Photo by: Hersh

Waste Not, Want Not

Photo by: Hersh

If you are going to write a blog about eating healthier and staying on a budget you really have to tackle the subject of waste. Waste is something that most people in my generation are keenly aware of. Those of us who grew up in the 80’s will always remember the anti-litter campaigns and the grainy images of the overflowing dumps and landfills on the nightly news as our trash problem slowly emerged as something that needed to be discussed.

A weekly trip to the grocery store with my family includes taking a list so that we can stay on a budget, but invariably we end up at least 15% over that budget because of all the items that end up in our cart that were never on the list. It is not the kids that clamor for these food items. They are really too young for that kind of begging, and our problem now is getting the kids to eat at all, rather than overeating. It is myself and DH that are swayed into buying things like Kashi bars and $7 per pound dried blueberries. Well, okay, it is mostly me.

At least once a month I have to throw away foods that have not been consumed. It is mostly leftover side dishes that didn’t get eaten, the ends of a loaf of bread, or juice that now tastes acidic and turned. There are always wilted veggies and brown fruit that we throw away. I sometimes lovingly refer to my refrigerator as ‘The Food Museum’, because everything is neatly packed into tupperware and on display. Look but don’t touch.

Andrew Martin of the New York Times wrote in 2008 that:
“…Americans waste an astonishing amount of food-an estimated 27% of the food available for consumption, according to a government study…It works out to be about a pound of food every day for every American.”

Martin reports that it breaks it down into the following categories for a family of four each month:

  • 18.5 pounds of grains
  • 10.5 pounds of processed fruits and veggies
  • 24 pounds of fresh fruits and veggies
  • 22 pounds of liquid milk
  • 10.4 pounds of meat and fish
  • 15 pounds of sweetener
  • 8.6 pounds of oils
  • 12.8 pounds of other foods (including eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, dry beans, peas and lentils and dairy other than liquid milk)

Now his numbers include uneaten restaurant food and food that grocery stores throw away because of spoilage (also think foods that are unspoiled but past their expiration date) but it does not include ready to eat foods that grocery stores throw away like rotisserie chickens and sandwiches and soup. So although you could step back from these numbers and say “I am not directly responsible for this”, we are consumers within this industrialized food chain, so technically we are culpable.

Martin’s numbers were right in the middle of what I found when I searched “Americans waste food” at Google.com. Some sites quoted more along the lines of 12% of the total food available while some more politically motivated sites quoted closer to 50%.

My current mission of shopping for unprocessed foods, I am hoping, will have 2 outcomes. One, That I will cook more often and eat higher quality things. And two, food will become less convenient so I will eat less of it. But I think there is a third thing factored into these two objectives, because I will be expending more time cooking I will be less apt to waste foods into which I have put all that effort. In a sense, food will become more valuable to me and my family. And for the Frugal Franny I am deep inside, I will save money in the process.

Isn’t this what we all want?

Stay tuned this week, I bought ramps at the farmer’s market and I am not sure what to do with them. And tomorrow I go in search of pressed peanut oil at the conventional grocery. I wonder if I will find it.

Christa O’Brien is a full time working mom of two young boys. The Table of Promise is her blog about getting her children off processed foods and getting them more intimately involved in the food that they eat.

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26 Comments

Great article. I am from Australia and we also had those ads in the 80s. Leftover food in our fridge gets called the Science Experiment! My partner and I are on a mission to cook more and waste less...

I think this is a great article! At least you were brave enough to date yourself, referring to the 80's. We were taught that percentage at Publix... yet they quoted something a little lower than 27%, but that is not the point. We (meaning only me) are trying hard at pushing the leftovers for lunches and reinventing dinners. I do still purchase the Kashi bars, crackers, etc since they are the cheapest items that are close to natural and convenient at the same time...

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Loved the article! In our home, we call the drawers in the fridge "The Rotter" instead of "The Crisper." Nothing has EVER been crisper coming out of those things! LOL Also, we buy goods in bulk with tax refund money every year. I have several really good sources for inexpensive food storage items. It saves us a lot of money and makes things easier--never have to order out or make a mad dash to the store to get dinner if you keep it on hand!

