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Inside Venice’s farm-to-table revolution

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Mario Saviolo, the 24-year-old manager of Venice’s Osti in Orto, tending a field of crops on the farm

This article is part of a new guide to Venice from FT Globetrotter

Some say Venice is in a doom spiral. La Serenissima is sinking into the rising waters of the surrounding Veneto lagoon, her population is in decline, as is her reputation as a dining destination, dragged down by sad spaghetti and pizza served at touristy venues. However, a handful of Venetian restaurant owner-chefs are throwing their home a lifeline and working towards a more sustainable future.

Four years ago, as engineers put into operation a giant barrier to spare Venice from future flooding, these local chefs launched their own rescue plan: a co-operative farm to create jobs and save the unique flavours of the fruits and vegetables used in Venetian dishes that are at risk of disappearing. Together, they leased a four-hectare plot of land on Sant’Erasmo, the rural island known as Venice’s kitchen garden that’s about 40 minutes away from the centro storico by boat. Planting began in 2021 at the shared farm, called Osti in Orto (Hosts in the Garden), which now supplies a dozen top chefs with local varieties of seasonal produce used in Venetian cuisine, including aubergines, root and leaf vegetables, radicchietti (tiny field lettuce), fennel, peppers, tomatoes and herbs.

“Sant’Erasmo vegetables are special — they come ready-seasoned inside,” says chef Francesco Agopyan of Antiche Carampane, a participating trattoria (see below). “The salt in the air and soil close to the lagoon mixes with their natural sugars and gives them a distinctive taste.”

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Mario Saviolo, the 24-year-old manager of Venice’s Osti in Orto, tending a field of crops on the farm
Mario Saviolo, the 24-year-old manager of Venice’s Osti in Orto, an agricultural co-operative on Sant’Erasmo
Saviolo shaking water from the bottom of a seedlings tray
Saviolo watering seedlings on the farm

Named after a patron saint of sailors, Sant’Erasmo is a quilt of market gardens, orchards and small farms on soils of clay and sand, the second largest of the lagoon’s 100-plus islands after Venice. Local chefs are worried that Sant’Erasmo’s existential fate is the same as Venice’s. Elderly residents are dying, while their children and grandchildren want an easier life on the mainland, so smallholdings with local delicacies are at risk of disappearing with them.

“But it’s too late to be pessimistic,” says Cesare Benelli, who runs Al Covo restaurant in the Castello district of Venice with his Texan wife, Diane, and whose idea it was to start Osti. “By acting decisively, we can bring Venice out of the coma into which she has sunk.”

Benelli was a boy in the 1950s when the historic centre of Venice was a vibrant community of some 160,000 full-time residents — it recently fell below 50,000 — and he’s seen Sant’Erasmo’s official number decrease by more than 50 per cent over a decade of visits to a mooring he keeps there. He says only 500 people live there year-round.

Saviolo standing in a field on the co-operative, looking towards rows of green crops
Saviolo is dedicated to sustainable farming on the island, despite its climate vulnerability

Remarkably, Osti is managed by a 24-year-old, Mario Saviolo, who grew up on the island. Raised by grandparents who had a farm, Saviolo introduced himself to Benelli and Agopyan when he heard about the project. You couldn’t imagine a better custodian. 

On a sweltering July morning when I visit Osti, I find Saviolo harvesting vegetables and looking laid-back in mirror sunglasses. He leads me over an aquifer to a field of ripening squash, pulls a few carrots from the sandy soil, twisting off their feathery tops, and digs a handful of potatoes — yellow, pink, fingerling — telling me which are best for salads or mashing.

“My grandparents were great teachers,” he says. “I learnt how to sow using the lunar cycle, irrigate crops exactly when needed, recognise harmful insects, and use the right tools to work the land.” 

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Saviolo studied environmental biotechnology in la città (the city), but he’s committed to a farming life on the island despite the risks. Sant’Erasmo suffered a devastating flood in 1966 that wiped out a generation of dairy farms, and it is vulnerable to unpredictable weather and the effects of climate change. 

“It’s not easy here,” he says. “It’ll be several years before we’re profitable. You don’t plant and immediately get a sustainable farm. But Sant’Erasmo is a special place, one of the few green oases still cultivated where nature is allowed to spread.”

The investors in Osti have their lease for nine more years. The co-operative plans to add greenhouses in late 2024 and is open to new members. “Se vuole, può unirsi a noi,” Agopyan tells me. Anyone who wants to can join us.

