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From matcha lattes to Dubai chocolate – how supermarkets fight to cope with TikTok trends

1 day ago
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TikTok’s algorithm is one of the great mysteries of the modern age.What it deems to be interesting is fed to millions of users, giving it huge cultural sway, from fashion to music and politics.It is also increasingly influencing what we eat.Supermarkets were once the trendsetters, studying popular items on restaurant menus and recreating them on their shelves.Now the big shops are the ones being influenced, says Zoe Simons, a brand development chef at Waitrose.

“The power has flipped,” she says,“Before, we relied on what was popular at restaurants or we had to wait months for data to come through,Now, because of TikTok and Instagram, our accuracy has gotten so much better,”It is not hard to spot this influence in action: matcha lattes, made from Japanese green tea, have exploded in popularity on social media, and now feature on menus at Pret a Manger, Starbucks and Gail’s,This week, Britain’s biggest bakery chain, Greggs, attributed better sales growth to a mac and cheese that “went viral on TikTok”, with a video of the snack played more than 3m times.

Perhaps most notably: the “Dubai chocolate” bar, invented by Sarah Hamouda, a British-Egyptian living in Dubai, became a huge viral hit.One video of a food influencer eating the bar, which contains a filling of pistachio cream and tahini with knafeh (a traditional Arab dessert), has more than 120m views on TikTok, which is owned by China’s ByteDance.Now supermarkets are using artificial intelligence tools that track online recipes, social media discussions and restaurant reviews to react faster to these trends.Where product development projects used to take months, products can hit the shelves in as little as a few weeks.The Dubai chocolate bar, for example, has inspired a range of pistachio treats from big shops in the UK.

Lidl launched its own version, as did Lindt, and when Waitrose launched it in March it imposed on customers a two-bar limit,But in the fields of the global agricultural sector – far from screen-addicted British shoppers, UK supermarkets or even TikTok’s headquarters in Singapore – producers are struggling to cope with the sudden, huge spikes caused by rapid food trends,The popularity of the Dubai chocolate bar has already contributed to a shortage in the green nut,In the past year, pistachio kernel prices have risen from €6,65 (£5.

59) a pound to €8.96 a pound, an increase of nearly 35%, according to the data monitor platform Tridge.It is on track to hit €10.80 a pound by the end of the year, Tridge said.That is despite the fact that production of the nut has expanded rapidly.

The US is now the biggest producer of pistachios in the world.American pistachio farms, which are mostly in California, collectively account for 43% of global production, making an even larger contribution in its category than America’s market share in its traditional agricultural exports such as corn, cheese and beef.It is a similar story in the matcha industry.A spike in demand for the green powder prompted tea companies Ippodo and Marukyu Koyamaen in Kyoto to impose purchase limits last year.That was again despite huge ramp-ups in production in an attempt to meet demand: Japan produced 4,176 tonnes of matcha in 2023, nearly three times the quantity in 2010.

The shortage has not been easy to navigate for Hanife Hursit, a 25-year-old who three weeks ago opened a matcha and coffee shop with her father, Ram, in King’s Cross, London,“Right before my first stock, my suppliers said we might have to wait for a while,” she says,“The shortage is a big issue, it’s blown up everywhere,”But the opening of Frothee, Hursit’s cafe, attracted a huge queue of customers, mainly young women, on the first day,The young entrepreneur, who used to work as a social media manager and has a personal following of more than 19,000 accounts on TikTok, has built her menu around drinks and flavour combinations trending online.

They include strawberry, brown sugar and jasmin-flavoured matcha lattes.“I knew how much it had blown up online and I knew it was going to reach a peak where everyone loved matcha,” she says.Many of the drinks have been inspired by at-home recipes trending on TikTok, she adds.“Earl grey matcha is our bestseller by far,” she says.“Whatever I put on the menu was crafted by my For You page and also by what I love.

”The temptation to add pistachio flavours on her menu has been strong, but rapidly rising wholesale costs have been a barrier.“I said to our baker: ‘Should we try a pistachio product?’ But it’s just too expensive, even at wholesale prices.”The environmental cost may also prove to be another barrier for sellers in the future, Mzingaye Ndubiwa, a market analyst at Tridge, adds.“The pistachio nut is a water-intensive crop cultivated mainly in California or Iran, which are known for their drought-torn regions,” he says.“Ultimately leading to the overuse of groundwater, the increased demand from the international market puts immense stress on water systems that are already scarce.

