Canadians Are Being Asked To Eat More French Fries

Iron Woode

Elite Member
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Oct 10, 1999
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I just saw this news piece today and thought it would fit in here on AT.


Simultaneously crisp and tender, steamy and salty, it’s hard to beat french fries fresh from the fryer. Delivery fries, like homemade oven fries, just aren’t the same. It’s only natural that proper french fries would be up there on many people’s lists of most-missed foods during lockdown.

Our collective longing makes it all the more painful to know that around 200 million pounds — more than 90 million kilograms — of Canadian french fry potatoes are stuck in storage.

As counterintuitive as it may seem, with so many people gravitating towards comfort food cooking, french-fried potatoes have become a slow mover. With many restaurants across the country closed due to COVID-19 — where three-quarters of Canadian potatoes are usually eaten — the market for fries has diminished dramatically.

French fry potatoes are a special breed of spud, larger and more elongated than the varieties commonly available in the produce sections at your local grocers. Their raison d’être is to be cut into batons and packed into bags for food service. They were bred and grown specifically for the fryer.

Regular potatoes and potato chips have both been flying off the shelves during the pandemic, says Kevin MacIsaac, general manager of the United Potato Growers of Canada. Sales of potato chips are up about 23 per cent compared to last year, and people are buying “substantially” more fresh table potatoes as well. But french fry potatoes are on the other end of the sales spectrum. There’s a big difference between the volume of fries typically sold at quick-service restaurants across the country, MacIsaac says, and the number of orders being placed today through drive-thrus and delivery apps.

As a result of the diminished demand from restaurants, millions of pounds of potatoes are at risk of being thrown away. Planting for the 2020 harvest has been reduced, MacIsaac says, and processing companies have told farmers to store their french fry potatoes until there’s a need for them again. Quick-frozen, they could easily last for a year, explains MacIsaac, but low consumption, coupled with the fact that more potatoes are coming in the fall, means space “is a major issue.”

A similar situation in Belgium has led to a request many on this side of the Altantic would be more than willing to oblige. With nearly 750,000 tons of potatoes at risk of being wasted, Belgian farmers are asking people to do their part and eat fries twice a week.
“We’re working with supermarkets to see whether we can launch a campaign asking Belgians to do something for the sector by eating fries — especially frozen fries — twice a week during the coronavirus crisis,” Romain Cools of growers’ union Belgapom told CNBC. “What we are trying to do is to avoid food waste, because every lost potato is a loss.”

MacIsaac applauds the effort, but given the volume of Canadian potatoes that need to find fryers, putting a dent in the surplus is a daunting task that will likely take more than a twice-weekly commitment from Canadian potato lovers. The average farm can store roughly eight million pounds (3.6 million kilograms) of spuds, he emphasizes — that’s 80,000 ten-pound bags of potatoes.

“It’s an excellent idea,” MacIsaac says of the Belgian appeal. “(But) that’s a lot of potatoes in that one storage on one farm. So that’s a lot of potatoes to deal with,” he says. “But it’s a good concept. It’s amazing the response that I’ve had in the past few days. People saying, ‘How can we help?’”

So, I will do my part as a patriotic Canadian and start buying more frozen french fries.

:D
 

ponyo

Lifer
Feb 14, 2002
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Not a problem unique to Canada. Belgium asked people to do the same.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/28/cor...o-eat-fries-twice-a-week-during-lockdown.html

I said this would happen in the coronavirus thread when I saw the same thing happen in South Korea. I said then we would see the same problem everywhere. You can pretty much look at things that happened in China and South Korea and sort of predict what's going to happen here and elsewhere. They went through everything we're going through lot earlier.
 

Iron Woode

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Super Moderator
Oct 10, 1999
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Not a problem unique to Canada. Belgium asked people to do the same.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/04/28/cor...o-eat-fries-twice-a-week-during-lockdown.html

I said this would happen in the coronavirus thread when I saw the same thing happen in South Korea. I said then we would see the same problem everywhere. You can pretty much look at things that happened in China and South Korea and sort of predict what's going to happen here and elsewhere. They went through everything we're going through lot earlier.
we are also having major issues with livestock now. Cargil Meat Plant has shutdown in Alberta. They are the biggest meat processing plant in Canada. The union is trying to fight its reopening. Pork producers are panicking now due to Quebec pork processing plants shutting down. This is not going to end well.
 

Exterous

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Jun 20, 2006
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I love potatoes so I'll see if I can do my part. Too bad anything I make will pale compared to a proper Belgium fry
 
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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
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Lot of people on my FB feed decided to start taking up running and post their progress every couple days.

I need to start doing the same thing, but with poutine.


I find a lot of this stuff boils down to politics. I'm sure they could easily ship off the excess to places that are poor, but due to liability and all that BS and probably the insurance companies, and other rules and regulations, they can't do that.
 

NoTine42

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Sep 30, 2013
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I wonder if closed schools are also part of the problem. In the US, the potato can count a vegetable, so the weight of a big serving of fries counts as healthier than an entree made with several fresh vegetables.
 

OccamsToothbrush

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Aug 21, 2005
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we are also having major issues with livestock now. Cargil Meat Plant has shutdown in Alberta. They are the biggest meat processing plant in Canada. The union is trying to fight its reopening. Pork producers are panicking now due to Quebec pork processing plants shutting down. This is not going to end well.

The end of Hawaiian pizza 'tis a consummation devoutly to be wished. Awww shit, no, wait, didn't think that through. We need to keep the pork processing plants open and shut down the pineapple processing plants.
 
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sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
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The end of Hawaiian pizza 'tis a consummation devoutly to be wished. Awww shit, no, wait, didn't think that through. We need to keep the pork processing plants open and shut down the pineapple processing plants.


Except Hawaiian Pizza was invented in Canada by a Greek immigrant. No way Canadians will stop eating it.

And you know fresh(ish) pineapple are shipped here as well right?
 

KMFJD

Lifer
Aug 11, 2005
28,434
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We get it - you have terrible taste in food

:D
20953363_2061942057362071_8567580865046943327_n.jpg


soo f'n good!
 

MtnMan

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Jul 27, 2004
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I have discovered that under "stay home" orders, I have shed some extra weight, just over 10 pounds so far. I always thought it was the beer that kept the weight on, but that is not it. If anything my beer consumption has gone up even from going to breweries 2 - 3 times a week. What is missing is fries from eating from food trucks at the breweries.
 

snoopy7548

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Jan 1, 2005
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I have discovered that under "stay home" orders, I have shed some extra weight, just over 10 pounds so far. I always thought it was the beer that kept the weight on, but that is not it. If anything my beer consumption has gone up even from going to breweries 2 - 3 times a week. What is missing is fries from eating from food trucks at the breweries.

I've been eating more (still going to work) but not going to the gym, and I'm probably about even. I have been running once or twice a week, and doing a short body-weight exercise routine; I can now do three sets of 24 pushups instead of a couple of sets of 14. I'm gonna be huge.