You are receiving this pop-up because this is the first time you are visiting our site. If you keep getting this message, please enable cookies in your browser.
You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).
As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site. Thanks!
You are receiving this pop-up because this is the first time you are visiting our site. If you keep getting this message, please enable cookies in your browser.
UK: Tesco unites potato suppliers to cut food waste
British retail chain Tesco has announced it will bring potato suppliers, Branston and Samsworths, together to reduce food waste, by using all their production for mashed and prepared meals.
Mark Little, head of the Food Waste Reduction department, explains on Tesco’s blog that potatoes come in all shapes and sizes and, previously, some of the extremely “wonky” ones would get left in the field. To solve the problem, the retail chain takes now more potatoes than ever before, with its “Perfectly Imperfect Range” programme.
“We buy all of Branston’s potato crop, with most of it going into our potato ranges. The rest are peeled and sent to Samworths to be mashed and used in our own-brand ready meals. This increases the amount of the crop used and saves edible produce from being ploughed back into the field. It also secures a consistent supply of great mash for our customers,” Mark Little writes.
He mentions that Tesco is bringing together two of its suppliers to prevent wasting perfectly edible potatoes, as part of the company’s work to reduce food waste and tackle food poverty.
“But we wanted to go further, so we brought our grower Branston together with our ready meal supplier Samworths to use those “wonky” spuds as mash. Potatoes don’t have to be beautiful to taste lovely,” he writes.