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Monday, November 30, 2020

Irish fear loss of British potatoes post Brexit - POLITICO.eu

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DUBLIN — Potatoes are a staple food for the Irish, but many of their spuds come from Britain — and that supply chain is about to be smashed by Brexit.

The Irish Department of Agriculture warns that all British potatoes, including seed plants, will be banned from importation once transition arrangements end January 1.

Even in the event of a trade deal, the department has told growers, processors and distributors that the flow of British potatoes to Ireland will stop January 1 and not be restored for months, because Britain’s application to export potatoes “must go through the EU law-making process.”

Ireland’s food promotion agency, Bord Bia, says one in four Irish people visits their local “chipper” for this guilty-pleasure meal at least once a week.

Fast food chains are scrambling to find alternative sources for the 80,000 tons of British-made chips normally consumed in Ireland annually. Only about 10,000 tons of chip-grade potatoes are grown within Ireland.

“We’re looking to get as much homegrown stuff as we can but that might not be ready in time. We might have to go with smaller portions,” said Derek Duggan, manager of one of Ireland’s biggest and oldest fish-and-chip chains, Leo Burdocks, founded in 1913 when Ireland was still part of the U.K.

Most Irish-grown potato varieties are good for baking and mashing, but are too high in sugar content to deep-fry well. Such chips can turn out as stiff as cardboard because they don’t absorb oil effectively. High sugar content also can mean the chips turn dark in hue, not the desired golden brown.

Duggan said Irish-supplied potatoes used to make chips would taste differently and “won’t be as crisp, sadly … We might have to alter the salt and vinegar and what we do with the sauces."

Potato producers along England’s east coast grow chip-friendly varieties such as Maris Piper, but Ireland’s own potato crop is heavily dependent on imported seed potatoes from Britain. Scotland supplies around three-fifths of Irish needs.

Thomas McKeown, chairman of the Irish Farmers Association’s Potato Committee which represents 600 commercial farms, said Brexit might force Ireland to start producing more of its own spuds again.

“People are amazed when they hear we import so many potatoes from abroad,” McKeown said.

“Farmers are very good at doom and gloom, but there are opportunities here,” he said. “It might help restart the seed industry here and make the public more aware of where their seeds and potatoes come from."

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December 01, 2020 at 03:08AM
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Irish fear loss of British potatoes post Brexit - POLITICO.eu

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