(ANSA) - Rome, October 6 - Ever more Italians are stopping
by supermarkets during their lunch breaks or between one
university lesson and another to buy a ready-to-eat meal,
complete with a single portion of olive oil and disposable
cutlery.
The quality-for-price aspect is mainly what determines this
choice for quick meals away from home, Coop Italia director
Francesco Cecere underscored to ANSA, noting that ready-made
sauces belong to an older generation.
In the top ten of modern shopping carts, according to June
2015 data on the previous year from the Coop 2015 report, are
packaged focaccia +146%, soy products +62%, gluten-free products
+50%, raw chicken and rabbit +40%, soy drinks +27%, dietary
supplements +22%, chocolate snacks +10%, sliced and cooked ham
+8% and non-sparkling mineral water +2%.
The consumption of vegetarian foods is growing, with 10% of
Italians considering themselves as such (a record in Europe,
followed by Germans). Some 2% say they are vegans - and then
there are also fruitarians, those that eat only raw food, etc.
"We are eating the same quantity of food as in the 1970s
(2.8 kilograms per day), but our diets have changed
drastically," states the Coop 2015 report.
"As a result, the type of consumption is wider. There is
the desire for 'wellness', to be well in a less hedonistic sense
than in the past. We are the slimmest in Europe and among the
longest-living."
Ready-to-eat organic meals gain
Italians eating same amount as in 1970s, but 20% organic