Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Declining Potato sales - Very Serious

«1345

Comments

  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 19,947 Mod ✭✭✭✭Leg End Reject




  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    Potato.ie :D:D:D:D

    Yes that's it, what is the problem here?

    Have you an idea to make potato hip and trendy with the millennials??


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,995 ✭✭✭Ipso


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »
    Potato.ie :D:D:D:D

    Yes that's it, what is the problem here?

    Have you an idea to make potato hip and trendy with the millennials??

    Serve it on a slate with avocado, and maybe along with the food they invented: bacon.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,596 ✭✭✭✭rob316


    It's down because of all the diet experts saying you should eat low carb or swap it for sweet potato. A load of bollox really. My grandmother has fed her children and grandchildren a staple daily diet of steamed spuds and none are obese or even overweight.

    Always room in my house for a baked, roast or mashed potato.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,052 ✭✭✭This is it


    Jaysus I love spuds. Mash spuds, boiled spuds, baked spuds, and most of all, proper roast spuds.


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 19,947 Mod ✭✭✭✭Leg End Reject


    Get a few sexy looking spuds to set up Instagram accounts and get a few celebrities to like their pictures.

    Maybe Mr. Tayto could be the first?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,596 ✭✭✭✭rob316


    Mashed spuds or baked with real butter. Cant bait it


  • Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 13,348 Mod ✭✭✭✭JupiterKid


    How can anyone not like the humble spud? Boiled, fried, roasted, chipped, sauteed, mashed, shredded etc. So much variety.

    I know I'm going to sound like a grumpy old fogey (I'm 44) but I honestly think Millenials are the most cosseted and spoilt generation of adults ever.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,995 ✭✭✭Ipso


    This is it wrote: »
    Jaysus I love spuds. Mash spuds, boiled spuds, baked spuds, and most of all, proper roast spuds.

    Or the new ones with the skin on and served with fresh mackerel.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,092 ✭✭✭OU812


    Get a few sexy looking spuds to set up Instagram accounts and get a few celebrities to like their pictures.

    Maybe Mr. Tayto could be the first?

    They tried that before...

    https://images.app.goo.gl/cqp6Qye8DNLyensw6


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,342 ✭✭✭Filmer Paradise


    Dug up a few from the garden yesterday and had a few this evening.

    Mashed up with butter.

    Lovely.:D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    I hear ye saying ye all love spuds etc etc
    But are any of ye Millennials??

    But on a Friday night are ye having a Chinese takeaway, pizza or a lovely baked potato with yere beers?

    How many potatoes do ye actually buy?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 72,190 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    They estimate my age group buys 70+KG of spuds a year. If I buy 3x 2.5KG bags its a big buying year; and I won't use all of them. And thats for two of us.


    No interest in my mothers standard slop of defrosted something and boiled spuds; and I suspect plenty others my age were fed the same. I cook what I want and is quite rare it has potatoes in it.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 19,947 Mod ✭✭✭✭Leg End Reject


    OU812 wrote: »

    I wouldn't consider Amanda Brunker to be a sexy spud.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    L1011 wrote: »
    They estimate my age group buys 70+KG of spuds a year. If I buy 3x 2.5KG bags its a big buying year; and I won't use all of them. And thats for two of us.


    No interest in my mothers standard slop of defrosted something and boiled spuds; and I suspect plenty others my age were fed the same. I cook what I want and is quite rare it has potatoes in it.

    What age are you?

    Would you not get into baked stuffed potatoes with cheese and ham? We all need to buy and eat more potato


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 72,190 ✭✭✭✭L1011


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »
    What age are you?

    Would you not get into baked stuffed potatoes with cheese and ham? We all need to buy and eat more potato

    30s.

    I can cook nicer things than baked potatoes in the same time.


    The idea of a destroyed overcooked veg and spuds with desiccated meat dinner is something you need to be either quite old or quite rural to actually think you like - that's what they're worried about losing as people die off.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,052 ✭✭✭This is it


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »
    I hear ye saying ye all love spuds etc etc
    But are any of ye Millennials??

    But on a Friday night are ye having a Chinese takeaway, pizza or a lovely baked potato with yere beers?

    How many potatoes do ye actually buy?

    If the definition is as per your OP, yes, I'm a millennial.

