UK's favourite food to eat on Christmas Day revealed

What is the most popular food for a festive dinner?

Sarah Young
Thursday 10 November 2016 18:53 GMT
Comments
A Christmas dinner with all the trimmings
A Christmas dinner with all the trimmings (REX/Martin Lee)

Britain's favourite Christmas dinner ingredient has been revealed - and it's not the turkey.

When it comes to the festive meal, most families opt for turkey with all the trimmings, followed by a mountain of Christmas pud and a good old family row.

But, according to a survey of 2,000 Asda customers, the festive bird doesn’t take the top spot.

Wading in at number one is perhaps the most humble of merry munchies – the traditional roast potato.

Carrots took second place followed turkey, gravy, stuffing, ‘pigs in blankets’, parsnips, sprouts, Christmas pud and Yorkshire pudding.

Roast potatoes beat turkey to the top spot
Roast potatoes beat turkey to the top spot

At the bottom of the list is avocado while kale, spinach, chips and nut roast saunter slightly ahead.

The survey, which marks the launch of Asda’s Christmas TV advert this week, also highlighted the 10 days of Christmas, and pointing out that December 5 is the day most of us put up our tree, decorations and watch our very first Christmas-themed movie.

The average Brit will buy their first gift on November 20 and enjoy their first glass of festive fizz on December 7.

“Christmas is one of those occasions that doesn’t need messing with too much,” an Asda spokesman said.

“We’ve done our best this year to make traditional favourites that little bit more special and have won numerous awards for things like our new recipe mince pies, cranberry sauce and festive turkey – all key components for the perfect Christmas.”

Christmas pudding came in at number nine
Christmas pudding came in at number nine (Rex Features)

The survey also highlights that despite a rise in technological advances, most people will be enjoying a traditional Christmas this year.

Almost half of us will don a paper crown and over 60 per cent continue to send Christmas cards by post.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in