Posts Tagged “salad kits”

Don’t Let all the Kale Talk Fool You

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DSCN7651Despite all the hoopla in the media over the latest trendy vegetable – kale – head lettuce remains much more popular with American consumers.

At first glance, it looks like kale has taken over the American palate. The number of times restaurants have mentioned iceberg lettuce as a menu ingredient in salads has dropped 17 percent in the last three years, according to research from the market-research firm Mintel. Mentions of kale are “off the charts,” said Caleb Bryant, a food-industry analyst at Mintel. “Kale is just exploding in all restaurants, whether it be salad or roasted kale,” he said.  And on store shelves, there is a similar rise in kale products, from kale chips to kale smoothies and juices, he said.

The mentions of kale from 2014 to 2015 as an ingredient in salads jumped 63 percent; before 2014, mentions of kale were so infrequent that there aren’t even kale-and-iceberg comparable data, Bryant said.

American are eating a lot more iceberg (head) lettuce, even though kale appears to be far more popular on menus.  The U.S. either produced or imported 13.5 pounds of iceberg per capita for use in 2015, a drop from 20.9 pounds per person in 2005, according to the USDA.  Kale, meanwhile, has remained relatively steady for the last decade, with the U.S. producing and importing just 0.6 pounds of kale per person in 2015, up from 0.4 pounds per person in 2005.

Pre-made salads and salad kits at grocery stores have increased in popularity, and many contain at least some iceberg  Plus, iceberg is an ingredient in foods that aren’t salads, such as wraps, he said. Iceberg also has a long shelf life and a resistance to turning brown, which may be attractive to restaurants and companies that produce bagged salads.

It will take some time for the kale trend to really change what farmers are producing, because it takes time for Americans to acquire a bigger appetite for it.  Agriculture specialists are constantly analyzing restaurant and retail patterns and trying to anticipate what new products are becoming popular.  However, even when they can predict a trend, farmers need several years to build up a sufficient supply of seeds and to dedicate land to grow a new crop.

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