As a
child, one of most important message, I always received from my
parents and grandparents, was that I should never waste even a grain
of food. In fact, it was said that one of my maternal great grand
fathers used to wipe clean his plate so thoroughly while eating, that
it was difficult to notice afterwords,whether it was washed or dirty.
I feel this was bit of an exaggeration, but it gave one message loud
and clear: not to waste food. In our house there were strict
meal-time conventions. Serve yourself only that much portions of
food, that you can consume. Absolutely no left overs in the plate at
all.
In
those days, food would be cooked in the house twice a day, as there
was no refrigerator in the household. This also meant that no
effective method was available to store and preserve cooked food for
a longer duration. On hot summer days, it was even more difficult to
preserve left overs as food could get contaminated in no time. Yet,
in spite of this shortcoming, I hardly remember any left over food
being thrown away in our house at any time. We had simple
arrangements that could keep the food safe for at least 8 or 10
hours. The arrangement was simple. In a large metal dish, my mother
would pour water and then keep the food containers in the dish. The
containers were covered with a fine muslin cloth so as to allow the
air to circulate. The water in the dish was sucked up by the cloth.
The hot weather around, evaporated the water sucked up and in process
cooled the food containers, keeping the food safe.
My
mother also had her own bag of tricks to make the left over food
palatable and attractive. In fact we always would know, whenever some
nice and appetising smells of deep fried food came from kitchen that
there was leftover food and mother was up to one of her tricks to
make us eat it. With left over vegetables, she would prepare stuffed
Parathas (Indian stuffed bread) that were so tempting! My mouth
waters even today after remembering the smell. If any rice was
leftover, a fabulous dish was served for dinner made from left over
rice fried with finely cut onion. Special Pakoras (kind of fritters)
made from leftovers was her another specialty.
Last
year, I visited India's western most region of Kutch. It is an
extremely hot and arid area, where temperatures hit forties (Above
100 Deg. Fahrenheit) quite often. In one of the villages, I was able
to see a gadget made only from such materials that were available in
the village itself. It looked like a white painted cupboard with a
small door in the front and with two stacks of earthen pots ( each
stack having three earthen pots) on the top of the cupboard. It was
difficult to know the internal arrangements, except for the fact that
the front door opened access to a small chamber inside. Food and
other perishables like milk are usually kept in this chamber and I
was told that they can be preserved there in hot climate of the
region rather well. Since Kutch is a desert like area, the
inhabitants know very well the value of preservation of food and
wasting it out of question and not a option at all.
Against
this background and frame of mind, I was simply appalled to see the
horrendous wastage of food around, when I visited United States for
the first time and also later, when I had an occasion to stay there
for longer periods. The restaurants served giant portions, which very
few could finish and mostly would go waste. Once I ordered pancakes
for my breakfast. I wanted just one, but was served six. When I told
the owner of the place that I wanted just one pancake, he said that
it was not possible. Minimum quantity served in his hotel was six
pieces. I could eat whatever I want and then throw away whatever is
left in the trash can. The Mega super stores like Costco and Sam's
club, sell only large packs of eatables l, which are very difficult
to consume before their expiry dates and have to be trashed.
I have
observed something similar, when Chinese or Thai food is served in
south east Asia. The portions are very large. I could never finish
the portion of rice that is served with dishes here. Enormous amounts
of vegetables are simply wasted here too.
Last
week, World Bank has issued a report in Washington D.C. about the
staggering quantity of food that is wasted around the world. Some of
the facts reported are:
- The world loses or wastes a staggering 25 percent to 33 percent of the food it produces for consumption.
- In North America, some 61 percent of losses are in the consumption stage — for example, food purchased and left rotting in refrigerators.
- In countries like the United States and the United Kingdom, an average family of four wastes $1,600 and $1,100 per year, respectively, at the consumption stage which means the losses of 750 to 1,500 Calories per day.
- In regions such as Africa and South Asia, the food losses translate to 400 to 500 calories per person, per day.
- Cereals represent more than half of all food lost or wasted, 53 percent by calorie content. By weight, fruits form the largest share of global food loss and waste.
- Most losses take place at the consumption, production and handling and storage stages of the food chain.
- Large supermarkets’ purchasing policies may provide incentives to overproduction of foods, and promotional offers could encourage over-buying by consumers, leading to food waste at home.
President
of the World Bank, Jim Yong Kim, says rightly: “The amount of
food wasted and lost globally is shameful. Millions of people around
the world go to bed hungry every night, and yet millions of tons of
food end up in trash cans or spoiled on the way to market.” It
is really shameful isn't it?
Talking
about India, Thousands of tonnes of food grains rot in India because
we lack proper storage facilities. Indian farmers are producing
bumper harvests year after year, yet huge amounts of food grain
simply rot away. The picture is quite grim indeed. The Governments in
India or in other countries might want to improve upon the situation
by changing agricultural production techniques and making large
investments in transport and storage infrastructure. But the key here
is to change consumer and commercial behavior.
I have
seen that in some families, they feel that only when, food is left
over in the diner's plates, everyone has eaten to his heart's
content. Such families throw away huge quantities of food left over
in the plates. Some women make a fetish of eating only fresh food.
They keep on looking with hawkish eyes at the expiry dates printed
on a food package. If they suspect that any food, though still well
within the expiry period, has been produced earlier than their idea
of what fresh food should be, they would simply trash the food even
it is in perfectly good condition. This needs to be changed.
I am
not much of a traditionalist. I never want to do something, just
because my forefathers were doing it that way or because someone had
ordered it to be done so long ago, say five millenniums. I would
rather do things for which, there is a apparent rational reason. But
when we talk of food wastage, I am totally a traditionalist. We must
use and preserve food the way our forefathers did.
3rd
march 2014
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