Everyday Life

The Big Waste: One-third of the World’s Food Supply

Recently, the Food Network, showed The Big Waste, a documentary on wasted food in the United States. A couple of statistics cited in the show caught my attention. Annually, roughly 40% of the food produced in the United States is not eaten. That comes to about 200 lbs. of wasted food per person, or enough to fill a football field every day. A recent study published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations suggests that one-third of the world’s food produced for humans to consume (1.3 billion tons a year) is either lost or wasted. These are staggering numbers, especially considering the magnitude of hunger in the world. The report offers many preventative measures.

The Big Waste documentary isn’t all that unique. It is reminiscent of a 2010 documentary shown on BBC, the Great British Waste Menu. The Food Network chose to introduce a male/female competitive element into their program by pitting celebrity chefs Anne Burrell and Alex Guarnaschelli against Bobby Flay and Michael Simon. Entertainment value generates the impact of The Big Waste, as it addresses a serious issue. Big personalities attract and sustain attention. The show stimulated significant responses from viewers through Facebook and Twitter.

The Big Waste suggests that we are part of the problem, and we can be part of the solution. The problem of lost and wasted food is well-known among academics and activists, but now the issue is working its way into popular culture.

Two chef teams demonstrated through a competition to one hundred restaurateurs, foodies, taste makers and food critics that outstanding meals can be created from what is destined for the trash or compost pile. By watching the chefs source the lost and wasted food that they need to prepare their dishes, the viewers are exposed to backstage areas of the food chain. Through the chefs’ quests, viewers learn how we can become part of the solution by changing our food sourcing practices, and are encouraged to explore foods we may have avoided, such as offal. Competition rules called for both teams to prepare main courses. Flay and Simon were asked to prepare appetizers, and Burrell and Gurnaschelli were asked to create desserts.

Flay and Simon deep-fried squash blossoms stuffed with a ricotta cheese filling, which was coupled with three sauces and a basil pesto which used shortbread for texture, and corn. Many of these were sourced at a food market. Consumers weren’t buying the squash blossoms, the ricotta was a day beyond the sell date, but their quality was excellent and was safe to use. The shortbread also was being discarded because of the sell date on the package. The chefs also selected fresh peas, radishes, carrots, onions, artichokes and thyme which had slight imperfections, and were being discarded. The corn came from a farm. It was knocked down by a storm, and potential buyers worried that there might be something wrong with it. There wasn’t. The basil came from an organic farm, and it had gone to seed. Some of its flavor potential had been lost, and it was heading for the compost pile. Other fruits and vegetables were destined for the compost pile because they were bruised, frequently by customers looking for the perfect item. On pick your own farms, shoppers frequently picked items and discarded them for what they perceived to be better items. Some pick your own farms lose 50% of what they produce. Largely customer demands for perfection and wariness of sell by dates condemned these foods for loss or waste. The narration noted that 27 million tons of edible food is lost every year in supermarkets, restaurants, convenience stores and other outlets for these types of reasons.

Flay’s and Simon’s entrée offerings featured offal: beef tongue, hearts and discarded ends of short ribs served with carrots, parsnips, cabbage and pesto. As with the other items, all were destined for the trash or composite pile. The offal and other body parts of butchered animals are frequently discarded because of lack of consumer interest in them, even though restaurant quality offerings can be made from them.

Burrell and Gurnaschelli served fried oysters, stuffed chicken legs, fish ravioli, a tomato base soup flavored with fish and seafood for their entrees. A trio of desserts was created: roasted peaches, a sweet corn flan, and a peach tartine accompanied by frozen afogatto made with espresso and cocoa powder. The fish and seafood came from a fish market. Oysters had been returned by a good customer who ordered too many. It couldn’t be resold. Red snapper was returned because a party had been canceled. Halibut was bruised. All were safe to eat and could be used. The flour, espresso and coca came from a well-known bakery that was reluctant to mix left over amounts. The peaches had slight imperfections on the skin, and many had been discarded on the ground by picky consumers. The same could be said about the tomatoes. The poultry was destined to be discarded because wings or skin had been broken while being plucked and cleansed. Suspicious customers didn’t want to buy whole chickens with imperfections. Eggs were discarded, but then reclaimed, because of size or color variations. All were perfectly good, but were not marketable. At a supermarket, Burrell with the help of a “freegan,” went “urban foraging” or “dumpster diving.” They found perfectly good tomatoes, bread, Swiss chard, bagels, avocados, and a variety of prepackaged salads.

