Working out how much to buy
Meat and filleted fish
For meat and filleted fish allow about 125 g a head, depending on appetites. So
half a kilo (500 g) will feed four. This is just over the old lb. Sausages weigh
around 40-80 g each and although many packs still carry the awkward 454 g pack weight
increasingly they are sold in 400 g and 500 g packs with 6 - 10 bangers inside.
At the Deli counter
Instead of asking for a 'quarter' (4 oz), ask for 100 g (which is slightly under
the old quarter). Prices will be in marked per kg and per 100 g so it is easy for
you to calculate how much you will be charged.
Vegetables
1 kg of 'old' boiling potatoes for mash, roasting, etc. is enough for 4-6 servings
depending on appetites. A baking potato weighs about 250 g. 500 g sprouts, carrots,
leeks etc. will feed 4-6 while 250 g mushrooms or tomatoes is enough for 6 portions.
Fruit
Fruits are frequently sold by the piece or ready bagged in 1 kg bags. However should
you wish to buy loose apples, remember a large cooking apple is about 250 g (or
4 to the kg) and there are approximately 6 dessert apples to the kg. All soft fruits
are sold in punnets of 150 g, 200 g or 250 g depending on the season and availability,
except for strawberries, which still are sold in awkward 227 and 454 g punnets.
Dairy produce
A pack of butter is 250 g (1/4 kilo). Yogurts, crème fraîche and soft cheeses are
sold in 150 g and 200 g. Cream and milks are still in awkward 284 and 568 ml packs,
although longlife, UHT, organic and speciality milks are sold in easy 500 ml and
1 litre sizes.
The sooner all produce weights are standardised to simple metric the better it will
be for consumers using ingredients in recipes and comparing prices.
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