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Not Perfect Doesn't Mean Not Usable: 3 Ways to Reduce Food Waste at Home

  • Feb 27
  • 2 min read

Updated: Mar 6

Food rarely gets wasted on day one. It gets wasted mid-week when it is still usable, just not at its best. A soft tomato. Greens that have lost their perk. Bread edging towards dry.


That is usually the moment it gets tossed.


According to the Ministry for the Environment’s Aotearoa New Zealand Baseline Food Loss and Waste Project, around 1.22 million tonnes of food are lost or wasted every year. That works out to about 237 kilograms per person. Around 30% of that happens at the household level. Often, reducing food waste at home comes down to everyday kitchen habits rather than what we buy.


In most cases, these foods still have plenty of life left in them. They just need a little re-imagining.


Simple Ways to Reduce Food Waste at Home


1. Soft Tomatoes

Too soft for sandwiches? That’s usually when people give up on them, but soft tomatoes are often ideal for cooking. Fully ripened tomatoes have more flavour, so once they’re too soft for slicing, they’re perfect for heat.


Roasted soft tomatoes on a baking tray

What to do instead:

  • Halve and roast with olive oil and salt at 180–200°C until collapsed

  • Simmer into soup

  • Blitz into a pasta sauce base

  • Freeze blitzed tomatoes in portions for future cooking


Once thawed, they’ll be softer in texture - but perfect for sauces, casseroles, and curries.



If they’re mouldy, slimy, or smell sour, that’s your cue to compost, but soft alone isn’t a reason to bin them.


2. Spinach or Sturdier Greens That Have Gone Limp

If greens aren’t crisp, people assume they’re done for. But spinach, silverbeet and kale are made for cooking. If they’re simply wilted (not slimy, not spoiled), they’re still very usable.


What to do instead:

Wilted spinach cooking in a pan

Stir through:

  • Scrambled eggs

  • Pasta

  • Soup

  • Stir-fries

  • Curries


Not every leaf mix is suitable once tired. Delicate mesclun that is breaking down should go to compost. But sturdier greens are still very much in play.



3. Stale Bread

Bread is one of the easiest foods to rescue, and it often works better once it’s a day old.

Instead of binning it:


Homemade croutons baked from day-old bread

What to do instead:

  • Cube and bake into croutons - perfect for sprinkling over your home-made Caesar salad

  • Blitz into breadcrumbs and freeze

  • Use for French toast

  • Tear into chunks and toss through a tomato or roast vegetable salad (think rustic, not neat)


Dry bread absorbs flavour beautifully. Fresh bread can’t do that.



Most of the time, reducing waste is not about buying differently. It is about using up what you have already paid for by the end of the week. A few small shifts in how you cook can make your grocery dollars go a lot further.



Joanne Webb runs Eatlocal.nz, delivering premium, locally sourced fruit, veges, and artisan foods across the South Island. Passionate about supporting New Zealand growers, she personally packs every order to ensure quality and freshness. When she's not working on Eatlocal, you’ll find her walking her mini Schnauzer, Zac, or contemplating marathon training again!


 
 
 

3 Comments


Steve
May 22

The food waste reduction article is very useful because it shows simple ways to save food at home. I started helping my family reduce leftovers and it made a difference. In a class budgeting task, I also used license and permit bond Texas as an example of real-world planning costs. Small habits can really help both money and environment.

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Adrian Anderson
May 14

I enjoyed reading about reducing food waste because small habits at home can help both families and the environment. Last year, I started planning meals better while living in a student apartment and trying to avoid wasting groceries every week. During a stressful exam period, I also searched for Pearson Class Help to manage my online coursework more easily. Simple daily changes can help people save money and live more responsibly.

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Guest
Apr 22

The article provides practical insights into reducing food waste at home. It highlights how transitionary stages of produce often lead to premature disposal. A critical point is that many items, like soft tomatoes and wilted greens, are still usable and can be reimagined. This reflects a need for a shift in mindset around food handling https://mummysgold.geek.nz/ Mummys Gold may offer distraction, but addressing food waste requires tangible action in our kitchens.

https://www.mummysgold.com/newzealand/

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By Joanne Webb - Eatlocal

Joanne Webb from Eatlocal, holding a crate of fruit
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