The “freegan” who helped Burrell did “dumpster diving” by choice, not necessity. The term “freegan” is compounded from “free” and “vegan,” although not all freegans are vegans. Elements of the movement have been around for decades. However, its current form is traceable to the 1990s. As a social movement, freegans believe that we live “in a complex, industrial, mass-production economy driven by profit, abuses of human, animals, and the earth abound at all levels of production (from acquisition to raw materials to production to transportation) and in just about every product we buy.”

Those who aren’t ready to become “freegans” can still make a difference. We can be a part of the solution to lost and wasted food. We can make a difference: rethinking how we handle food, what we choose to eat, how we prepare it, where we get it and how we choose to get it.

And by the way, Flay and Simon won the competition.

6 comments to The Big Waste: One-third of the World’s Food Supply

  • Susan Pearce

    Thank you, Jeff. And university campuses are a part of the problem. Many are trying to become part of the solution. The Campus Kitchens project is a student volunteer project that creates meals from leftover dining hall food and delivers them to local community members to combat hunger. It’s a small step in a larger structural dilemma, but at least it represents an institutional commitment and raises awareness of the problem among students. We have been participants in this program for almost 3 years year at East Carolina University:

    http://www.campuskitchens.org/national/

  • Darini Nicholas

    Thank you, a great piece by the way! Within the realm of our sociology or even anthropology of food and eating this serves as a useful exercise into the rethinking required in how to source wasted food via dumpster diving a facet of the freegan subculure. A culture that negotiates the boundaries between what is deemed polluted/contaminated to find a new value and meaning for further sustenance–that in this case can mean a deliciously decadent meal, possibly the envy even of some of our finer establishments–and yet in slight measure but nevertheless once again reassuring me the endurance of the human spirit in the face of “The Big Waste”.

  • Michael Corey

    The Campus Kitchen’s Project is doing great work. Thanks for providing the link. I was impressed by what the students have been able to do. Community initiatives like this can make a difference for the people who participate and for the people it serves. The list of sponsors is an example of how stakeholders from very different backgrounds can come together and support a worthwhile cause.

  • Michael Corey

    Great point. The boundary between what is deemed polluted/contaminated and what is regarded as pure is negotiable, location and time specific. In The Big Waste, there is a contentious negotiation between Burrell and a food scientist hired by the producers to insure the safety of the food being used. Burrell acquired from a shop a large piece of prosciutto that was going to discarded because the ratio of fat to meat was too large for the business to use in normal slices. Burrell thought that she could extract great flavor from it. The inspector classified the food as being a meat product that was uncooked, and it had an internal temperature of slightly over 40 degrees as I recall. The inspector denied the use of the prosciutto because of concerns about possible bacterial infection. Burrell argued that dry-cured meats have been used safely for thousands of years, and the 40degree temperature cut-off was not a problem. Burrell lost. She considered taking the prosciutto home.

    On a personal note, I recall being in the Army during the Vietnam War. Fresh baked bread was brought to our location. Insects “infested” the dough prior to baking, and could be seen in the finished form. We were happy to eat the bread. It was a great change from “C” rations. We told one another that the bread was enriched with protein. In the United States, we would have rejected the bread as being contaminated.

  • Michael Corey

    Great point. The boundary between what is deemed polluted/contaminated and what is regarded as pure is negotiable, location and time specific. In The Big Waste, there is a contentious negotiation between Burrell and a food scientist hired by the producers to insure the safety of the food being used. Burrell acquired from a shop a large piece of prosciutto that was going to discarded because the ratio of fat to meat was too large for the business to use in normal slices. Burrell thought that she could extract great flavor from it. The inspector classified the food as being a meat product that was uncooked, and it had an internal temperature of slightly over 40 degrees as I recall. The inspector denied the use of the prosciutto because of concerns about possible bacterial infection. Burrell argued that dry-cured meats have been used safely for thousands of years, and the 40degree temperature cut-off was not a problem. Burrell lost. She considered taking the prosciutto home.

    On a personal note, I recall being in the Army during the Vietnam War. Fresh baked bread was brought to our location. Insects “infested” the dough prior to baking, and could be seen in the finished form. We were happy to eat the bread. It was a great change from “C” rations. We told one another that the bread was enriched with protein. In the United States, we would have rejected the bread as being contaminated.

  • Scott

    I think wasting food while nearly one billion people in the world are going hungry is highly immoral. Thank you for bringing attention to this issue.

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