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US avoids Super Bowl chicken wing shortage

IN THE run-up to Super Bowl Sunday, millions of American football fans can rest assured: there is no looming shortage of their beloved chicken wings.

Chicken wings
Chicken wings

IN THE run-up to Super Bowl Sunday, millions of American football fans can rest assured: there is no looming shortage of their beloved chicken wings.

The National Chicken Council estimates that the nation will wolf down 1.23 billion chicken wings over Super Bowl weekend, or nearly four wings for each and every American.

But fears that restaurants, bars, fast food outlets and supermarkets will run out of the savoury snack - served baked, fried or grilled, most often with ranch or barbecue sauce - are unfounded, the industry group said.

"There is sufficient frozen poultry in storage," council spokesman Tom Super said in an email, citing the latest data from the US Department of Agriculture.

"So no, there will be no wing shortage," he said. "They might be a little more expensive, but there is and will be plenty to go around."

Unprepared wings are retailing in Washington supermarkets this week for about $US2.49 ($2.40) per pound.

Contributing to a rise in prices, there has been a 1 per cent dip in chicken production in the past year, and corn and feed prices are at record highs.

"The Super Bowl is the second biggest eating holiday of the year, after Thanksgiving," noted Charlie Morrison, president of Wingstop, a nationwide chain of more than 550 wings-dedicated franchise restaurants.

"With the growing demand for wings, we are gearing up for this to be our biggest year yet," with more than six million wings sold, up 15 per cent on last year, he said in a statement.

The National Restaurant Association estimates 48 million Americans will either take out or call in food for Sunday's big game, with 63 per cent naming chicken wings as their "must-have" finger food.

"When it comes to favourite game-watching foods, dips, chicken wings and pizza top the list," the restaurant group's senior vice president Hudson Riehle said in a statement.

He added that, judging from market research, "about two out of five individuals who plan to watch the big game say that healthful food items are a must on their table that day".

That said, 18 per cent of respondents to an online survey for CouponCabin.com identified "the dieter -- the one counting calories on one of the most celebrated days of junk food" as the most undesirable Super Bowl companion.

Chicken wings are so popular among Americans that they typically cost more in US supermarkets than they do in Europe, despite being less meaty than chicken legs - also known as "drumsticks" - or breasts.

The season-closing Super Bowl championship, taking place this year in New Orleans, Louisiana, pits the Baltimore Ravens against the San Francisco 49ers. Their hometowns are famous for crabcakes and Asian cuisine, respectively.
 

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/food/us-averts-super-bowl-chicken-wing-shortage/news-story/00613118b70c5c1e42670ba39d9aa034