Yes ... I never grow enough of them - we always run out. I think soft fruit is good value to grow, I struggle with crops in the cabbage family - almost impossible to grow well on our heavy clay soil and the only things that really get the benefit are the caterpillars ! I'm not sure about whether to continue with potatoes - decent ones in the shops are very cheap and don't taste that much different to those I grow. Parsnips are fabulous at present and the taste surpasses anything in the shops. I don't have a polytunnel and I find salad crops in the ground are devoured by the snails and slugs ... I constantly battle with them.
I am seriously tre-thinking what I am going to grow next season. Onions, Shallots, spring onions, parnsips, sweetcorn, squash, cucumbers, one courgette plant !, broad beans, runners (fewer plants), french beans, sweet potatoes in tubs, beetroot and my established soft fruit I think is the allotment plan at present.
More of what we like and what is tastiest compared to the supermarket stuff. Tomatoes at home in pots and perhaps some chillies in the greenhouse. Been at it over 13 years now and I am at last coming to terms with what works and what costs more in energy and effort and real cost than shop bought and fails to please.
There is nothing tastier than a fresh raspberry straight off the cane or loganberry or blackcurrant home made jam ... and you just can't beat home grown strawberries or an early stick of forced rhubarb in a crumble but ... some things just don't work.