The UK's food history revealed through five generations of data (2024)

For the first time official records of what people ate and how they survived during rationing have been published by Defra. They show 1940s Brits ate seasonally and bought food from butchers, bakers and grocers rather than supermarkets.

Salmon sandwiches, tinned fruit with evaporated milk, fish on Fridays and ham salad for high tea every Sunday were frequently on the menu for 1950s families. People ate four meals a day and relied on gardens and allotments to grow more than double the amount of food they bought.

An appetite for easy to prepare meals began in the mid-1950s, the new data reveals, with convenience foods accounting for nearly a fifth of families spend on food. As technology started to improve and more women began to work full-time - frozen foods, ready meals and takeaways began to transform the British diet.

Environment Secretary Andrea Leadsom said:

This is more than just cosy nostalgia – everyone now has access to this hoard of rich data which shows how technology and social change have transformed our diets over five generations. While foodie fads have come and gone, it’s interesting to have seen a recent revival of fresh, British grown, seasonal foods – though today it is through choice, unlike the necessity of the 40s and 50s.

Our Great British Food campaign is all about championing British produce, at home and abroad, and highlighting the exciting and diverse regional cuisine all around the country. It’s also about backing our world leading food and farming industry that already generates £100 billion for our economy and employs one in eight people. In my role as Environment Secretary I will be doing all I can to make sure the industry goes from strength to strength.

For more than 70 years, families across Britain have filled out in-depth diaries of their weekly food and drink purchases for the National Food Survey.

Today (1 September 2016) Defra has published the oldest versions of the survey reports from the 1940s when Britain’s food supply was controlled by rations to the 1970s when technology had advanced and kitchens were equipped with freezers.

Learn more about current British food and farming - including what we grow, sell and eat in 2016.

In the 1940s rural households relied on gardens and allotments to provide more than 92% of their fruit and vegetables in winter and 98% in summer. This ranged hugely with urban households who grew 12% of their fruit and vegetables in winter and 49% in summer. About a third of the household income was spent on food in 1940 compared to 12% nowadays.

Rationing carried on until the mid-1950s, indeed, when the Queen came to the throne in 1952, sugar, butter, cheese, margarine, cooking fat, bacon, meat and tea were all still rationed.

Our hunger for quick and easy meals had rapidly grown by the 1960s. Frozen peas had grown in popularity and the consumption of flour, a cupboard must-have for decades, started to fall. As more families were able to buy fridges and freezers in the 1970s, the popularity of convenience food reached a new level and by the end of the decade, almost all families across the country (95%) owned a fridge.

Back in 1952 nearly half of all households ate no meals outside of the home and only one fifth ate one dinner a week out. By 1983, the average person ate three meals a week outside of the home.

This data also shows social change through the years - the person filling out the questionnaire was no longer described as a “housewife” in 1991 and instead the “main diary keeper”.

The National Food Survey was established by what was then known as the Ministry of Food in 1940 to establish what people were eating and how much they spent on food during the Second World War.

The survey was mainly directed at workers living in urban areas at first, but in 1950 it was expanded to be a national survey.

This new set of data is part of #OpenDefra – the biggest ever government data giveaway which has seen 11,007 open datasets published already. More than a third of the Government’s total open data has been released by Defra.

The UK's food history revealed through five generations of data (2024)

FAQs

What is the food history of United Kingdom? ›

Since the Neolithic period, many types of food have become available to people living in the British Isles. The Romans brought a variety of exotic foods, and European exploration of other parts of the world led to imports of new foodstuffs such as potatoes, tomatoes, sugar and chocolate.

How much of the UK's food is produced in the UK? ›

The UK produces only 60% of the food it consumes. The vast majority of imports and exports are with other Western European countries. Farming is subsidised, with subsidies to farmers totalling more than £3 billion (after deduction of levies).

What food is the UK known for? ›

Traditional British dishes include full breakfast, roast dinner, fish and chips, toad in the hole and shepherd's pie. Traditional desserts include trifle, scones, apple pie, sticky toffee pudding and Victoria sponge cake. Cheddar cheese originated in the village of Cheddar in Somerset.

What is the food availability in the UK? ›

The UK maintains domestic production of all food available in the UK at around 60% of consumption and indigenous food at 73% (2022 figures) and continues to see rising productivity, while there is strong global production and trade of food that the UK can access through its diverse supply chains.

What is the UK's national food? ›

As well as there is no single official National Day in the UK, there is not one single national dish of Britain, mainly because the UK is made up of four separate countries, each of which have their own national dishes: Chicken Tikka Masala in England; Haggis in Scotland; Welsh Cawl in Wales; and Irish Stew in Ireland.

Where does UK food come from? ›

Overall, the UK's food supply is concentrated on the UK and Europe, with over 80% of supply coming from these main sources. The remainder is mostly spread between Africa, Asia, North America, and South America.

What is the UK famous meal? ›

According to this survey the 25 greatest British dishes of all time include: Fish and chips – 58% Roast beef and Yorkshire puddings – 42% The full English breakfast – 40%

What are 3 popular foods in England? ›

The top dishes in their rankings include:
  • Fish and chips.
  • Roast chicken.
  • English breakfast.
  • Soup.
  • Bangers and mash.
  • Beans, eggs and chips.
  • Pigs in blankets.

Which country food is famous in UK? ›

With Japanese, Italian and Greek revealed as firm favourites, as well as Thai, French, and Spanish rounding up the top ten. It is no surprise that the adoption of worldwide and world-renowned dishes has inspired the UK over the years.

What is the eating culture in the UK? ›

Food culture in the UK is often based around social gatherings and interactions. Typical UK culture food consists of fish and chips, full English breakfast, a Sunday roast, and a cup of tea. One of the first things you will be offered when walking into a British home is a cup of tea.

What food is available in UK? ›

15 British foods you have to try
  • 1) Fish and chips.
  • 2) Sunday roast.
  • 3) English breakfast.
  • 4) Shepherd's pie.
  • 5) Cottage pie.
  • 6) Toad in the hole.
  • 7) Bangers and mash.
  • 8) Pie, mash and liquor.

What is UK food culture? ›

Typical UK culture food consists of fish and chips, full English breakfast, a Sunday roast, and a cup of tea. One of the first things you will be offered when walking into a British home is a cup of tea. Having a cup of tea (or coffee) is the basis of many British social interactions.

What did the British eat in the past? ›

To understand the history of British food, we need to go back in time to the days of the ancient Britons. Back then, their diet consisted mostly of wild game, fish, fruits, and vegetables. They also enjoyed mead, a type of fermented honey drink that was popular throughout the Middle Ages.

What did UK ancestors eat? ›

MEAT THE ANCESTORS

What did the ancient Britons eat? If you were invited to a Stone Age feast, the menu would have included wild boar, red deer with hazelnuts, salmon, trout, frogs' legs, blackberries and – possibly – you.

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