
Eating Octopus
As a massive influx of octopus off the south coast of Britain impacts our fishing industry, should we be eating more octopus?
Since January 2025, thousands of tonnes of common octopus, usually found in the Mediterranean, have been landed by fisherman off the south coast of England.
But it’s still not a regular feature on UK menus. In this episode of the Food Programme, Jaega Wise heads to Brixham fish market to find out more about what’s happening, and visits seafood restaurants taking alternative approaches to the challenge. Rockfish owner and chef Mitch Tonks talks her through the difficulties of cooking octopus, and marine ecologist Bryce Stewart at Plymouth University explains why the creature could be here to stay. Jaega also explores what puts people off eating octopus - from tentacles to extreme intelligence. And we head to Guernsey to meet a fisherman whose business has been severely impacted, and try some “Octodog”.
On radio
Broadcasts
- Fri 31 Jul 202611:00BBC Radio 4
- Sat 1 Aug 202622:15BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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The Food Programme
Investigating every aspect of the food we eat