There are many ways to enjoy Sant’Erasmo’s bounty, from visiting Osti in person for an aperitivo and cicchetti (Venetian-style tapas on bread) to dining at the participating restaurants it supplies. Together, like Sant’Erasmo itself, they honour and remind me of the extraordinary culinary richness of la laguna and the sense of connection Venetians feel with it.

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Antiche Carampane

San Polo 1911, Rio Terà de le Carampane, 30125 Venice 
  • Good for: Challenging friends to find it on a first visit without GPS — at least one of the alleys on approach looks like a dead end

  • Not so good for: Boasting to your friends you’ve found a secret spot

  • FYI: Order the fritto misto. You might think it’s a cliché, but this is a next-level mix of calamari, mysterious local varieties of fish to eat, bones and all, with your fingers, sweet batons of (Sant’Erasmo) carrot and cubes of potato

  • Opening times: Tuesday–Saturday, 12.30pm-2.30pm and 7.30pm–10pm

  • Website; Directions

I first ate here 15 years ago when Francesco Agopyan’s mother, Piera, expertly signora-bossed the cucina, and still recall every giddy bite of fingernail-size fried crab and shrimp served in paper cones before the main course. Agopyan now oversees the kitchen, which turns out playful twists on Venetian classics and top-notch versions of standards, including cuttlefish in its own ink with polenta, liver with onions, and risotto from rice grown in the nearby wetlands of the lagoon.

Chef Francesco Agopyan of Antiche Carampane standing in front of his restaurant
‘The world needs to know a different Venice is possible,’ says chef Francesco Agopyan of Antiche Carampane
A bowl of Agopyan’s spaghetti in cassopipa
Agopyan’s spaghetti in cassopipa

Agopyan is passionate about saving Venice — maybe it has something to do with Venice having saved his family from extinction two generations ago. His Armenian grandfather escaped to the city from Istanbul in the catastrophe of 1915 and married a Venetian woman.

“Venice needs help,” he says while serving me spaghetti in cassopipa (with seafood in a spiced sauce crowned with a roasted red Sant’Erasmo tomato). “The world needs to know that a different Venice is possible.” A second-generation restaurateur, Agopyan is determined to back Osti in Orto for the long haul: “The co-operative is an investment in Venice, our people, our heritage, our future.”

A linen-covered set table at Antiche Carampane, with ornately framed mirrors on the walls
The ambience at Antiche Carampane is relaxed
A pavlova in a red sauce and surrounded by blackberries and blueberries
Agopyan’s does ‘imaginative takes’ on desserts such as pavlova

Carampane, as locals call it, is an old trattoria (reputedly a former canteen serving the customers of a brothel — antiche carampane means “old hags”), so the atmosphere is more relaxed than at a more formal restaurant. No one will judge you if, as I did, you pick a starter of grilled octopus as your main. My meaty tentacle came curled around lobes of crushed yellow potato with Osti cherry tomatoes, parsley and dabs of vegetable emulsion.

Carampane also conjures imaginative takes on local desserts: if you can, leave room for natural-yoghurt gelato or a sgroppino — a refreshing lemon sorbet meets cocktail of vodka topped with nutmeg, lemon zest and black pepper.

Al Covo

Campiello de la Pescaria 3968, 30122 Venice
  • Good for: A mash-up of multi-course tasting menus and US-style chocolate cake 

  • Not so good for: Showing up in shorts for a quick pizza 

  • FYI: Handy for visitors to Biennale art and architecture events at the nearby Arsenale. You can easily drop by without a reservation at the start of service

  • Opening times: Thursday–Monday, 12.45pm–2pm and 7.30pm–10pm

  • Website; Directions

Cesare Benelli and his American wife, Diane, have been running Al Covo, a cosy two-room restaurant with exposed brick walls in the Castello district of Venice, since 1987. Their son, Lorenzo, has taken over the kitchen, now that his white-haired papa is technically “retired”. But don’t be fooled. You’ll find Benelli inside morning, noon and night, making sure you know he’s still the brains behind a menu rigorously devoted to local provenance.

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 Lorenzo Benelli of Al Covo preparing a dish
Lorenzo Benelli of Al Covo at work
A plate of the restaurant’s crudo dell’Alto Adriatico: fish and seafood from local waters
The restaurant’s crudo dell’Alto Adriatico: fish and seafood from local waters

In warmer seasons, diners might luck out with a grey mullet crudo on the menu from a brackish part of the lagoon, its soft flesh flecked with finely cubed carrots, red pepper, potato and celery from his beloved Osti. Or go for the crudo dell’Alto Adriatico selection of fish and seafood from local waters.

