Deub wrote: » Does the 30% include food thrown away by shops? It would make sense.
Food Waste (2017) In Ireland there is over one million tonnes of food waste disposed of each year. Around 1/3 of this comes from households. Every household in Ireland is responsible for 1 Ton of Food Waste. The cost per household is between €400 and €1000 per year.
freshpopcorn wrote: » I was unsure of this. However most of the supermarkets now give this to charity.
freshpopcorn wrote: » I recently heard something on TV and it said that we waste about 30% off food per year. I was think about this and I doubt our house does this. All meat/fish/vegetables/etc are eaten. Fat/scraps/ go to the pets and peels/skins go to compost/recycling. Bread/cakes/Biscuits/etc are generally eaten. Frozen food/dry goods/etc are generally eaten. We sometimes throw out bread crusts but the birds get these. Apart from that all that would be thrown out would be something we didn't like and Jams/mustard/etc that doesn't get used. I'd say we'd throw out well below 5% off food a year. What percentage of food do you waste?
LimeFruitGum wrote: » Out of curiosity, is there typically more wastage if there are kids in the house? It is just me and my partner at home, and I know what it takes to feed us every week. I hear of some parents having to cook different meals every night because one kid doesn’t like spuds (or whatever), and there’s bound to be some wastage creeping in there?
LimeFruitGum wrote: » I find I always end up throwing out broccoli:( We have improved a lot on this front. I actually stopped buying the 800g sized breads because we never finish it off. So I get a smaller loaf for the weekend and that does us fine. I box up dinner leftovers for lunch, so we don’t always need the bread for lunchtime sandwiches. Himself brings home leftover fruit from work if he can, so they’re perfect for my breakfast smoothies. There’s nothing wrong with them, they just don’t want fruit lying around the office over the weekend.
Graces7 wrote: » The freezer is a great help in not wasting. I buy a large sliced loaf as I am now housebound and shop by email/delivery every 2 weeks. So I just take out a slice or two as needed. Mostly for toast. When it arrives I split it into smaller bags too . Starting to bake more too now!
LimeFruitGum wrote: » Oh definitely. Splitting up the loaf is a great idea. We could very much do with a larger freezer at home
Woke Hogan wrote: » 0% People wasting food should be prosecuted, though I do understand that would be very difficult to enforce.