    Weekend would be mostly snacks, sandwiches, salads, especially in this weather. Spuds during the week or for dinner of a Sunday


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,596 ✭✭✭✭rob316


    I'll tell ya one thing they taste an awful lot better than ****ing avocado. I couldn't pretend to like that muck.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    Spuds are like bricks you can make anything amazing with them so long as you're creative enough! -- Dia Anseo 2019


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,423 ✭✭✭✭Outlaw Pete


    ... let's call the whole thing off.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    We should all start eating potato for breakfast

    Here are recipes for breakfast potatoes

    https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.thekitchn.com/15-breakfast-potato-recipes-to-start-your-morning-right-224645%3famp=1


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 582 ✭✭✭Hobosan


    JupiterKid wrote: »
    I know I'm going to sound like a grumpy old fogey (I'm 44) but I honestly think Millenials are the most cosseted and spoilt generation of adults ever.

    Maria Bailey.

    She'd be around your age wouldn't she? :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,597 ✭✭✭gctest50


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »

    Board Bia have launched a multi million euro campaign to get Millennials (18 to 34 years) to get buying and eating more potatoes.....

    Bord Bia just love spending other peoples money

    I don't see the need/problem

    If people are not eating potatoes, they are eating veg etc - still has to be grown


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,431 ✭✭✭Airyfairy12


    I love creamy mashed potato with loads of butter and salt, its lovely with baked salmon and veg.
    Also love a good potato salad, mashed potatoes and mayonnaise are lovely mixed together, also love a baked potato loaded with butter and salt and a big dollop of coleslaw or cream cheese.
    That said I never buy a big bag of them, only buy the small packets and only every couple of weeks, my parents would buy a big sack weekly which would be empty by the end of the week, I know if I bought a sack they would just go off and be thrown in the bin.
    Ive been mostly buying sweet potatoes the last few years because theyre more nutrient dense than average spuds and theyre just as cheap. I dont see the point in making two different types of spuds for dinner, they wont all be eaten and will thrown in the bin, I dont like wasting food so dont buy the normal ones very often as theres no point.

    I think that maybe millennial's are a bit more adventurous with our food compared to how our parents where? I dont remember getting anything other than toast, porridge or cereal for breakfast, cheese sandwiches or potato waffles for lunch and lasagna, spaghetti bolognese, chips and an egg, stew or meat spuds and veg for dinner. It was all fairly basic.
    I didn't see a prawn till I was 17 and I didnt know what it was, First time I heard of and bought an avocado was at 15 after I read in a beauty book thats its good if you put one in your hair, I didn't know what it was and had to ask someone in the Supermarket if they had any and to show me where they were as I didnt know what they looked like.
    It wasnt until the internet, having unlimited access to recipes and professional cooking videos and information on different types of foods that I started discovering all these new foods that were tasty, cheap and high in nutrients and that's when I started buying Avocados and different foods that I never would have heard of before and never got growing up.



    I dont think it comes down to a generation of spoiled adults as one poster suggested, I think we just have access to allot more information regarding food and diet so we're able to make more informed decisions about the food we buy.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 31,510 ✭✭✭✭freshpopcorn




    I think that maybe millennial's are a bit more adventurous with our food compared to how our parents where? I dont remember getting anything other than toast, porridge or cereal for breakfast, cheese sandwiches or potato waffles for lunch and lasagna, spaghetti bolognese, chips and an egg, stew or meat spuds and veg for dinner. It was all fairly basic.

    Your parents were adventurous!


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 7,466 ✭✭✭blinding


    I hear that when you have sex on a pile of potatoes you feel more ball-sy .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,404 ✭✭✭✭rainbowtrout


    L1011 wrote: »
    30s.

    I can cook nicer things than baked potatoes in the same time.


    The idea of a destroyed overcooked veg and spuds with desiccated meat dinner is something you need to be either quite old or quite rural to actually think you like - that's what they're worried about losing as people die off.

    Bit snobbish to say that people don’t like the food they eat.

    And it’s perfectly possible to cook tasty veg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 133 ✭✭AuldDaysul


    Bit snobbish to say that people don’t like the food they eat.

    And it’s perfectly possible to cook tasty veg

    No no you just don't know it's muck you're eating, you must be old or rural


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,880 ✭✭✭Canis Lupus


    L1011 wrote: »
    30s.

    The idea of a destroyed overcooked veg and spuds with desiccated meat dinner is something you need to be either quite old or quite rural to actually think you like - that's what they're worried about losing as people die off.