Don’t miss Al Covo’s version of deep-fried fiori di zucca, squash flowers stuffed with burrata — you’ll be surprised by the fresh mint used instead of the usual basil (ask for a single fritter if you can’t manage a full order). Crab lovers should order tagiolini alla granzevola, a thin, spaghetti-length pasta with spider crab, plated with the shell of the crustacean. In spring I’ve enjoyed fat Montina asparagus (indigenous to Sant’Erasmo) with shavings of lemon zest and — yes, always — fritto misto, with polenta on a twirl of string potatoes. Diane’s “Devil’s Food” chocolate cake and US-style desserts, such as her cheesecake with buffalo ricotta and cherry sauce, will delight the sweet-toothed.

Al Cavo’s fiori di zucca
Al Cavo’s fiori di zucca
Cesare and Lorenzo Benelli outside their restaurant
Father-and-son Cesare and Lorenzo Benelli outside their restaurant

Benelli is a life-long chef and businessman but, recently, a quiet activism has stirred his soul. He bemoans a lack of vision by politicians to preserve the community in his home city and its adjacent islands. Osti in Orto is a late-career practical and political act.

“My dream is that the city and islands can return to being a community,” he says. “That Sant’Erasmo and other islands in the lagoon be recognised as a vital part of the city, which would help stimulate and implement a housing plan to bring people back there to live.”

At Al Covo’s bar, he displays glass jars of Sant’Erasmo heritage fennel — snow-white orbs the size of baseballs from last year’s harvest — and a copy of Atlante gastronomico dei Presìdi Slow Food, an atlas of ingredients recognised by the Slow Food foundation for their artisanal value and risk of disappearance, including Sant’Erasmo’s celebrated violet artichokes. “Mario,” he says of the farm’s young custodian, “Is the future.”

Osti in Orto

Via dei Forti 75, 30141 Venice
  • Good for: People eager to dig deeper into life in the lagoon, not just “do” Venice

  • Not so good for: Travellers who don’t like boats or getting muddy 

  • FYI: You need to book in advance and take a number 13 vaporetto from Fondamente Nove D boat stop in Venice to Sant’Erasmo-Chiesa (second stop on the island)

  • Tours: April to December

  • Website; Directions

Alvise Cinelli kneeling in a field with a black Labrador at the Osti in Orto cooperative
Alvise Cinelli takes visitors on a two-hour tour of Osti in Orto
Trays of chard and peppers at Osti in Orto
Freshly gathered produce on the farm

For those curious to see the chefs’ co-operative farm in person, Alvise Cinelli — the manager of Marciano (see below), one of the participating venues — will take visitors on a two-hour tour. It begins with a visit to the fields followed by an aperitivo (maybe a Sant’Erasmo sparkling wine) and cicchetti

A glass of red wine and a plate of cicchetti – Venetian-style tapas – at Osti in Orto
The tour ends with wine and cicchetti

Tours can be booked on the Inside Venice portal, where prices start at €150 for two people, rising to €550 for a group of 10. Alternatively, take the vaporetto and roam on your own to take in the island vibes, or privately rent a bike (RideMovi is the local bike-share app). Don’t worry about getting lost: there’s really only one road around the island.

Other top venues in the co-operative

Osteria alle Testiere, a popular bistro, serves traditional Venetian dishes and fresh seafood and fish caught on the day of service (the menu changes depending on market availability). It’s small — booking ahead is highly recommended. Website; Directions

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Riviera, a relaxed waterfront restaurant with a refined menu, serves contemporary takes on Venetian classics. Directions

Vini da Gigio, a family-run trattoria in the Cannaregio district, offers classic local dishes in a rustic setting, with a good selection of wines. Website; Directions

Da Guido, an elegant restaurant on the nearby peninsula of Jesolo, has served refined seafood dishes, fresh pasta and other local specialities since the early 1990s. Visit in warmer seasons and enjoy an aperitivo in the garden. Website; Directions

Marciano, a pub in the Cannaregio district, offers local dishes in a casual environment. It also makes its own IPA and gin with produce from the Venetian islands. Website; Directions

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More ways to enjoy Sant’Erasmo’s produce

