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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Lockdown home cooking sees veg sales rocket

Supermarket chains and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ growers see jump in sales for greens such as leaks, sprouts, broccoli and cabbage

Workers harvest savoy cabbages at TH Clements near Boston in Lincolnshire(Image: Joe Giddens/PA)

More people cooking from scratch during lockdown has led to a rise in demand for fresh veg.

Supermarket chains and º£½ÇÊÓÆµ growers say they have seen sales rocket for greens such as leaks, sprouts, broccoli and cabbage.

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

Veganism and plant-based events such as Meat Free Mondays and Veganuary also contributed to the surge in sales of greens, according to Lincolnshire-based TH Clements.

The company, based near Boston, is one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest growers of greens such as sprouts, cabbage, broccoli and spring greens and is a supplier to supermarket giant Tesco.

Tesco said that since the first lockdown in March last year, it has seen increases in its sales of vegetables against the previous year, with the highest increase in leeks, with demand up by more than 30 per cent.

It has also seen increases in sales of cabbage, up nearly 25 per cent; broccoli, up 20 per cent; sprouts, up 10 per cent; kale, up 10 per cent; and spinach, up nearly 10 per cent.

TH Clements spokesman Richard Mowbray said: “In the last year, sales of greens have particularly soared and we are working with Tesco to manage the extra demand by planting more vegetables.