6 Chefs Who Fight Food Waste with Trash Cooking
Photo via Flickr/ TazThe stats on food waste are sobering. No less an authority than the World Bank said last year that up to one third of the world’s food production billion metric tons every year—is wasted. In the United States alone, the Food Waste Reduction Alliance estimates that 80 billion pounds of food made it to landfills last year.
The positive flip side of those stats is that trash cooking—using the food that would often be considered waste, scraps, or rejects—is hot right now. The National Restaurant Association ranked food waste reduction and management in the top ten of its Tableservice Menu Trends for the year. And well-known chefs like Dan Barber and Roy Choi are making reducing food waste—for reasons as varied as saving the environment to saving money—part of their culinary missions, or even their business plans.
While the majority of food waste occurs at consumer levels, chefs—with their influence and allure—are in a unique position to set a good example. Here are six chefs who fight foodservice-level waste in everything from fast-food chains to Michelin-starred restaurants.
Dan Barber
For Dan Barber, the utilizing the unharnessed potential of food waste is a passion. Barber, of the acclaimed restaurants Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns, recently ran a pop-up event called wastED that focused on meals made from what most would consider food scraps. A variety of big-name chefs cooked for wastED, making meals with unglamourous-sounding ingredients like beet roots, vegetable peels, and the ends of dry-aged beef.