Confused:
One in 10 young adults told researchers they believed eggs come from wheat or maize;
Two thousand people were asked to match staple foods - such as milk,
bacon, butter or oil - with pictures of the crop or animal they are made from. Four
in 10 young adults failed to link milk with an image of a dairy cow, with 7 per
cent of them associating it with wheat.
Two-thirds of the 16 to 23-year-olds
questioned were able to link eggs to a picture of a hen, but 11 per cent
thought they came from wheat or maize. Eight per cent of this age group
believed that bacon came from wheat, and another 2 per cent said it was made
from maize. Only half of young adults correctly identified that steak came from
beef cattle, with 12 per cent thinking it came from wheat or maize. Almost two-thirds of young adults did not
know that new potatoes would be available from British farms in June, and one
in 10 thought they took less than a month to grow.
The
report said, it was shocking lack of knowledge – when young adults responded
about the origin of most basic foods on their table. While 24 per cent of all respondents knew
that salad dressing could come from rapeseed oil, only 6 per cent of young
adults were able to make the connection. In spite of the findings, 43 per cent
of 16 to 23-year-olds told researchers that they considered themselves knowledgeable
about where foods come from.
'Three
in ten adults born in the 1990s haven’t visited a farm in more than 10 years,
if at all, which is a real shame as our farmers not only play an important role
in food production but are passionate about engaging and reconnecting consumers
too.'
With
regards – S. Sampathkumar
30th Mar 2015.
