatoes into fries, mash and crisps per year and sending them to customers in more than 160 countries.

Restrictions to halt the spread of the coronavirus have forced the closure of cafes and restaurants, the industry’s prime customers for fries, and processing firms have seen demand fall by as much as 80 per cent.

“We know Belgians like their fries, it’s intangible heritage our frying culture, so we ask Belgians to consume an extra portion of fries to allow us to process more potatoes and to avoid food waste,” said Romain Cools, secretary-general of industry group Belgapom.

Belgapom says worldwide demand for frozen fries has dropped by more than 40 per cent. The potato sectors in neighbouring France, Germany and the Netherlands are also facing problems.

In Belgium, some 750,000 tonnes of potatoes would not be processed this year as a result and they were varieties not suitable for other culinary uses. Some were being exported, some given to food banks, some fed to cattle and the rest converted into energy at biomass plants.

Belgian farmers were likely to lose 125 million euros of income, Cools said.

Cools urged Belgians to eat an extra portion of fries per week, cooking at home as well as going to stands selling fries, which have been allowed to stay open.

Many Belgians say the country invented fries but that U.S. troops stationed in the French-speaking part of Belgium during World War One mistakenly called them 'French fries'.

Author Details

247

Articles

View Profile

5

Followers

UnFollow
Follow

0

Following

UnBlock
Block

No profile data ....Read more

Login

Welcome! Login to your account




Lost your password?

Don't have an account? Register

Lost Password



Register

I agree to EULA terms and conditions.