The death of the potato crisp? Shoppers switch to 'healthier' nachos and biscuits
Version 0 of 1. For decades, prawn cocktail, salt and vinegar and cheese and onion were staple flavours of the British lunchbox. But it appears that the potato crisp is in decline. A snack industry survey shows that alternative, non-fried savoury snacks including tortilla chips, and biscuits such as Mini Cheddars, are now selling outselling crisps in Britain. The UK crisp market is worth £923.2 million, down 2 per cent in the past year, according to the Grocer magazine. The volume of crisps sold dropped 0.4pc to 132,000 tons. Sales of biscuits and tortillas, meanwhile, rose to £947.9 million, up 4.1pc. The crisp trade has been hit by discount retailers Aldi and Lidl marketing snacks other than crisp, deflation and a bumper potato harvest, the report says. |