NEW YORK — What’s for dinner? How about leftover cartilage of skate with herring-head tartar sauce, cured tuna blood line aioli or a meat loaf of offal and slightly past-its-prime cow usually reserved for dogs?
NEW YORK — What’s for dinner? How about leftover cartilage of skate with herring-head tartar sauce, cured tuna blood line aioli or a meat loaf of offal and slightly past-its-prime cow usually reserved for dogs?
Those and two dozen other dishes using scraps and usually ignored bits comprise the menu at chef Dan Barber’s WastEDny, a pop-up project at one of his Blue Hill restaurants intended to shed light on the many tragedies of food waste.
The farm-to-table guru, a multiple James Beard Award winner and author of “The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food,” didn’t have a hard sell on his hands when he invited 20 of his heavy hitter chef friends to join him in turning out $15 a la carte plates made from day-old bread, bruised beets, brine from the olive bin and the peels of pineapples.
Even his tabletops and cocktails told the story. Barber had his Manhattan tables redone with tops from agricultural byproducts and mushroom mycelium for his March pop-up. His boilermaker libation included flat beer syrup and spent coffee grounds with the bourbon.
Using such waste, of course, has been part of rustic cuisines around the world for centuries. And chefs like Barber, who has a second restaurant on a farm north of the city, are far more efficient than they’re given credit for. But in the U.S., the land of abundant fast food, grocery aisles piled with perfect produce and home refrigerators stuffed with food never eaten, the distribution system has been deemed broken by activists in a waste movement more firmly taking root.
“Really, the larger issue is how do we create a culture of eating that utilizes the entirety of the food system. To do that we need chefs and restaurants to start the conversation,” Barber said during a recent busy night of service at WastEDny, capitalized to emphasis his hope of educating the unenlightened.
Fine-dining restaurants are just a fraction in the food waste equation, however.
About 40 percent of food grown for human consumption in the U.S. is tossed, cramming landfills, and about a third of such food globally never makes it into human mouths. With nearly 1 billion people starving or food insecure around the world, much of the waste is generated by U.S. households and farms themselves, said Jonathan Bloom, an activist in Durham, North Carolina, and author of “American Wasteland: How America Throws Away Nearly Half of Its Food (and What We Can Do About It).”
“It’s a system that is not serving anyone particularly well,” Bloom said, noting that waste is scattered throughout the distribution chain. “We have an obesity crisis on a global scale in addition to a hunger crisis, the scale of which we’ve never seen before, and at the same time we’re overproducing, taxing our planet to an unnecessary and dangerous amount.”
Barber sees his pop-up as an extension of his “third plate” philosophy that challenges Americans to radically rethink what is acceptable and unacceptable to eat while becoming better stewards of the land.
“In America we come with this blessed landscape, this Garden of Eden … with incredible soils, temperate climate, predictable rainfall, and we produce a ton of food. And because of that we were never forced into the kind of negotiations that suck up waste,” he said.
That goes a long way in explaining the “wasted special” served up by one of Barber’s guest chefs, Bill Telepan of the Upper West Side restaurant Telepan. He fashioned his plate of tuna on a bed of salvaged radish greens, incorporating them into a pesto, slicing the radish into the dish and using the usually tossed blood line of the fish in an aioli.
Chefs are trained to carve out the blood line and tuna overall is a good example of customer preference driving waste, he said.
“People look for that certain ruby red part of the tuna. They’re not interested in paying top dollar for a piece on the side that may not look as beautiful but still is just as tasty,” said Telepan, hoping to sneak his WastED dish onto the menu of his own restaurant. “I just won’t call it blood line.”
Grant Baldwin wouldn’t mind.
He and his wife live in Vancouver, British Columbia, and filmed themselves living on discarded and culled food for six months for their documentary “Just Eat It.” They did their share of dumpster diving — heading to unlocked bins of wholesalers for the best finds — and they came up with some treasures: cartons of eggs with plenty of time left on expiration, boxes of pricey chocolate bars tossed because they did not have the requisite English-French labeling required in Canada, and a mountain of packaged hummus still in containers but perfectly edible.