The shop at I Sapori di Sant’Erasmo © Camilla Glorioso

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I Sapori di Sant’Erasmo (Flavours of Sant’Erasmo) is a 10-hectare family farm — the island’s largest — and a 15-minute walk from the Capannone vaporetto stop and public dock. Brothers Carlo and Claudio Finotello started it in 1996. Ring the bell on the counter and someone will come from the adjoining shed to serve you, then decide which variety of squash or pumpkin to lug away, or go for the excellent products in glass jars: crema di carciofo violetto (cream of violet artichokes), radicchio in saor (radicchio in vinegar with onions), mostarda di zucca (pumpkin conserve). It’s hard to stop. Food lovers across the Veneto region recognise the quality of this farm’s seasonal produce. I have Italian friends in Padua (40km from Venice) who come by motorboat once a week — a day trip with a stop for lunch — to load up on radicchio, squash and jars of preserved foods, while I usually end up checking in an extra bag to fly home with a supply as gifts and to serve at drinks parties.

Glass jars of produce at I Sapori di Sant’Erasmo
I Sapori di Sant’Erasmo produce in jars includes mostarda di zucca and radicchio in saor © Camilla Glorioso

In Cannaregio, I & S Farm Il Biologica di Sant’Erasmo sells produce and preserves from the organic farm of Ilaria and Savino Cimarosto. Try the cream of aubergine, cream of white onion, apple and ginger jam, pumpkin compote with cardamom or cooked purple beetroot preserved in oil.

Elsewhere in Italy, Rialto Frutta offers nationwide delivery of Sant’Erasmo produce.

Sip:

Gin dei Sospiri, a Venetian distilled gin, is made with Sant’Erasmo botanicals: samphire, basil, thyme, artichoke and cardo (a big thistle, cardoon in English). You can buy litre and half-litre bottles at Maramao, a delicatessen with a wine store and bakery in Cannaregio.

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Italian Free Spirit also creates drinks made with local produce. I like the Amaro Venesian, a liqueur made with certified handpicked Sant’Erasmo violet artichokes and herbs. Look out for owner Giacomo Tenconi and his colleagues mixing cocktails at events with live music around Venice.

Have you visited Osti in Orto or dined at one of its restaurants? Tell us about it in the comments below. And follow FT Globetrotter on Instagram at @FTGlobetrotter

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Advent International prepares takeover bid for Tate & Lyle

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Advent International prepares takeover bid for Tate & Lyle

Offer would value UK ingredients group at premium to its £2.8bn market capitalisation

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Warwick University reveals £700m investment in West Midlands science campus

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Warwick University reveals £700m investment in West Midlands science campus

Investment will be focused on the Social Sciences and STEM subjects: science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

The post Warwick University reveals £700m investment in West Midlands science campus appeared first on Property Week.

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Amazon buys stake in nuclear energy developer in push to power data centres

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Citadel’s Ken Griffin takes part in X-energy’s $500mn fundraising alongside ecommerce group

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We must get messaging right amid pension pot panic

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Rachel Vahey - Illustration by Dan Murrell
Rachel Vahey - Illustration by Dan Murrell
Rachel Vahey – Illustration by Dan Murrell

Over the last few years, the Financial Conduct Authority has been very clear it is keeping a close eye on the advice given when someone decides to take a retirement income.

Earlier this year, it published its review into this area.

It discovered no systemic issues with advice firms but wasn’t completely happy with the consistency of how many advisers were approaching this area of advice. Particularly around record keeping.

It’s too early to see exactly what effect the FCA’s findings have had on both advice firm’s behaviour and clients’ decisions, but the latest statistics on this market still makes interesting reading.

Savers withdrew over £52bn from their retirement pots in 2023-24 – 20% higher than the previous year

The regulator publishes stats every six months and this latest batch covers October 2023 to March 2024. The key takeaway is the number of people accessing their pension for the first time and the amount withdrawn is continuing to increase apace. Savers withdrew over £52bn from their retirement pots in 2023-24 – 20% higher than the previous year.

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There seems little doubt the cost-of-living crisis is the main culprit behind this increase. Savers are turning to their pensions to make ends meet to get through a temporary period of financial pain. The most popular decision for those accessing their pensions for the first time is to cash in the pot completely. And while this initially seems concerning, it’s worth noting most of these pots are worth less than £10,000. Faced with a tuppence ha’penny income or a useful lump sum, many people will opt for the latter.

