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Food

Jamie's War on food waste

(66 Posts)
Teetime Sun 04-Jan-15 12:33:02

Jamie Oliver's new programme on Friday evening documented the amazing waste of perfectly good vegetables from our farms because supermarkets specify that they will only take perfect veg. Jamie and his team demonstrated well that the public do not mind what he called 'wonky vegetables' and in fact feel they look more natural and can be keenly priced. Apparently Asda is taking up the challenge and going to stock these in some pilot stores. Farmers are only receiving £10 a ton for these veg as animal food - its shocking. I know without asking that Gransnetters would be happy to use these veg but would still be good to hear some views about the waste.

Juliette Fri 09-Jan-15 20:20:51

Ooh, thanks POGS haven't tried that, will give it a whirl and report back.

POGS Fri 09-Jan-15 19:45:01

Keep an iceberg lettuce for ages by wrapping it in cooking foil and obviously in the fridge. I don't know if that works for other types though.

annodomini Fri 09-Jan-15 19:06:12

You can keep lettuce for ages in the fridge as long as you don't cut it first. If you need to take bits off it for use, tear leaves off. Keep it in a plastic bag which needn't be airtight.

Juliette Fri 09-Jan-15 17:54:26

I never use a metal knife Ana, always employ the tearing method or use a specially designed implement which is plastic and has a serrated edge. I've tried every method of storing known to man. No joy. I think I'm responsible for a soggy brown lettuce mountain all on my own! Jamie would be horrified.

Nonu Fri 09-Jan-15 17:22:05

I never peel any of my veggies, just give them a good rinse.

As for storage, keep them in the refrigerator, last for an absolute age !!
smile

Ana Fri 09-Jan-15 16:47:18

Sorry, crun, didn't get what you meant. The ones I buy loose don't ever seem to be wet, though.

I store them the same way as you, Juliette and yes, they do last for ages. I keep lettuce in a food storage bag in the salad drawer (and never cut with a metal knife!)

Juliette Fri 09-Jan-15 16:42:26

crun I dry carrots, parsnips etc. when I get them home, then store loose in the salad drawer of the fridge which I line with a dry tea towel. They keep for ages. I don't have any such success with lettuce though no matter how I store it. Any tips would be very welcome.

crun Fri 09-Jan-15 16:26:55

Yes, but the boxes are lined with polythene to stop them drying out whilst they're in storage.

Ana Fri 09-Jan-15 15:51:25

Loose carrots don't/shouldn't come in polythene wrapper, crun...confused

You pick them out of veg boxes yourself.

crun Fri 09-Jan-15 15:32:10

I can't use a whole bag of carrots before they go off either, but the loose ones are wet when the polythene wrapper is first opened. I have to keep them in a poly bag at home, otherwise they go all soft and bendy.

granjura Thu 08-Jan-15 20:04:41

Must say I have given up buying carrots in bags- as they go off so quickly. Rather pay a little more for buying loose and dry- and keep much longer.

lemoncat Thu 08-Jan-15 16:09:38

Vote fot fresh misshapen veg and fruit here

crun Thu 08-Jan-15 15:28:00

"Wouldn't they be the same peeled as unpeeled?"

Probably, I don't know why I peel them really, habit probably. I don't think I could be bothered washing them, but then, I eat fruit without washing it. I've eaten carrots just as they are when I'm on holiday, and don't have a peeler.

constance Wed 07-Jan-15 20:20:42

No crun Esther is no relation grin

Stansgran Tue 06-Jan-15 15:35:23

But S'bury's have no peel carrots in bags. I definitely take their advice.

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 06-Jan-15 09:59:47

I would think so.

whitewave Tue 06-Jan-15 09:58:41

Does scrapping count?

jinglbellsfrocks Tue 06-Jan-15 09:57:10

That Chief Medical Officer for Health bloke did say we should peel all carrots except organic ones.

Teetime Tue 06-Jan-15 09:48:24

hilda where I used to live we were in Lions and we used to collect up the good but not sold fresh produce from the local large supermarket for distribution to vulnerable people on low incomes. The problem was this scheme became less and less successful as it became harder to identify who needed/wanted it as all agencies involved said due to confidentiality they could not give us any contact details. The Rotary Club here wanted to do it but ran into the same problem. I think a great deal here goes to the local food bank now.

soontobe Tue 06-Jan-15 07:48:12

That is my point really crun.
Wouldnt they be the same peeled as unpeeled?
Either they have chemicals all the way through, or they dont?
[I am not necessarily right by the way].

crun Tue 06-Jan-15 00:50:19

"My mother used to save weird potatoes and carrots if she thought the shapes would amuse us. "

You're not Esther Rantzen, are you?

crun Tue 06-Jan-15 00:44:07

"Pesticide residue can linger in the skin. Best to wash them thoroughly or peel them "

I eat a raw carrot with my breakfast every morning, I always peel them, but sometimes they have a very strong chemical taste to them. I assume it must be pesticide or some such agrichemical.

Agus Mon 05-Jan-15 20:47:17

Granjura grin

constance Mon 05-Jan-15 20:27:16

My mother used to save weird potatoes and carrots if she thought the shapes would amuse us. As a child I thought it normal to have a duck shaped spud sprouting on the windowsill. Looking back - maybe she was in too much of a hurry to peel them?

She also worked on a cucumber farm just post-war ww2 and even back then they had to sort into different sizes/shapes/straightness. I remember her complaining in the 1960s there was no point and that they were all jumbled together 'these days'

(and raclette - I remember back when I could eat cheese, my daughter crying at the smell of the raclette grill, probably because they were cooking meat and cheese on it - we sent her outside)

back to the veg - I am def a "Peel if not organic" person, however curvy.

hildajenniJ Mon 05-Jan-15 19:07:21

Never mind the not quite perfect fruit and veg. My DH works in the local Co-op and he is appalled at the amount of perfectly good fruit and vegetables they throw away just because they are past the sell by date. He said that on Christmas Eve he had to throw away two trays of beautiful bananas, several good pineapples and loads of brussels sprouts. The waste amounted to about £200.
Jamie Oliver - here is your next mission, sort out the supermarket waste!