The National Trust reveals consumers need a leg up with farming knowledge
21 November 2011
The National Trust has revealed the results from a new
survey* which show that the vast majority (93 per cent) of people in Great
Britain don't know the best time of year to enjoy eating British lamb.
Only seven per cent of respondents correctly identified
autumn as the time for tucking into one of Britain 's favourites, with half (49
per cent) choosing spring as the best time to serve lamb - the time of year
when most lambs are born.
The research marks six months of the National Trust's mass
on-line MyFarm experiment at its 1,200 acre organic farm at Wimpole in
Cambridgeshire.
The innovative project aims to involve people in farming and
where their food comes from by enabling them to make decisions on a real
working farm.
An online straw poll of the MyFarm community revealed that
19 per cent knew the best time of year to enjoy lamb - more than double the
outcome of the wider non-subscriber survey - suggesting the experiment is
making useful progress.
Richard Morris, the National Trust's Farm Manager at
Wimpole, said: "Eating lamb when it's in season ensures consumers can
enjoy the meat at its best.
"Lambs born in the spring feed outside on grass
throughout the summer resulting in really flavoursome and tender meat.
"The lamb we see on our supermarket shelves in the
spring is either shipped in from abroad, or has been barn-reared out of season
without the benefit of maturing and developing naturally on grass."
Other results highlighted consumer confusion over hogget (a
mature lamb between one and two years old) with only 16 per cent of respondents
aware that hogget is meat from sheep.
It also revealed only 40 per cent of Britons buy British
lamb with 21 per cent buying its New Zealand relation and 16 per
cent just indiscriminately selecting whatever is on the supermarket shelves.
By contrast, 51 per cent of MyFarm subscribers could
identify hogget – three times as many as the wider survey - and 63 per cent
brought British lamb.
Richard Morris added: "The National Trust is the
country’s biggest farmer - more than 80 per cent of the 250,000 hectares of
land under our care is farmed in some way and we see it as our role to
re-connect people with farming and to encourage them to care more about where
their food comes from.
"We can do this via experiments such as MyFarm which
lift the lid on the realities of farming in the 21st Century."
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