The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Scramble for main ingredient

- ANDY MORTON

Staff at The Larder know exactly what to do when they see a hard-to-find ingredient while out shopping “Grab it!” says Shirley Smith, a shop assistant at the Huntly delicatess­en and sandwich shop.

Top of the hit list are things like butter, a critical component of The Larder’s famously decadent cakes and brownies, but which has nearly doubled in price over the past few months.

“If we can get something, we get it while we can get it or when we see it,” Shirley explains.

Now, staff have a new item to add to the list – eggs.

Bakers across the north and north-east are scrambling to secure egg supplies as shortages hit UK supermarke­ts.

Asda has started limiting customers to just two boxes of eggs while Lidl set the limit at three.

Meanwhile, other supermarke­ts are facing hold-ups in their egg supply chains, threatenin­g the availabili­ty of a core ingredient for bakers.

Around Huntly, the situation is so stretched that Larder staff found only empty shelves on a recent supermarke­t trip to buy eggs.

Aberdeen cake maker Jenny Robertson, who owns Cake Affair in Stoneywood, has at least two weeks’ worth of eggs in her stores so hasn’t yet been affected.

However, she says the shortages could be a problem for her and other small bakers – most buy their eggs from supermarke­ts instead of securing them wholesale.

“We’ll just have to find a way around it,” says Jenny who typically uses about five eggs in each of her elaboratel­y designed cakes.

“That might mean going from store to store to get the eggs that we need,” she adds.

At Gannet’s in Laurenceki­rk, owner Aaron Neave says egg shortages are also low on his list of problems. He has a local supplier so hasn’t yet had problems getting his hands on any. He has, however, had to put up prices recently because of rising ingredient­s costs.

Meanwhile, Donna MacCulloch, the owner of Roxy’s in Oban, says bakers such as herself are learning how to deal with shortages, eggs included.

“We’ll make less of something and more of something else,” says Donna.

“You just have to cut your cloth according to your needs.”

 ?? ?? Some shops are in short supply.
Some shops are in short supply.
 ?? ?? DEMAND: Aaron and Kirsty Neave of Gannet’s get their eggs locally.
DEMAND: Aaron and Kirsty Neave of Gannet’s get their eggs locally.

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