Those setting up a retirement income are still mostly choosing drawdown, although the numbers buying an annuity increased by 40% last year. In one respect, this isn’t surprising – annuity rates have recently been buoyant – but on the other, this behaviour has been slow to adapt, with the FCA retirement income advice review lamenting low annuity sales.

There is evidence savers are currently taking retirement decisions based on fear and speculation ahead of the Budget

If the latest bunch of stats are showing record numbers of people accessing their pension pots, I have a feeling the next lot – covering April 2024 to October 2024 – will cast this set in the shade.

There is evidence savers are currently taking retirement decisions based on fear and speculation ahead of the Budget, with both contributions and the number taking their tax-free cash rising year-on-year.

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It has been just over a month since prime minister Keir Starmer stood in the Rose Garden at Downing Street and warned us of a ‘painful’ Budget to come. It feels like every government minister has been told to include the ‘£22bn black hole in public finances’ in every subject they talk or write about.

There is no doubt the message has struck home. After slowly recovering following the Covid pandemic, the long-running GfK Consumer Confidence Barometer took a recent dip, showing UK people are growing worried about their finances.

Exiting pensions in haste may be a choice clients are forced to repent in leisure

The government is keeping its cards close to its chest on what actual measures will be included in the Budget, but, in the absence of hard facts, rumours are swirling with a growing intensity on possible cuts in the amount of tax-free cash someone can take and the removal of higher-rate pensions tax relief.

This pessimism is leaking out. Advice firms are facing an increasing groundswell of client phone calls and emails asking if the rumours are true and what action they could take ahead of the Budget.

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This places advisers in an impossible position. None of us have a crystal ball. Only chancellor Rachel Reeves can tell us if these changes are really on the table and to what extent. Common sense tells us there is no point planning based on a rumour and clients should only make a decision that ties in with their long-term goals.

Ultimately, this is about making irreversible decisions regarding people’s long-term financial futures

Those who are insistent on crystallising quickly may find they lose out on longer-term tax benefits, as well as ending up with a lot of cash sat in their bank account they simply don’t need at this moment.

This episode has really driven home the importance of careful messaging around pensions and thinking through the implications. Ultimately, this is about making irreversible decisions regarding people’s long-term financial futures. And exiting pensions in haste may be a choice they are forced to repent in leisure.

Rachel Vahey is head of public policy at AJ Bell

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Hong Kong’s IPO market could benefit from robo-vehicle boom

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Interest in self-driving cars has gone up a gear thanks to Tesla’s recent much-hyped robotaxi event. Chinese autonomous driving firm Horizon Robotics has chosen a good time to raise funds in a Hong Kong listing. If it reaches its target of raising up to $696mn, it would be the city’s largest initial public offering this year.

The company, backed by Intel and Volkswagen, will sell 1.36bn shares. This would make the listing bigger than China Resources Beverage. Before Horizon’s announcement, this soft drinks company had been on track to hold the city’s biggest new share sale this year after it started bookbuilding on Tuesday.

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In Hong Kong, having multiple large listings in close succession has frequently meant more scattered funds from retail investors and less demand for companies that are not well-known household names. For Horizon, that should be less of an issue as it has already received significant interest from corporate investors. Cornerstone investors for the Horizon stock offering include the online business software unit of Alibaba Group and Chinese internet search giant Baidu. 

There are good reasons for the interest. Horizon manufactures advanced driver assistance systems and autonomous driving solutions for passenger vehicles in China. Unlike some self-driving and software start-ups that have yet to build a viable product or business model, Horizon has already supplied customers including Volkswagen’s Audi, Continental, BYD, Li Auto and SAIC. Volkswagen has invested in developing technology to integrate autonomous driving-related functions on to a single chip along with Horizon since 2022. Proceeds raised in the listing will be used for research and development as well as sales and marketing. 

Autonomous driving technology, especially fully self-driving cars, have been the topic of much debate. True, the commercialisation and mass production of driverless cars are likely to be many years in the future. But that does not necessarily mean it will take that much time to get individual autonomous driving functions — still requiring driver supervision — into today’s cars as lucrative add-ons.

Autonomous driving technologies use software, radars, lidar sensors and cameras to enhance safety and convenience for drivers. For example, the level of technology today can alert drivers to obstacles, help avoid collisions and assist in parking and lane centring — all of which carmakers can monetise through premium features. 

