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Wicklow County Council. Waste Prevention in the catering and Hospitality Sector. Waste Prevention in the catering and Hospitality Sector. Aim
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Wicklow County Council Waste Prevention in the catering and Hospitality Sector
Waste Prevention in the catering and Hospitality Sector • Aim • To benchmark food waste with a view to developing prevention measures in the hospitality and catering sector. To trial alternative composting methods of food waste. Cooked Food costs €2000 a tonne to produce and how much for disposal???
Partners • Wicklow County Council Staff Canteen • Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation – Restaurant & Hostel • An Óige Knockree Youth Hostel • The Baltinglass Inn - Pub • The Portview Day Care Centre • Carnew Community Care Centre • Clermont Campus, Rathnew
Work Undertaken to Date • A waste categorisation audit for one weeks waste for each of the partners. • Food waste was collected separately from the dining areas and kitchens and where feasible peelings were kept separate from cooked food waste. • This will allow us to develop a better understanding of how food waste is generated in the catering process.
Report A report profiling waste production was written for each partner: • Explaining results of waste audit • Recommendations on general waste management • Recommendations on food waste prevention and composting of food waste. • Meetings with staff to discuss results and recommendations
Some observations…. • Food cooked but not served can be a high proportion of food waste • Plate waste – leftovers- was much lower than expected • Peelings and trimmings were up to 50% of food waste • Good stock control and managing events were particular problems
Prevention Measures Implemented • Wicklow County Council – 136kg/week • self service salad bar, • sandwiches made to order, • portion control, • ramekins for jam & butter(free), sachets are charged
Prevention Measures Implemented • Glencree – 124kg/week • Chef decides portion size • Second helpings offered • Peelings composted • Improved recycling Raw food waste is composted Wormery installed
Prevention Measures Implemented • Knockree – 164kg/week • Stock control • Over cooked meals frozen for other guests • kitchen management for catered events, • food left by guest made available to other guests • Using stock to prepare meals • Wormery installed Food Waste reduced to approx 15 kgs/week
Prevention Measures Implemented • Baltinglass – 142kg/week • Changes in kitchen management have significantly reduced production of cooked food waste, • opening hours have been adjusted to suit market. • Food waste reduced by over a half • Energy management Food Waste reduced By over a half
Prevention Measures Implemented • Portview Centre – 22kgs/week • Good menu planning taking account of clients, • use local suppliers purchasing exact ingredients for planned meals, • meals cooked for clients who don’t attend are given to clients to take home. • Wormery Installed
Prevention Measures Implemented • Carnew Community Care Centre – 63kgs/week • 32% of food waste already composted, • use local suppliers purchasing exact ingredients for planned meals, • 13% of cooked food is stored for reuse as prepared meals. Food waste management began in 2001 with staff training and composting
Handling Organic Waste • Research was undertaken reviewing composting technologies available on the Irish market and internationally. • No appropriate technology is currently available for small businesses generating food waste between 50Kgs and 150Kgs per week at a viable cost.
Worm Composting • Two worm composting systems have been developed for trial with our partners. • New Zealand Box in use • Earthworms Unlimited – local Company
Composting • Glencree New Zealand Box
Worm Composting • Large Wormery
Worm Composting • Stacking Wormery
Worm Composting Trials • Knockree, Glencree and Portview • Wormeries are handling up to 15 kgs a week • Need careful controls in the set up period • Larger wormery is in use at Glencree • Cold composting for raw vegetable food working very well in Glencree & Carnew
Knockree Worm Compost • Harvested 13th October 2010
Some useful hints… • Portion control – let people ask for more! • Fruit in season made into coulis which is frozen • Extra meals sold cheaper at end of day or frozen for future use • Cold composting effective especially where there is also garden waste • Daily recording of unused cooked food to accurately predict quanities • Daily accurate stock control • Local purchasing of food with short storage • Cooking smaller batches of staples in advance – rice, paste, etc. • Table staff alerting cooking staff of dishes that are creating leftovers
More Information… • www.foodwaste.ie(sectoral fact sheets) • www.epa.ie - go to downloads, waste, waste prevention projects: ‘Calling Time on Waste’ & ‘Less Waste More Profit’ • www.stopfoodwaste.ie • www.lovefoodhatewaste.org • http://envirowise.wrap.org.uk - ‘Cost-Effective Management Of Organic Waste From The Food & Drink And Hospitality Sectors’