With support from the ongoing #FoodSavvy initiative, residents from 12 households were provided with personalised tips and hacks, a free food saving kit, an expert food waste cook-along and a foodie street festival to help collectively make their food go further.
The challenge took place over a month and residents weighed their food waste before and after the challenge. The final weigh-in showed an average saving of more than £40 and 5.6kg per household, per month¹ - equivalent to £485 and 67kg per year.
Resident Lorraine Le Grice reported nearly £26.90 of waste in the first week, compared to just £2.30 in the final week. If her household kept up its new food saving habits for a whole year they would be more than £1,279 better off.²
Lorraine said: “We didn’t think we were wasting much food, but it turns out we were!”
Fellow resident Christine Newman said: “We now think more consistently about how we can save food, rather than throwing it away.”
Residents were asked to provide their number one food waste reduction tip that they learnt during the challenge, which included:
- Freezing bananas – ready for a smoothie or ice cream
- Putting leftover meals in the freezer rather than the fridge to make them last even longer
- Measuring portions – to reduce waste and avoid eating too much!
Councillor James Mallinder, chair of the Suffolk Waste Partnership, said: