Partner Article
Yorkshire Dales Meat Company sees 20% rise in sales after horsemeat scandal
Yorkshire Dales Meat Company has seen a 20% rise in sales of its products in ASDA stores across the North since the horsemeat scandal began.
Yorkshire Dales Meat Company’s range of carefully sourced burgers, steaks and meatballs are on sale in 50 ASDA stores in Yorkshire, the North East, North West and North Midlands.
The business has seen a 20% boost in sales of its products in ASDA stores across these regions since a number of beef products from well-known suppliers were found to contain traces of horsemeat in mid-January 2013.
Yorkshire Dales Meat Company, which is based on its own farm in Wensleydale, only sourcing meat from suppliers that can prove food provenance.
James Knox, Financial Director of Yorkshire Dales Meat Company, said: “We’re obviously very pleased with these sales figures and put it down to consumers looking to buy meat - and, in particular, beef - from trusted sources since the beginning of the Horsemeat scandal.
“These tremendous figures also show great confidence in our beef products sold in the supermarket, and in the brand that we’ve worked so hard to create.
“We pride ourselves on knowing exactly where our meat comes from. If meat doesn’t actually come from our own farm, then you can be sure that it will have been sourced from suppliers that we know and fully trust.”
Yorkshire Dales Meat Company supplies restaurants, hotels, food pubs, event venues and the catering trade with a comprehensive range of high quality meat products and chefs with menu development consultancy.
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Clare Burnett .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular Yorkshire & The Humber morning email for free.
What next when social media career help goes?
The psychological contract that nobody signs
Time for strategy built on the foundational economy
Why being ‘work-ready’ matters more than ever
The North's future doesn't end at Manchester
Exit or legacy? Why every owner needs a plan
Who speaks up for SMEs when giants get bigger?
The true value of HR in an AI-driven working world
What new business rates guidance means for pubs
Business success starts with people investment
It's time to confront the digital poverty crisis
Why a business exit is no longer all or nothing