Belgian chips set to shrink due to drought

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A woman serves Belgian fries to customers at a chips stand, in Brussels.Image source, Getty Images

Belgium's traditional potato "frites" could soon be 3cm (1.1in) smaller than normal, growers have warned.

Pierre Lebrun, head of the Walloon Potato Growers' Association, said lower levels of rainfall had cut potato crop yields by 25%.

"Because the potatoes are smaller at the moment, we will all be eating smaller chips," he told the Sudpresse, external newspaper.

"Frites" are a signature Belgian dish, often eaten with mayonnaise.

Mr Lebrun said the dry ground also made farmers' work more difficult. "It's the same thing across southern England, the Netherlands, France and western Germany," he said.

Last month, the Guardian, external newspaper reported that Belgium has applied to the EU for emergency funds to deal with the drought.

"It is a disaster in the fields that the farmers could not irrigate. We record losses of around 30%," Romain Cools, the secretary general of Belgapom, the country's largest potato grower, told the newspaper.

The "frite" is reputed to have originated in Namur in francophone Belgium, where the locals were particularly fond of fried fish. When the River Meuse froze over one cold winter in 1680, people are said to have fried potatoes instead.

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