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2.11. Food, glorious food

A guide to responsible food provision that should provide plenty of interesting food for thought.

Key Takeaways 2.10

In a nutshell

  • How much do you think about food?

  • Consider your guests and visitors: what is important to them?

Food waste

According to food waste redistribution company Olio, we throw away one third of the food we produce. That is 6.4 million tonnes of edible food going to waste each year in the UK - the equivalent of 15 billion meals. By contrast, an estimated 14 million people in the UK struggle to feed themselves, their families and their children.

From an environmental standpoint, the amount of global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated by food waste is 10%, which is even more than from plastics. Olio (who provide guidance and helpful tools to reduce food waste), has created five ways businesses can significantly reduce their food waste levels. They are adapted here for brevity:

Thoughtful planning and ordering

Careful menu planning and ingredient estimation are important to avoid over-stocking and wastage. Go back through your historical sales data and customer feedback to help you make informed decisions about what to order. You’ll use more food before it spoils - and probably save money too.

Foster a waste-conscious culture

Educating your staff on proper food handling techniques, product shelf life, expiry dates and portion control will make a big difference to how much food is wasted in your kitchen. Encourage your team to actively find ways to minimise waste, such as reusing ingredients for future menus. 

Improving your storage and labelling 

Investing in good quality storage equipment helps ingredients stay fresher longer. Implement clear date labelling and run a first-in, first-out (FIFO) rotation system to make sure that older products are used up before newer ones, reducing the likelihood of items expiring and going to waste.

Monitoring plate management

Monitoring plate waste provides great insight into customer preferences and helps manage food waste levels better.  If lots of food is coming back after service, consider adjusting portion sizes, invite customers to request smaller portions or offer the option to order half portions.

Thinking inside the box with surplus food

If you cannot reuse food for future menus, explore ways to redistribute or donate it. Partner with local charities, food banks or similar businesses to have a positive impact on the community while simultaneously reducing food waste. 

Local produce

Transport is a small but important contributor to GHG emissions from our food. For most food products, it accounts for around 10% of emissions. For any food items that are transported by air, the emissions can be very high, so particularly try to avoid sourcing air-freighted ingredients to reduce the overall carbon footprint of your food.

Supporting and using locally produced food has many benefits:

  • Menu variety (making use of seasonal produce forces you to update your menu regularly which is great for guests).
  • Confirming product provenance (complete certainty of product origin).
  • Developing fruitful partnerships (ensuring deep and accurate supply chain knowledge).
  • Creating and nurturing local storytelling (generating a distinctive character for your destination through novel products with a story behind them).
  • Supporting micro businesses (if they thrive, you thrive).
  • Community involvement (a united community benefits everyone).

… while all the while being helpful to keeping your carbon footprint low.