Q&A: Get a free meal and learn how to combat food waste at Thursday’s Feeding the 5000 event in downtown Los Angeles

Latimes

Q&A: Get a free meal and learn how to combat food waste at Thursday’s Feeding the 5000 event in downtown Los Angeles"


Play all audios:

Loading...

On Thursday, Feeding the 5000 will hold its first Los Angeles event, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Pershing Square in downtown Los Angeles, as part of the Los Angeles Times Food Bowl festival.


The event culminates in a feast created with the help of local partners using fresh produce that otherwise would have gone to waste.


Among the festivities, Feeding the 5000 LA will include cooking demonstrations by Monica May of Nickel Diner, who will show how to make a savory French toast, and chef Ryan Stewart of L.A.


Kitchen, who will demonstrate how to transform produce into delicious dishes.


Feeding the 5000 held its first event in 2009 in London as a showcase for local initiatives and a way for ordinary people to send a powerful message to the food industry that food waste on


this scale has to stop. To date, 40 Feeding the 5000 events have been organized around the world, including in New York, Oakland, Denver and Washington, D.C.


Tristram Stuart is the founder of Feeding the 5000 and Feedback, a nonprofit environmental organization devoted to ending food waste at every level of the food system. Recently, I


interviewed him by email about the Los Angeles event. The interview was edited for clarity and length.


A third of the world’s food is wasted — even more in a country like the USA, where it’s nearer to 40%. The U.S. government and the U.N. have set a goal of halving food waste by 2030. In


order to achieve this, Feedback is calling on businesses to start transparently reporting how much food they’re wasting each year: That way, the government, entrepreneurs and nonprofits


seeking to make use of unsold product will know where to invest to solve the problem. Companies who continue to sweep food waste under the carpet are just hindering the solutions.


In the U.K., where measurement has been ongoing for some years, and progressive businesses report annually, we’ve seen a dramatic reduction — 21% at household level and nearly as much from


the industry — which demonstrates to the world that the global goal to halve food waste is achievable.


Food waste has massively taken off as an issue in the USA — with chefs, civic society organizations, government and big business realizing that cutting waste is a huge environmental and


economic opportunity. It’s great to see some beginnings, such as L.A.’s Zero Waste goals, which commits the city to sending 1 million tons less waste to the landfill by 2025.


But California will need to go much further. For one thing, when food is wasted, all the water used to grow that food is wasted: A quarter of all U.S. water consumption can be attributed to


the growing of food that never gets eaten. In California, that’s 9,000 million gallons a day — equivalent to leaving a faucet running for 9,000 years! For a state like California, cutting


food waste may prove to be an existential necessity.


Feeding the 5000 is a showcase for local initiatives and a way for people to send a message to the food industry that food waste on this scale has to stop.


The global food system is so interconnected — it’s fascinating and terrifying visiting farms in a country like Peru, and seeing piles of onions rotting in the desert because they’re too


small, or too big or not round enough for the U.S. or European markets. One innovation I am particularly proud of is Toast Ale, the award-winning beer I created, which transforms fresh


surplus unsold bread into craft ale. One hundred percent of the profits will be poured into nonprofits like Feedback, seeking to toast the end of food waste. We just launched a crowdfunding


campaign on Indiegogo to bring it to the U.S.


Los Angeles is such a fascinating city from a food waste perspective. On the one hand, you have a really vibrant, active, forward-looking environmental movement — no one knows better than


Southern Californians what adverse weather conditions can mean. In many ways, it feels like the hub of action on climate change in the U.S. But L.A. also has a reputation as a symbol of


consumption and excess — and of course, L.A. has an incredible food movement, which makes hosting a Feeding the 5000 here a really exciting prospect.


Here in L.A., we have some really incredible partners, doing amazing things to tackle food waste. Feeding the 5000 is a way of bringing them together and showcasing what they’re doing and


why it is so vital. L.A. Kitchen, set up by my friend Robert Egger to tackle food waste and social issues, is our partner to cook the meal.


The city government has really welcomed the event, and I’ve been learning about their plans to tackle waste going to the landfill. The zero waste by 2030 ambition is admirable and something


I hope Angelenos really engage with. What we’d love to help inspire next is more action to not only deal with waste that does occur, but to prevent it from happening in the first place. And


to do that, the city needs to be encouraging companies that produce food to be transparent about how much of it they’re wasting — that way we can start coming up with some solutions


together.


The great thing about food waste as an issue is that there’s something practical that every individual can do to solve the problem. The first step is to buy less: On average, we’re all


buying way more than we end up eating. In the USA, there’s a dire need for the industry to standardize food labels and for people to understand that most of them are hyper-cautious dates set


by the industry merely to guarantee optimal quality, but that it’s still safe to eat food after its best-by date.


And although we should all consider food waste our responsibility, we shouldn’t let big business off the hook. Californians should be asking their supermarkets, restaurants and retailers


what they’re doing about their food waste too.


Chefs and scientists will discuss solutions for tackling the global problem of food waste at the Los Angeles Times Food Bowl throughout the month of May. For a full schedule of events, click


here.


Why we need to stop throwing out food and thinking of it as a resource


Food Bowl is coming. Here’s our cheat sheet of what to do during the monthlong festival


Can urban farming combat food waste? We chatted with the founders of Alma Backyard Farms


Noelle Carter is the former Los Angeles Times Test Kitchen director. She left in January 2019.


Trending News

Lucky coffee, unicorn stumbles and sam altman's yc wager

Hello and welcome back to Equity, TechCrunch’s venture capital-focused podcast, where we unpack the numbers behind the h...

How to Halt or Even Reverse Weight Gain as You Age

These food samples show what 25 to 30 grams of protein per meal looks like. Sue Tallon Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Let’s s...

Les audacieuses, a show to introduce children to the women who made history, at la nouvelle seine

From December 7 to 28, 2024, La Nouvelle Seine presents Les Audacieuses, a series of portraits of extraordinary women, i...

Mikie sherrill articles - breitbart

On Thursday’s broadcast of CNN’s “Cuomo Primetime,” Representative Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ) stated that President Trump is ...

New MacBook Air 2018 review – Laptop perfection comes at a premium

Ever since the MacBook Air was pulled from an A4 envelope back in 2008 it's been admired for offering powerful specs and...

Latests News

Q&A: Get a free meal and learn how to combat food waste at Thursday’s Feeding the 5000 event in downtown Los Angeles

On Thursday, Feeding the 5000 will hold its first Los Angeles event, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Pershing Square in downto...

Psg 5-1 lens - Sortiraparis.com

PSG 5-1 Lens (1-0)Buts :Paris : Camara (20e), Nenê (50e), Hoarau (53e, 63e), Luyindula (75e).Lens : Eduardo (80e).Averti...

Mechanisms of radiotherapy-associated cognitive disability in patients with brain tumours

Intracranial radiotherapy leads to permanent and substantial cognitive disability in 50–90% of patientsThe pathophysiolo...

Page Not Found

很抱歉,你所访问的页面已不存在了。如有疑问,请电邮[email protected]你仍然可选择浏览首页或以下栏目内容 :新闻生活娱乐财经体育视频播客新报业媒体有限公司版权所有(公司登记号:202120748H)...

Drive-thru clinic available for flu vaccine for indiana veterans | va indiana health care | veterans affairs

Getting a flu vaccine is more important than ever this year to minimize the risk of illness and possible hospitalization...

Top