Bradford-based supermarket chain Morrisons has been named as one of the best value stores to do your Christmas shopping.

Trade magazine The Grocer surveyed the big four supermarkets for the price of a variety of foodstuffs, presents and Christmas related goods and ranked Morrisons as the second cheapest in the country.

Only Leeds-based Asda offered a cheaper overall experience in the annual supermarket price wars, narrowly beating Morrisons.

The survey ranked the total cost of 33 items, ranging from Christmas turkeys and satsumas, to DVDs and computer games.

At £113.44, Morrisons was just 52 pence more expensive than Asda and more than £10 cheaper than Sainsbury's.

Morrisons said in a statement that the results had shown the supermarket offered good value.

A spokesman said: "Overall we were pleased with our results in the Grocer 33 Christmas price survey. This, combined with our strong promotional package, means we are regularly commended for our outstanding value."

Morrisons was the cheapest place to buy Aunt Bessie crispy roast potatoes, mature cheddar and milk chocolate Brazils.

It was also the least expensive store to get hold of so-called "big ticket items", with the debut CD from Leona Lewis nearly £2 cheaper at Morrisons than elsewhere and the DVD of Transformers costing less than its competitors.

Morrisons also narrowly lost out on the battle for the cheapest frozen turkey, being just 99p more expensive than Asda.

All four chains charged exactly 98p for their cheapest 454g Christmas puddings, while Morrisons was the most expensive place to buy a litre bottle of Cockburn's Special Reserve port, charging £8.99 compared to £8.51 at the other three stores.

The Grocer magazine said: "Morrisons has five of the cheapest items on the list, including Aunt Bessie roast potatoes on a long-running half price promotion at 82 pence.

"The retailer also offered the lowest price for mature cheddar and milk chocolate Brazils. Though its satsumas were 10 pence more expensive than Asda's, they were 200g heavier, but it was the price of its non-food items that really made the difference with the chart-topping CD and DVD coming in at a whopping £1.78 and £3.74 lower respectively than Asda."