A panel of international travellers has declared that the best on board food is served by Turkish Airlines, according to Skyscanner.
The flight comparison site included 19 international airlines from all corners of the world in the study and ranked them according to the scores they received from passengers.
More than 100 passengers from around the world were asked to score the airline food on presentation and taste.
Turkish Airlines took first place with a score of 86% for its menu which includes such dishes as stuffed eggplant and walnut pear tart.Ā As well as standard meals, the airline also offers a range of special meals including childrenās, Kosher, vegetarian and seafood options.
In second place is Singapore Airlines, on which Gordon Ramsay has previously offered his expertise as part of their culinary panel, while Etihad took third place ahead of UAE rival Emirates which came in 5th behind Aer Lingus.
The full ranking:
Airline | Score |
Turkish Airlines | 86 |
Singapore Airlines | 81 |
Etihad | 80 |
Aer Lingus | 78 |
Emirates | 77 |
Cathay Pacific | 75 |
KLM | 75 |
Qantas | 72 |
Aeroflot | 71 |
Air France | 70 |
Iberia | 65 |
SAS | 64 |
United Airlines | 62 |
British Airways | 60 |
Qatar Airways | 57 |
Virgin Atlantic | 57 |
Alitalia | 54 |
Lufthansa | 53 |
American Airlines | 47.5 |
Mary Porter Skyscannerās food expert and one half of pop up restaurantĀ Kitchen Porterās, comments:
āThe stereotype of the barely edible inflight meal appears to be a thing of the past.Ā In todayās highly competitive marketplace airlines have to stand out from one and another, ensure the passengersā on board experience is a positive one and ultimately generate customer loyalty.
Inflight meals are a key way of doing this and recent years have seen a huge investment in this area with many leading chefs being brought on board by airlines to help develop their offering.
āThis investment in food appears to have been successful ā many reviewers in our study described food as being ādeliciousā or ātastyā and over half of the airlines included in the study achieved a score of 70% or more.ā