The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Palm oil price rise may put butteries’ future in doubt says bakery boss

- ANDY MORTON

The cost of living crisis is about to hit Aberdeensh­ire in the butteries. Prices of the north-east’s favourite salty staple are set to increase after Indonesia banned exports of palm oil, a key ingredient.

The shock move announced last week is expected to drive up the price of palm oil, along with other oils used in food processing.

Experts say the buttery – known by some as a rowie – will be disproport­ionately affected by any price hike because it contains more palm oil than other baked goods. But the situation could get worse.

Inverurie baker JG Ross, one of the region’s leading suppliers of butteries to supermarke­ts, has revealed it may stop producing rowies if costs become too prohibitiv­e.

“Obviously, we are in the midst of a big issue at the moment,” said JG Ross production director Cameron Ross, pointing to the Indonesian ban as well as the war in Ukraine that has stifled the production of sunflower oil in the country.

“It could be, a little bit down the line, that we are looking at what products we are making and still able to make.

“I would hope that the buttery is not one of the ones that need to be addressed but there’s so many things happening in the world you just don’t know what’s going to be next.”

Mr Ross said his company has already raised prices by about 8% because of supply chain pressures and oil price rises. Since August, JG Ross’s oil prices have increased by 60%.

And more baked goods price increases are in the pipeline amid unpreceden­ted cost rises.

JG Ross’s suppliers have already raised their prices twice this year, which

production director Mr Ross said was “unheard of ”.

Suppliers usually only increase prices once a year to cover costs.

“Food price inflation hasn’t reached its pinnacle yet, unfortunat­ely,” Mr Ross continued, adding that JG Ross is working to keep price increases to a minimum.

Asked how much buttery prices will increase by, Mr Ross said: “It is nearly impossible to predict.” A four-pack of JG Ross butteries costs about £1.70 in supermarke­ts.

The Indonesia export ban has highlighte­d the use of palm oil in modern buttery baking in place of traditiona­l ingredient­s such as lard. Some Aberdeensh­ire foodies are leading a campaign to get palm oil out of butteries, calling the practice a blight on one of the region’s mostloved products.

Modern bakers, including JG Ross, typically use

sustainabl­e palm oil, which is harvested under a certified set of environmen­tal and social criteria.

However, palm oil production is blamed by some environmen­tal groups for the loss of oldgrowth forests in Indonesia and Malaysia. The groups also say palm oil plantation­s

destroy the habitats of endangered animals.

Aberdeen food group Slow Food, which champions traditiona­l methods of cooking, believes this damage should be enough to deter bakers from using palm oil in butteries even despite the use of sustainabl­ecertified plantation­s.

The group – which said 95% of butteries today use palm oil – wants a return to “ingredient­s your granny would recognise”.

According to Slow Food, modern bakers use palm oil because it is cheap.

“There should be butter in it, and there should be lard,” says Wendy Barrie, a Slow Food member and author of a report that put butteries into the global Ark of Taste project, which aims to safeguard foods of cultural significan­ce.

“There absolutely should never be palm oil.”

Cameron Ross said bakers no longer use lard

because it is made from animal fats.

He added: “If you had (a buttery) that was very heavy on butter it wouldn’t taste as good as it does now.

“And if you’re talking about price, then the price would be probably twice where it’s at now. Maybe three or four times.”

However, food writer and critic for the Observer newspaper Jay Rayner, who is in Braemar for a oneman show this weekend, said so-called traditiona­l ingredient­s do not always make for better food.

“The fact that they made the buttery that way does not immediatel­y imply virtue,” he said.

“I’m not bigging up the use of palm oil, which is a very controvers­ial ingredient, but the assumption that the way it was made once was best – it’s not always proven to be the case.”

There’s so many things happening in the world you just don’t know what’s going to be next

 ?? ?? IN THE MIX: Slow Food’s Wendy Barrie and JG Ross’s Cameron Ross have differing views about buttery ingredient­s.
IN THE MIX: Slow Food’s Wendy Barrie and JG Ross’s Cameron Ross have differing views about buttery ingredient­s.

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