    I think you're doing it wrong.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 508 ✭✭✭d8491prj5boyvg


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »
    Board Bia have launched a multi million euro campaign to get Millennials (18 to 34 years) to get buying and eating more potatoes.

    https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/millennials-targeted-in-1m-makeover-for-the-humble-spud-1.3829357%3fmode=amp

    Seemingly the perception of the potato has fallen out of favour with millennials as they are perceived to be fattening and time consuming to cook.

    This campaign aims to rid those false perceptions. Like did you know a potato has more potassium than a banana?

    There's 142 potato recipes on potato.ie

    Do you eat potato ?
    Do you buy bags of potatoes often? Why not?

    How can we make the potato sexy and trendy like the Avocado?

    I'd say the majority are eating fewer which is no harm. Middle aged Irish boomers have bellies, too many carbs.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,717 ✭✭✭YFlyer


    Weren't they the crowd that complaint about people on a vegan diet.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,220 ✭✭✭✭m5ex9oqjawdg2i


    JupiterKid wrote: »
    I know I'm going to sound like a grumpy old fogey (I'm 44) but I honestly think Millenials are the most cosseted and spoilt generation of adults ever.

    It's exactly what our parents said about our generation, and the millenials will say the same about the next generation etc etc.

    Our grandparents had potatoes every day because they didn't have an option, nothing wrong with rice or pasta or even no carbs, shock horror.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,880 ✭✭✭✭Tell me how


    L1011 wrote: »
    No interest in my mothers standard slop of defrosted something and boiled spuds; and I suspect plenty others my age were fed the same. I cook what I want and is quite rare it has potatoes in it.
    L1011 wrote: »
    The idea of a destroyed overcooked veg and spuds with desiccated meat dinner is something you need to be either quite old or quite rural to actually think you like - that's what they're worried about losing as people die off.

    I have a feeling there's something else you want to talk about.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    Nothing wrong with rice or pasta at all, but they are not vegetables. :) potatoes are a veg too. They have a load of vitamins and minerals, which makes them a step above the other carbs.


    A steamed potato in its skin, alongside a salad and grilled fresh mackerel is my favourite summer food. Fresh, delicious, healthy, environmentally conscious. Zero air miles, all grown or caught within 10 miles. Best food in the world.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,351 ✭✭✭✭super_furry


    Think it's just a case of more options and exposure to other foods. When I was a kid my Mam would buy a big sack of potatoes each week and we'd pretty much have them in some form or another seven days a week. Now I buy spuds much less frequently and maybe have them once a week.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,068 ✭✭✭Unearthly


    Great food. Still a big part of my diet


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭The Bishop Basher


    L1011 wrote: »
    The idea of a destroyed overcooked veg and spuds with desiccated meat dinner is something you need to be either quite old or quite rural to actually think you like - that's what they're worried about losing as people die off.

    I’m sorry you were subjected to that but don’t assume we all were. Even now in her 80’s my mother is still a phenomenal cook and I’m still learning things from her. Only this weekend she was passing on her recipes to my two grown up daughters and not a spud in sight.
    I dont think it comes down to a generation of spoiled adults as one poster suggested, I think we just have access to allot more information regarding food and diet so we're able to make more informed decisions about the food we buy.

    Eh, us “oldies” have access to the internet too you know and we are also well capable of finding information about our food along with recipes, diet tips and we can even make informed decisions about the food we buy. I hate to break it to you but your generation aren’t special or unique in any of this regard.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 433 ✭✭Dia_Anseo


    I love creamy mashed potato with loads of butter and salt, its lovely with baked salmon and veg.
    Also love a good potato salad, mashed potatoes and mayonnaise are lovely mixed together, also love a baked potato loaded with butter and salt and a big dollop of coleslaw or cream cheese.
    That said I never buy a big bag of them, only buy the small packets and only every couple of weeks, my parents would buy a big sack weekly which would be empty by the end of the week, I know if I bought a sack they would just go off and be thrown in the bin.
    Ive been mostly buying sweet potatoes the last few years because theyre more nutrient dense than average spuds and theyre just as cheap. I dont see the point in making two different types of spuds for dinner, they wont all be eaten and will thrown in the bin, I dont like wasting food so dont buy the normal ones very often as theres no point.

