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A number of well-known high‑street restaurants will trial nutritional labelling on their menus this summer, the Food Standards Agency (FSA) will announce today (15 January).
The scheme is the latest step in the FSA's drive to improve the nation's diet and follows agreements signed with the major contract caterers on workplace menus.
The FSA is not revealing the names of the restaurants taking part yet, but they are believed to come from across the sector.
The scheme, initially covering calorie information, follows research carried out by the FSA before Christmas which revealed that consumers were in favour of seeing more nutritional information on menus or at the point of sale. They believed it was a natural next step from the information retailers provide on food packaging.
However, one industry source insists that a menu-labelling scheme would be "completely unworkable" for all but the largest chains.
● FSA chief executive Tim Smith reveals more in next week's Viewpoint.
FSA chair to step down after four years >>
FSA defends scores on the doors decision >>
FSA signs up six fast-food chains for healthier meals programme >>
FSA reports on healthier workplace meal drive >>
Operators in menu talks with the FSA >>
By Daniel Thomas
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Using foraged ingredients is nothing new but the trend has become more mainstream over the past two years. However, the wider use of foraged food in restaurants also carries a certain amount of danger.
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