advertisement

butter chicken most popular canadian order in 2024 for one food delivery app

when it came to food delivery in canada this year, peop...

when it came to food delivery in canada this year, people definitely had a hankering for indian food. online app skip — previously known as skip the dishes — has announced which menu items its canadian customers liked ordering the most in 2024
butter chicken ranked number one for the second year in a row.
that delicious dish was followed by garlic naan at number two and butter naan at number five, while miso soup ranked third and fries were fourth.
meanwhile, each province had its own particular favourites in 2024.
ontario accounted for 44% of all coffee orders on skip, followed by alberta at 25%.
when it came to poutine, ontario was responsible for 36% of all orders while alberta had 27% of the cheesy dish purchases.
for sushi lovers, ontarians had an impressive 34% share, followed by alberta which accounted for 25% of the orders. residents of b.c. also placed 20% of all orders.

recommended video

albertans also ordered the most whey protein at 38% while manitoba and ontario followed with 19% and 18% respectively.
skip’s express lane, which is used for stocking up on household essentials quickly and conveniently, saw chips as the most ordered item followed by pop, milk, the mystery bag (for $9.99, it contains five unique items available on the site worth at least $25), and bread.
story continues below

advertisement

canadians were also keen on freeze-dried candy, with skip saying orders skyrocketed by a whopping 2,310% this year compared to last year. the top orders came from alberta, ontario, manitoba, and saskatchewan.
beyond food and drink, flowers bloomed with an 87% increase in orders compared to last year and pet store orders rose by 178% year over year, the company said.
jane stevenson
jane stevenson

jane stevenson has been a toronto sun columnist since 1995, the majority of that time as music critic with an avid interest in film (including tiff every year) and tv. more recently she's added news to her portfolio recalling her vancouver journalism beginnings in radio and print (cjor, cp/bn) although she also worked in tv as an entertainment reporter/anchor (ckvu) out west before getting a transfer to cp/bn in toronto. she's a graduate of the bcit broadcast journalism program and went to ubc for her first year where she studied second-year creative writing.

read more about the author

comments

postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. we ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. we have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. visit our community guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.