    I think that maybe millennial's are a bit more adventurous with our food compared to how our parents where? I dont remember getting anything other than toast, porridge or cereal for breakfast, cheese sandwiches or potato waffles for lunch and lasagna, spaghetti bolognese, chips and an egg, stew or meat spuds and veg for dinner. It was all fairly basic.
    I didn't see a prawn till I was 17 and I didnt know what it was, First time I heard of and bought an avocado was at 15 after I read in a beauty book thats its good if you put one in your hair, I didn't know what it was and had to ask someone in the Supermarket if they had any and to show me where they were as I didnt know what they looked like.
    It wasnt until the internet, having unlimited access to recipes and professional cooking videos and information on different types of foods that I started discovering all these new foods that were tasty, cheap and high in nutrients and that's when I started buying Avocados and different foods that I never would have heard of before and never got growing up.



    I dont think it comes down to a generation of spoiled adults as one poster suggested, I think we just have access to allot more information regarding food and diet so we're able to make more informed decisions about the food we buy.

    Did anyone read this essay?

    If so, please give me the gist of it, Thanks!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭The Bishop Basher


    Dia_Anseo wrote: »
    Did anyone read this essay?

    If so, please give me the gist of it, Thanks!

    Well they had to ask what an avocado looked like despite having the Internet but apparently us “oldies” just eat spuds all day because we don’t have the Internet to look up avocados.

    Something like that..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,171 ✭✭✭enricoh


    Had new queens from rush with the grub yesterday - dynamite. Pasta me arse!


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,122 ✭✭✭killanena


    I'm 26 and have a kids and we buy a bag of spuds most weeks. If I was single I wouldn't bother because they'd only flower before I'd get to use them. Most my friends my age tend not to cook for themselves often and live off eating out or takeaway's.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,149 ✭✭✭Tammy!


    I'm mid thirties and have potatoes around three or four times a week. When I was younger, we had potatoes practically every day.

    On a Friday, youd have chips. You couldn't beat my mother's homemade chips from the chip pan. As another poster said, it's just more variety.

    I say bring back Seamus and Shiela....



  • Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 23,239 Mod ✭✭✭✭GLaDOS


    I'll probably get lynched for this, but yeah I find potatos fairly boring tbh. I'll eat them once, occasionally twice, a week, but more out of convenience then anything else.

    The best potatos are usually so smothered in butter or other toppings you can barely taste the potato.

    Cake, and grief counseling, will be available at the conclusion of the test



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,684 ✭✭✭Fionn1952


    I would've grown up with some sort of spuds at least five or six days a week, pasta and rice being eaten occasionally. The mother was a wonderful cook, so we all ate well. I've no problem at all with the humble spud, but I'd eat a much broader range of food than I grew up with.

    Often getting in from work, the last thing I want to do is peel a clatter of spuds and steam them when I could cook fresh pasta in four minutes (or make fresh pasta in the time it would take to make the spuds).

    That said, wouldn't dream of having my Saturday morning fry without a bit of boxty or potato bread.

    Bit sad for some to use it as an excuse to rant about millennial mind - as time has gone on, even my old man, who was firmly a meat and spuds man, has massively diversified his eating habits, purely due to the increased availability of a wider range of foods.

    No matter how some yearn for it, the 1970s were sh*te, and we're not going back.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    Need exciting varieties, blue ones, purple ones, small and sassy with a hint of gluten free about them!

    Spuds are seen as boring as they are used as filler rather than a genuine feature of a meal.


  • Posts: 13,712 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It's nothing to do with being cool. We're lazy about potatoes. When most people think potatoes they think 'Roosters' -- a frankly disgusting, charmless, bland spud. Yet it dominates the market.

    Most of the interesting potatoes are imported. Most pre-made chips are also, apparently, imported. Most seeds are imported -- why??

    The potato farmer needn't give out about milennials giving up spuds, they just need to improve their offering. We are not going to stay eating roosters forever.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,461 ✭✭✭Bob Harris


    You can't have Waffles without potatoes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 24,737 ✭✭✭✭Alf Veedersane


    Middle aged Irish boomers have bellies, too many carbs.

    This is partly why people eat fewer potatoes.

    If someone has a belly, it's not because they eat potatoes. It's because they eat too much across the whole day.

    Nothing wrong with potatoes and they don't make people fat


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,220 ✭✭✭✭m5ex9oqjawdg2i


    People who say spuds are boring are doing it wrong. It's such a versatile vegetable, and the choice in Ireland is quite good. In other countries there's just variants of the same bloody potato.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,634 ✭✭✭✭Graces7


    Have a look at the meal photos on the food forum here on boards. ie

    Few potatoes there. Not trendy enough :rolleyes:

    Buying less here as growing more.


  • Advertisement
Advertisement