‘Tis the season of gaining weight. Face the facts; it is all that delicious holiday food we gorge ourselves on. Gratefully, there’s only one last holiday weekend to eat our way through: New Year’s Eve.
The easiest way to avoid fattening up is to avoid preparing the fanny-fattening foods. Granted, it is difficult to avoid when someone else prepares the food and every holiday party we attend is focused on increasingly large amounts of fats, sugars and salts. If you have control over the menu, make the choice to consume less and prepare healthier choices like preparing raw foods as appetizers. My suggestion is to remember this mantra, please repeat after me - - “all things in moderation”.
There’s another reason to consider preparing less. What happens to all that food at the end of the holiday party? By throwing it out we are saying that all the energy that was consumed to fly, train, and drive our grocery products from all over the world is wasted. That is simply glut!
Almost half the food in the US, approximately 100 billion pounds a year, goes to waste, making leftover food the second largest component of the US waste stream by weight. With food waste losses accounting for about $100 billion per year—$30 to 40 billion occurring within the commercial or retail sector—consumers and food service providers simply cannot afford to sidestep environmentally sound surplus food management. If we use the adage “all things in moderation” then we will reduce our waists and our wastes.
According to Tim Jones, a University of Arizona anthropologist who has studied food waste for 15 years, reducing holiday food waste helps both the environment and your wallet. During the holidays alone, the average household of four could save $100 to $150 by reducing food waste, Jones offers these tips:
- If possible, distribute leftovers to guests to take home, based on what they like. Leftovers will more likely get eaten that way.
- Freezing increases the probability that leftovers will not go to waste, since they keep so much longer. For instance, you can freeze a slice of baked fruit pie for up to eight months.
- Before giving cookies or candy as gifts or treats, make sure the recipients want them.
- To battle that holiday bulge and reduce waste at the same time, consider buying less stocking stuffer candy. Jones' research shows that 20 percent of all candy gets tossed out uneaten.
- Consider donating food you do not use. Local food banks appreciate many canned items, including juices, nuts, fruits and vegetables. Some accept prepared foods. Check your local listings.
Remember, it is not just commercial or retail groups that are wasting - individual consumers must assume responsibility for reducing food waste. Avoid excess waste in the first place by buying only what will be eaten. Start a backyard compost bin with your food preparation scraps and fall leaves. Before you throw away leftover cranberry sauce or potatoes that you did not eat, think of places that may be able to use those items (a poor family locally with a houseful of teens for example).
Finally, I would like to give you one last waist/waste reducing tip: exercise aerobically, preferably outdoors, for at least 20 minutes every day. During the non-gardening winter season I walk, walk, walk. When it is too icy to walk outside, I use a treadmill. It is essential to keep your energy level strong because it is an easy way to keep the waist down and your mood up.
If you want to keep the waste down after eating a heavy dinner, take a walk to a composter and compost as much of that food as you can instead of throwing it in a landfill. It is good for you and it’s good for the environment!
Happy “Green” Holidays!!
Thank you to eHow (http://www.ehow.com/how_4705229_rid-fat-stomach.html) for providing the above photo of a fat tummy. :-)
Shawna Coronado says Get Healthy! Get Green! Get Community! www.thecasualgardener.com, The Green Blog - www.gardeningnude.com, or The Garden Blog - http://thecasualgardener.blogspot.com









Sounds like a winner to me Mike!
Shawna
Posted by: Shawna Coronado | December 29, 2009 at 02:38 PM
Staying active can keep you warm. You can turn the heater down a couple degrees. That's got to help too, right?
Posted by: MikeHale | December 29, 2009 at 01:21 PM
How true - less waste is always best! Thanks for the great comments!
Shawna Coronado
Posted by: Shawna Coronado | December 28, 2009 at 04:45 PM
If I could get people to do one thing ... it would be to consume less (of everything). It would be such a positive step towards helping the earth!
Thank you for this post ... and here's wishing you a very happy, green New Year!
Posted by: Small Footprints | December 28, 2009 at 03:10 PM
Amen, Shawna! It's such a sin to waste food, and see food go to waste at luncheons/buffets/etc. I've been told that shelters & such can NOT accept leftovers from buffets (health concerns, I suspect). It's to cry for.
Posted by: PL | December 28, 2009 at 01:04 PM
What a fantastic idea "Love Food Hate Waist" - awesome!
Shawna
Posted by: Shawna Coronado | December 28, 2009 at 07:08 AM
Thanks for all the fantastic info! We have a campaign here in the UK call Love Food Hate Waste, but you could use Love Food Hate Waist :-)
Posted by: Eco Bloke | December 28, 2009 at 05:04 AM