Shoppers Soon it will be able to reach a new way to check if their stores are baked. Tesco Tesks a new high -tech system.
Available in five stores from this week, machines act like X-rays, Internal condition of fruit,
holding it Avocado In the scanner of machines, it will either tell the customers whether their avocado is high, and is ready to be smashing, or if it is less cooked and is better for slicing or waiting for ripening.
The Dutch company named it a third of the avocado scanner after the Dutch company invented, the technology aims to help consumers, in a few seconds. Pick up the right fruit.
The company states that technology has worked by scanning through avocado using light to detect its internal condition. The service aims to avoid customers need to pinch or squeeze the avocado, possibly to waste its meat and lead to food waste.
Tesco Avocado Buyer Lisa Lawrence said: “Scanner will enable shopkeepers to choose avocado which is right for them and which is therefore help them plan their use and desired shelf life, which can cut waste.
“Smashed on sour, the avocado remains one of the most trendyst snacks at this time, receiving millions of views on social media sites for recipe ideas, so we think, for this reason, the scanner will actually be popular with shopkeepers.”
Tesco is trialing the store scanner:
Tesco said Avocados has never been more popular and in the last year it had sold about 15 million more in the last 52 weeks compared to avocado.
Supermarket giants have worked with Global Avocado Suppliers Westfallia Fruit, Shrink, Lincolnshireon the project.
Emma Hovs, commercial manager of Westfallia Fruit, said the scanner is “one of the many initiatives we have worked in the last one year”.
He said other initiatives include trialing lasard avocados that remove plastic labels from Tesco’s loose avocado lines, and roll out cardboard and paper packaging in all Tesco’s avocado pre-pack lines.
He said that this helped “save 20 million pieces of plastic in a year”.