This is a good commentary. I try to think about my budget, healthiness, how often do I cook at home and so forth. There is nothing worse than waste.

All the Best

I think the same things... With my Almost 2 year olds taste buds all over the place, I am trying to create new healthy and yummy food choices... Right now I just made Kasha for the first time.. and yes the WHOLE box... OMG you get alot of Kasha.. so after making a huge amount of a "side stir fry veggie" thing, there is still a bunch waiting for some culinary love..as the time ticks by... I just cant throw it away.. yes TODAY I will make thoes pattys...

I agree with your article and am appalled at a new ad for Walmart. The mom has an at home office and she is on the computer. 3 kids are in the other room scribbling on paper, putting sticky notes all over walls and themselves. The a kid sweetly asks mom for more paper and she hands them an entire package. WHY? Because office supplies are cheaper at Walmart...

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Good article. When I was first married it seemed like I threw out tons of food. As I have gotten older, wiser and more budget conscious I rarely throw out food now.

One word for you: Freeze. You can freeze almost anything. I buy most of our veggies frozen now to help cut down on waste. You can also buy fresh, flash freeze them and freeze for later use.

We eat leftovers and I try to recreate new meals out of anything that has not been eaten...

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I enjoyed this article and hope to read more about it myself. In our home we used to waste a lot of food and we rarely cooked @ home. These days I have been cooking and preparing meals almost entirely at home and I am shocked to find that I do not waste as much if rarely any food now.

What a great article - so true about how wasteful we have become. My parents were very frugal just like you described your childhood. It such a shame how wasteful we have become - I too am going to work harder at not wasting food. The most expensive food you buy is the food that you did not use and throw away!! Just think how much of our own hard earned money we are throwing away everytime we let food go bad. Thanks for a reminder to quit being so wasteful.

I know when I was growing we wasted alot of food. my husband I are on a tight budget and can't afford to waste. I know a lot of people are on tight budgets but I am a little tighter than some. My husband has the only income which is about 1100 a month and $435 of that goes to our recently filed bankruptcy. after the other bills we don't have alot. we collect...

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So important... and so hard! We have a CSA subscription and have similar problems with what to do with "unfamiliar" veggies... I've bought a couple veggie cookbooks, and a freezing/canning book. After 5 years, we are much better at it, but still a work in progress... I keep trying to remember that "perfect is the enemy of good."

I agree, We have a dog that gets our left overs, but to be honest we don't have that much... We have long ago tackled the subject of waste less. We live where we don't have trash pick up and have to haul our own garbage to the dump- when you start doing that you realize how much you waste. As far as food goes I cook from scratch years ago because I have been a SAHM and it is cheaper than the convenience food- not to mention my degree is in dietitics so healthier to...

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There are foodie "challenges" to create meals for a week using only the food you have in the house. It seems a good idea to get imaginative with leftovers as well. I like that the Food Network has shows that plan the second menu with the original protein for later in the week. I divide large portions and put in the freezer, but then find my freezer just becomes the place where the food gets freezer burned and okay to throw away. I guess Freezer Challenge is next!

I am famous in my family for HATING to waste anything! With food i find if i shop a little more often, that i know what i have to work with and less goes to waste. My best trick is to cook a meal that uses up all the stuff thats going bad, and either have it for dinner, or just freeze it - ive gotten very creative :) I find freezing leftovers not only keeps the waste down, but makes hetic dinner times easy when there isnt time to cook - we just pull something healthy out of the freezer!

I'm on the same page with not wasting, and we don't eat processed foods. I grew up in the 70's with the same environmental messages and even anuimanl cruelty ones. (Mom liked to put shaved rabbits in "Boycott Gillette" posters onh the fridge.)
My problems with food waste were the "less yummy" produce items that would get avoided in the fridge until they spoiled...

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