”There are fears too that rapidly expanding the cultivation of a single crop, driven by social media trends, could contribute to deforestation for monoculture farming, which in turn harms wildlife.“Because of this, there is an increased reliance on herbicides and pesticides, which contaminate soil and water systems,” he said.“Trends steered by social media can fuel environmental decline if it disappears as quickly as it appeared.”
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Scottish Labour accused of trying to hide candidate’s link to scandal-hit firm

Labour is facing questions over transparency after it failed to disclose that a byelection candidate worked for a company previously embroiled in a data falsification scandal.The party has not told voters in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse byelection that its candidate, Davy Russell, worked as a consultant to a subsidiary of Mears Group in the neighbouring area of North Lanarkshire.Scottish Labour is facing defeat in the byelection, which was called after Christina McKelvie, the area’s popular Scottish National party MSP, died suddenly in March.Labour fears it may come in third behind Reform UK, which would send shock waves through the party. It would mark a significant reversal of fortunes for Labour since it won the adjacent Westminster seat of Rutherglen and Hamilton West by a landslide in October 2023

2 days ago
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Is Angela Rayner positioning herself for a Starmer succession race?

What is Angela Rayner up to? To every Labour MP reading the leaked memo in the Daily Telegraph setting out the deputy prime minister’s alternative tax-raising measures, it felt like firing the starting gun on a race to succeed Keir Starmer as leader.It has infuriated Starmer loyalists because of long memories of the breakdown in relations after Labour lost the Hartlepool byelection just a year into Starmer’s leadership, when he considered quitting and allies of Rayner encouraged her to stand against him. Starmer then attempted to demote her, leading to a fierce standoff and Rayner emerging with a clutch of new job titles.Relations have somewhat healed since then, but there is a feeling now that the deputy prime minister is once again seeming to try to capitalise on the party’s misfortunes – an allegation considered deeply unfair by those close to her.There is no doubt this memo setting out new ways of raising taxes on wealthy people as well as a proposal to clamp down on benefits for migrants is a way of trying to show her broader appeal

2 days ago
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Wildlife charities urge Labour to scrap ‘licence to kill nature’ in planning bill

Leading wildlife charities are calling on Labour to scrap a significant section of the planning bill that they say is a “licence to kill nature”, as new data reveals bats and newts are not the main reason planning is delayed in England.The RSPB and the Wildlife Trusts, whose membership is more than 2 million, said Labour had broken its promises on nature. They called for part three of the bill, which allows developers to avoid environmental laws at a site by paying into a national nature recovery fund to pay for environmental improvements elsewhere, to be ditched.Beccy Speight, CEO of the RSPB, said: “It’s now clear that the bill in its current form will rip the heart out of environmental protections and risks sending nature further into freefall.“The fate of our most important places for nature and the laws that protect them are all in the firing line

2 days ago
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UK politics: Starmer accused of being ‘beneath contempt’ for attack on Chagos deal critics – as it happened

James Cartlidge, the shadow defence secretary, is responding to Healey.He starts by saying that what Keir Starmer said at his press conference about opponents of the deal being on the side of Russia and China was “beneath contempt”.He says by opposing the Chagos Islands deal, the Tories would not be traitors, they would be patriots.The UK has signed a £3.4bn agreement to cede sovereignty over the Chagos Islands to Mauritius after an 11th-hour legal challenge failed

2 days ago
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Yeah but no but yeah but no but surrender. Life’s just one big betrayal for Kemi and co | John Crace

I fear for Kemi Badenoch’s sanity. She may need a little respite care. From herself. Little more than 24 hours after one of her by now customary car-crash outings at prime minister’s questions in which she didn’t appear to have noticed that Keir Starmer had U-turned on the winter fuel allowance, KemiKaze was emailing Tory party members to tell them the exciting news. She had had the prime minister on the rack and it was only down to her that Labour had done their reverse ferret

2 days ago
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Tories must ‘get moving’ on new policies or face crisis, says Robert Jenrick

The Conservative party needs to “get moving” with new policies or risk being cut adrift in a social media-informed world where people make up their minds quickly, Robert Jenrick has said.While the shadow justice secretary did not directly criticise Kemi Badenoch for the time she is taking to formulate policies, and said he accepted there was a need for reflection after a bad election defeat, he warned that without rapid action the Tories faced an “existential crisis”.Badenoch, who defeated Jenrick in the party leadership race last year, has attracted some criticism within the party for her insistence that the Conservatives should not rush into policies but instead spend the next couple of years working to rebuild voters’ trust.Asked about generating new polices at an event in London on Wednesday evening, Jenrick said: “I do think you’ve got to get moving. That’s not a criticism

3 days ago
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John Fletcher obituary

1 day ago
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The Guide #192: How reality TV and streaming has shaped 21st-century TV

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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s tax bill: ‘If this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one’

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Sónar festival hit with artist boycott over alleged links to Israel

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Republicans’ mega-bill: ‘Takes from the poor and gives to the rich, brazenly’

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’: ‘Like the husky guy at a male strip club’

4 days ago