This article is within the scope of WikiProject Food and drink, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of food and drink related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Food and drinkWikipedia:WikiProject Food and drinkTemplate:WikiProject Food and drinkFood and drink articles
Delete unrelated trivia sections found in articles. Please review WP:Trivia and WP:Handling trivia to learn how to do this.
Add the {{WikiProject Food and drink}} project banner to food and drink related articles and content to help bring them to the attention of members. For a complete list of banners for WikiProject Food and drink and its child projects, select here.
Consider joining this project's Assessment task force. List any project ideas in this section
Note: These lists are transcluded from the project's tasks pages.
Packaging
In my experience chicken and chips is sold by every fish and chip shop in the UK and is generally wrapped in paper, then an outer paper bag, just like fish and chips or chips only. The cardboard box seems to come only from the likes of KFC. I have no information on the relative volume sold in each way, however although my nearest source of chicken is a KFC, I always go a much greater distance to a "real" fish and chip shop, where the food itself and the packaging are more conventional.
Then there is Nandos. Different again.
If someone has any hard facts, rather just personal experience of one person, perhaps we could expand the article accordingly?
Tiger99 (talk) 15:57, 3 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]