culled tomatoAfter researching wasted food at grocery stores for some time, I felt I wasn’t getting the full picture. To move past food companies’ rhetoric and get a clear picture of the amount of food supermarkets throw away, I decided to get a first-hand look.

In September, 2006 I began working in the produce department at a large grocery chain. In addition to learning exactly what foods were tossed, I sought to understand why an industry with wafer-thin profit margins and advanced software systems still throws out tons of food each year. Follow the saga with these posts:culled yellow pepper

The Produce Project (intro) The Produce Project: Day 1–Packaged Waste

The Produce Project: Day 1–Training

The Produce Project: Day 2

The Produce Project: Day 3

The Produce Project: Day 4

The vegetables pictured here are the kind of produce the store “culls,” or throws culled red pepperaway because of imperfections. As a culling guideline, I was told to toss a fruit or vegetable if I wouldn’t buy it as a shopper. Having one dark or soft spot meant it was trash. The same held if it was wrinkly or unusual looking. Uniformity and perfection were the ideals. 

6 Responses to “Produce Project”

  1. on 30 Mar 2008 at 12:02 pm Stephanie

    After reading about your first 4 days as the produce guy at a supermarket I was hoping you would talk about what you had to go through to get the culled produce to be donated to food shelters or soup kitchens. This is something that I am interested in getting involved in, but am curious about some of the excuses that I may run up against and if there are any regulations out there about the donated foods.

    Thanks for creating such an informative site. I look forward to reading more about what you’ve done and what you’ve discovered and using it to decrease waste in a big way.

  2. on 06 Apr 2008 at 10:57 pm Laura K

    Wow, it’s amazing how much perfectly good food goes to waste. Hope you have an update.

  3. on 20 May 2008 at 3:12 pm James Reiss

    THE COLD CUTS WOMAN AT KROGER

    told me she’d thrown three cooked chickens
    & two turkey breasts plus the leftover
    prepped spaghetti & deviled eggs
    into a dumpster out back of the store last night

    told me she’d once worked for Acme Food Service
    where a mountain of scraps met the trash every
    day but her boss let her bring in her grandkids
    for meatloaf & mashed potatoes twice a week

    told me she’d given up hope at Kroger
    knowing her coworkers went home pinched
    it was cold last night when she dumped the stuff
    the wind caught a cold in her heart

  4. on 20 May 2008 at 3:50 pm Jonathan

    Wow, food waste poetry! Thank you for sharing, James.

  5. on 24 Jun 2008 at 9:23 am penny

    i know first hand the waste from grocery stores as i work at a local chain store. it breaks my heart to throw out grocery carts full of out of date product that is still edible, but our local food bank no longer picks it up.

  6. on 28 Jun 2008 at 9:50 pm penny

    update: we finally have a church that is picking up day old food. it is only the weekends, but its better than throwing it out.

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