Anonymous wrote:Compost. Composting is annoying and time-intensive, but gives me great joy. And makes a huge difference on food waste.
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
Most of our food waste is stuff you'd keep in the fridge that doesn't get used. So, produce, like a whole pack of celery for a recipe that only needs two stalks, carrots for same reason, herbs that come in a bunch, limes or lemons that get forgotten (this is easy - only buy when needed instead of stocking), deli meat where we make one sandwich and don't use the rest, hummus containers half used, shredded cheese that we only use some of, cream cheese that doesn't get used up.
From the pantry sometimes cereal or bread that gets forgotten and stale or moldy.
Dinners are always cooked at home and we do really well eating up or freezing all the leftovers. I do need to make sure the kids only put on their plates what they will actually eat so we have fewer scrapings into the garbage.
So, looking at this, composting our leftover produce, veggies, and tea leaves/coffee grounds, would vastly reduce our food waste. But composting seems overwhelming. We live in the suburbs and have a yard, but we don't have anywhere nearby to bring compost, so we'd need to do it at our home. Is there a truly simple way to start this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here:
Most of our food waste is stuff you'd keep in the fridge that doesn't get used. So, produce, like a whole pack of celery for a recipe that only needs two stalks, carrots for same reason, herbs that come in a bunch, limes or lemons that get forgotten (this is easy - only buy when needed instead of stocking), deli meat where we make one sandwich and don't use the rest, hummus containers half used, shredded cheese that we only use some of, cream cheese that doesn't get used up.
From the pantry sometimes cereal or bread that gets forgotten and stale or moldy.
Dinners are always cooked at home and we do really well eating up or freezing all the leftovers. I do need to make sure the kids only put on their plates what they will actually eat so we have fewer scrapings into the garbage.
So, looking at this, composting our leftover produce, veggies, and tea leaves/coffee grounds, would vastly reduce our food waste. But composting seems overwhelming. We live in the suburbs and have a yard, but we don't have anywhere nearby to bring compost, so we'd need to do it at our home. Is there a truly simple way to start this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are some tips that people have to lessen the amount of food you throw out? I recent article in the NYT pointed out that household food waste is a huge contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. I really didn't know that.
So I'd like to do better with this and I'm looking for ways to start.
Start where the waste is the most: not in households, but in public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Looking at what you are wasting might help, just to figure out where you should focus your efforts.
I tend to go through the fridge 2 times a week and look at what may need cooked/frozen/eaten asap. You might see what is consistently leftover or unused.
Having a few recipes on hand that can be improvised with assorted leftovers. Sometimes it's an omelet or stir fry.
My grocery list is built around having 2-3 kinds of fruit, 4-6 kind of veg, 2-3 meat/fish and so much of our staples (rice, pasta, etc). We don't keep more than a handful of cereals on hand, so something must be eaten before a new cereal is bought. (We have a tiny kitchen.)
Freeze extra veg/meat for stock.
Anonymous wrote:We eat a lot of leftovers. I truly don’t understand people who don’t keep leftovers. It’s often lunch the next day, or we’ll do a couple days worth of different leftovers for a dinner one night. Not much gets thrown out. Also, be careful about buying more produce than you can reasonably eat before it rots.
Anonymous wrote:What are some tips that people have to lessen the amount of food you throw out? I recent article in the NYT pointed out that household food waste is a huge contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. I really didn't know that.
So I'd like to do better with this and I'm looking for ways to start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t mind leftovers but DH doesn’t care for them. I try to “repurpose” when possible, like making sandwiches out of last nights pork roast.
I will freezer certain leftovers after a day or two if they lend well to freezing.
My somewhat guilty pleasure is putting leftover veg and protein in a bowl of instant ramen along with sriracha or gochujang and any other Asian condiments I have in the fridge.
Let me guess. Your husband also "doesn't care" to cook. It's always the person who isn't responsible for cooking who demands a fresh, hot meal daily. If he were responsible for the cooking, bet he'd change his tune right quick.