Site icon Seacoast Eat Local

The Food Waste Conversation Continues!

Hello everyone!

This week I’m going to continue to share with you what my friends, family, and colleagues had to say about two more of my food waste questions. Last week focused on what people have done to reduce the amount of food waste they produce and what they believe could be done at the home, town, and governmental level to reduce waste. This week’s questions hone in on why people reduce waste, and how reducing our waste can also reduce problems elsewhere in our lives.

 

Q 7: Do you think reducing food waste could in turn reduce other problems our country is currently facing? What problems, and how so?

I really enjoyed these responses, and love how each answer took a different approach when linking food waste to our other worldly problems. No, reducing food waste will not occur overnight, but as our last response noted, there are small changes that can lead to big changes, and those small steps will eventually be able to make an impact on the other problems we are facing.

 

Q 8: What do you think are the mains reasons why people waste food?

So many great points were brought up in this section. Money, time, laziness, a lack of appreciation, understanding, or education, and being disconnected from our food. Most people don’t know how their food is made. Most people don’t know where their food is from, and most people don’t even seem to think about it. Much of this is due to a lack of education and how our society runs. We on the Seacoast are extremely fortunate to have farmers markets where we are able to get to know our farmers and know how our veggies and meat are grown and raised.


Now for this weeks food waste challenge. To the participant who believes fries aren’t yummy as leftovers… toss them on a pan in the oven and I promise you they will be as yummy as before! Throw some cheese and peppers on it! Cut them up and throw them on nachos! There are so many possibilities. We have been trained to think that food needs to look a certain way, or that food isn’t good unless you have a recipe. Go out of your comfort zone and try something new! Throw something together and hope for the best! I once made a stir fry with coconut, plum, snap peas, broccoli, fig spread, balsamic, and rice because those are what I had in my fridge. It tasted good! Push yourself. Accept that sometimes it might not taste how you were expecting it to taste. It might even taste kind of ‘blah,’ but realize that it’s still food. You can still eat it, and should. Many people in the world live off of grains or rice. We are extremely privileged when it comes to food (and many many many other things), and we have lost sight of that.

Until next time-

Jess

Exit mobile version