From all the fast food outlets on our streets, a stranger to these shores might think all we ate was take-aways. Far from it. Of course, take aways are popular, but, as we've seen elsewhere on this site, we're a million miles away from the stereotypes of "meat and two veg" and "fish 'n' chips". And it's not just what we eat that is changing; it's also how we shop for it.
Most people in the UK embrace the ease and choice supermarkets offer. However, we're becoming increasingly aware that there are types and styles of food, seen on TV, eaten on holiday, or read about in Sunday newspaper supplements, that these supermarkets don’t provide. So, while we might buy our daily food from supermarkets, we're also shopping in other places for exotic extras and organic and traditional fare. One of the most popular of these places are farmers' markets.
The markets are lively affairs. They're usually held on Saturday mornings, and attract all sorts of people; the dedicated foodie hunting down obscure ingredients, passers by, drawn in by the smell of sizzling burgers, or maybe the wax jacket brigade, enjoying seeing part of the country in the city. Indeed, the stalls, stocked with produce from the countryside, the sometimes cheeky banter between the stallholder and the customer and the friendly atmosphere can be at odds with their urban settings. These markets are modern affairs, though, given an edge by the trendy new foods, or the flyers for the farms, with their website addresses on them. |