Wednesday 29 Oct 2014
Perennial favourite beans on toast is falling out of favour for modern students, who favour more experimentation in the kitchen, according to a new survey from 91Èȱ¬ Good Food magazine. The survey of 1,076 readers of 91Èȱ¬ Magazines found that beans on toast was the favourite dish for students at Universities in the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s but that by the noughties it had plummeted out of the top five. Spaghetti Bolognese and pizza are now more popular, along with dishes such as stir fries. However the breakfast fry up and roast dinner remain as popular today for students as they were for their parents when they were students.
The findings show the influence of international cuisine in our diets over the years, with the Oriental- inspired stir fry seeing a dramatic increase, from just 4% regularly consuming it in the 1960s, to 53% today, making it the 5th most popular dish from the past decade. The number of students eating pizza has increased from 26% of students in the eighties to 57% today.
The survey also found that students' culinary abilities have improved over the past twenty years, with the number of students able to cook more than six dishes from scratch rising from 53% in the 1980s to 64% in the noughties. However, among the upcoming crop of students, according to parents and relatives, only 42% could cook more than six dishes, though this rose to 56% for students currently at University, suggesting a degree of culinary experimentation in student kitchens.
According to Gillian Carter, editor of Good Food magazine: "The sight of a student kitchen can make a parent's heart sink, but these findings reflect the changes in our diet and show the cosmopolitan influence spreading from our restaurants and homes into halls of residence. However it seems the latest crop of students need to learn new skills in the kitchen as well as the lecture hall in order to give themselves the right brain food. In this month's Good Food magazine we have four student staples including super healthy Spaghetti Bolognese with a twist, vegetable curry and an all-day breakfast, all high in nutrition and low cost."
October's Good Food magazine, featuring easy meals for students, is on sale now priced at £3.40. has more than 6,000 recipes online.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
About the survey
The survey was asked of 1,076 91Èȱ¬ Magazines readers in an online survey in July.
About Good Food magazine
Good Food is the UK's market- leading food magazine, selling 305,855 copies a month, according to the last Audit Bureau of Circulation figures. Each issue is packed with over 100 recipes for everyday meals, easy entertaining and dishes from celebrity chefs. Every recipe is tested by the Good Food cookery team.
Toby Hicks
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