My new toy/experiment -still bit expensive, but read why almost every home should be a have one |
I did say food waste deserved a separate post. Well this week, Craig Reucassel of Chaser
fame, has beaten me to it, with the first of his excellent TV Series “The War on Waste”
The good thing about
having a well -known comedian do it, is that it is also thoroughly
entertaining, so catch up on it if you can and watch out for the other two
episodes which haven’t been shown yet.
Australians currently waste about 38 million Kilogrammes of
food each year, about one in five shopping bags worth and that’s growing by 8%
a year. At a time when many countries are experiencing famine – Somalia, South Sudan, Nigeria and Yemen, and some
2 million people in our own supposedly affluent country are going hungry, that is not only indecent, but nothing short of a
crime.
Food is wasted all along the food chain – from harvest to
the end product that winds up in your fridge or rubbish bin. One of the things
which really shocked me in the video was that great mountain of bananas being
thrown out on a banana plantation simply because they were too big, too small
or the wrong shape to meet the exacting standards demanded by supermarkets. Supermarkets
in turn say that they do this because that’s what their customers want.
This may or may not be true. I suspect that it has more to do
with minimising the cost of packing and shipping and having a predictable unit
cost and margin at the end. This may seem incomprehensible in places where
production and consumption occur close together, but the vast distances between
farms and our cities make the cost of sending imperfect or non -standard fruit
and vegetables to market prohibitive, especially if they may not be acceptable
to consumers or end up spoiling the batch.
Nevertheless, Woolworths which together with Coles control 70%
of food sales in Australia, have begun trialling sales of “The Odd Bunch” –fruit
and veg that are not the right size or shape but are thus considerably cheaper. I scored
both apples and pears this way on my last visit. Since these outers were half empty by the time I had walked around the store, I don’t think given the opportunity, the problem necessarily
lies with the consumer. Obviously this is a good choice if trucks have spare
capacity, especially if it enables people who wouldn’t otherwise buy fruit to do so, but
less so from a business point of view, if thereby the main stock remains
unsold, but it's definitely great news for those who can’t buy much at all. Long may
it continue!
Well patronised - Woolworths new Odd Bunch section |
I didn't buy the "awkward avocados who dream of dancing their way into a salsa" yet as there were a few too many for me, but I did enjoy the names |
Meanwhile charities such as OzHarvest and Food Bank are doing their best to salvage food at all points along the
food chain - including restaurants and private homes, for redistribution to the
needy. Call them if you have anything surplus to requirements. Here is the list for those near you including those
outside Australia.
Can’t help thinking
that both of these these initiatives will only make a small dent in that banana mountain and how great it would be if that
waste fruit could be distributed to schools or we could dry it with say, a mobile dehydrator to make a lightweight, high energy food for
famine relief, not to mention possible commercial applications such as banana powder for use by bakeries or pudding manufacturers.
Loved the crazy carrots ... |
On the home front, I personally waste very little having
come from a household where wasting food was regarded as a sin. Our Dad grew
up in Germany between the wars and the Depression and didn’t even see butter
until he was eleven. Many others whose parents (or they themselves) went
through similar hardships such as rationing and the Depression will know what I
mean. We use up leftovers and have a
long- standing tradition of market day stews or soups which use up any remaining
vegetables, while things like overripe
bananas go into smoothies, muffins or cakes.
I also like to shop on an almost daily basis like the French do, which is more expensive but allows me to buy fresh and only what I really need, as opposed to cheaper bulk buys, where much more is likely to go to waste. For those who actually have a job and don’t have to worry as much about saving money this is no doubt a bit of a luxury as they are much more time poor and stressed. Gone are the days when mothers could stay home and spend hours making delicious meals out of modest ingredients, or when households had the space to grow and store food. Urbanisation and denser living have also put paid to such things, unless people have made a deliberate lifestyle decision to say, support farmer’s markets or make their own food, both of which are generally more expensive as well as being more time consuming.
Despite all this we still make our share of kitchen waste –potato
peels, onion skins, wilted outer leaves of cabbage and so on. In landfill it
turns into methane, which is a greenhouse gas three times more potent
than carbon dioxide.When we tried using the neighbours ‘ compost
bin (we live in a kind of townhouse
arrangement), they started to get rats, so
I have just invested in a rather expensive Bokashi system. This is an indoor
process favoured by the Japanese which uses benign microbes to ferment kitchen scraps
-even fish and meat, without smells, flies or rodents. Afterwards, what remains
can be put into the compost or buried in the garden or, as in my case, probably
a flower pot, which would be OK to plant in two weeks later. I’ll let you know
how it goes. For the Japanese there is also a spiritual dimension to this. Read
about the concept of mottainai here, also the Swedish notion of lagom.
I also like to shop on an almost daily basis like the French do, which is more expensive but allows me to buy fresh and only what I really need, as opposed to cheaper bulk buys, where much more is likely to go to waste. For those who actually have a job and don’t have to worry as much about saving money this is no doubt a bit of a luxury as they are much more time poor and stressed. Gone are the days when mothers could stay home and spend hours making delicious meals out of modest ingredients, or when households had the space to grow and store food. Urbanisation and denser living have also put paid to such things, unless people have made a deliberate lifestyle decision to say, support farmer’s markets or make their own food, both of which are generally more expensive as well as being more time consuming.
The 'peculiar' pears |
One last thought on this topic. Yes, it is wrong that so much food
is being wasted -according to Dr Karl food waste makes up the bulk of US solid waste and we are surely not far behind . Nor is it much use telling one’s offspring how grateful someone on the
other side of the world would be for those peas you have just had to throw out because logistics are a big part of the problem. It does however remind
me of a lady I met once who was pondering what to do with an extra cabbage she had while people were starving in Africa
. She hit upon the idea of making
soup with it and selling it at her morning church group. This went so well that
she did it a few more times and was soon able to make a substantial donation. Perhaps workplaces could have a soup day like this once a month or even once a week.
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