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Hong Kong’s deflated listings market could do with the kind of hype that self-driving cars are generating. But a successful Horizon IPO should at least provide another much-needed boost to shift it out of the slow lane.

june.yoon@ft.com

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M&S confirms it has axed a ‘glorious’ breakfast item as shoppers say ‘I’ve been searching high and low’

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M&S confirms it has axed a 'glorious' breakfast item as shoppers say 'I've been searching high and low'

M&S has confirmed that it has axed one of its most popular breakfast items, leaving shoppers gutted.

The posh supermarket has discontinued its “glorious” Cocoa & Cherry Bircher pot.

Shoppers are gutted that the Cocoa & Cherry Bircher pot from M&S has been dicontinued

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Shoppers are gutted that the Cocoa & Cherry Bircher pot from M&S has been dicontinuedCredit: X

A sweet-toothed customer was devastated after coming up empty-handed while rummaging “high and low” through the fridge section for the breakfast treat.

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In a desperate plea they wrote on X/formerly Twitter: “Have you discontinued your glorious Cocoa & Cherry Bircher pot? (Archive pic attached).

“I’ve searched high and low across the UK for it recently – to no avail – and your staff have no idea where it’s gone either?”

He then added “please send help”.

Staff at M&S then sadly broke the news that the pot is no longer available to buy.

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They wrote: “Hi Kevin, I’ve just checked but our cherry bircher pots aren’t showing in any stores at the moment so do appear to be discontinued.”

Although they did say they will let their Food colleagues know the user would like to see the pots again in the future.

The X user was left devastated by the news and wrote in disbelief: “NOOOOOOOOO?! Do you know why it’s been discontinued?”

He revealed that “many many” people feel the same about the product and that should serve as a reason for the product to return.

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A quick search on X showed many others sharing their love for the pots.

Which chocolate bars have been discontinued in the UK?

One said: “Dreaming about that cocoa and cherry bircher from M&S I had yesterday. It’s too good to be legal.”

Another wrote: “In other news, I bought an M&S cocoa and cherry Bircher to eat on the train and it was SUBLIME.”

While a third commented: “Guys, if you’re ever in M&S try the cocoa and cherry bircher pot, and the chocolate chunk shortbreads. DIVINE.”

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The breakfast item is made up of oats and Greek yoghurt, with cherry compote and cocoa nibs.

It contained 277kcals per pot and weighed around 190g.

We had a look online and struggled to find a similar item that could fill the bircher pots’ shoes – the closest M&S seems to sell is fresh porridge for £1.30.

Why are products axed or recipes changed?

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ANALYSIS by chief consumer reporter James Flanders.

Food and drinks makers have been known to tweak their recipes or axe items altogether.

They often say that this is down to the changing tastes of customers.

There are several reasons why this could be done.

For example, government regulation, like the “sugar tax,” forces firms to change their recipes.

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Some manufacturers might choose to tweak ingredients to cut costs.

They may opt for a cheaper alternative, especially when costs are rising to keep prices stable.

For example, Tango Cherry disappeared from shelves in 2018.

It has recently returned after six years away but as a sugar-free version.

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Fanta removed sweetener from its sugar-free alternative earlier this year.

Suntory tweaked the flavour of its flagship Lucozade Original and Orange energy drinks.

While the amount of sugar in every bottle remains unchanged, the supplier swapped out the sweetener aspartame for sucralose.

Other discontinued M&S treats

M&S shoppers have been left gutted after the chain axed a popular takeaway meal after less than two years.

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The supermarket’s Vegan ‘Chicken’ & Pepper Pizza earned rave reviews before it was scrapped.

It also discontinued its almond milk and vanilla hand wash, despite being described by shoppers as “amazing and affordable”. 

The posh shop also removed some of its popular Percy Pig sweets from its range – leading to desperate calls for them to be reinstated. 

Percy Pig Phizzy Chews earned rave reviews before they were scrapped in the brand’s recent confectionery overhaul in July.

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What’s more its popular Colin the Caterpillar in a jar treats recently disappeared from the shop shelves.

Marks and Sparks also confirmed that a popular teatime meal has been axed as the supermarket carries out a shake-up.

The supermarket has cut the Plant Kitchen: 2 No Beef Steak Pies.

The supermarket then expanded to say that it was set to relaunch the Plant Kitchen range.

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Earlier this year, Marks and Spencer shoppers begged the retailer to bring an iconic flavour of ice cream back after learning it had been savagely discontinued.

A customer was baffled when they came up empty handed while rummaging through the freezer section for Chocolate Millionaires Ice Cream.

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