Culinary waste management for a healthier planet : a qualitative study

Yap, Chin Choo and Wu, Shin Ling and Soon, Pau Voon and Berezina, Elizaveta and Aroua, Mohamed Kheireddine and Gew, Lai Ti (2024) Culinary waste management for a healthier planet : a qualitative study. Cogent Social Sciences, 10 (1): 2388178. ISSN 2331-1886

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Abstract

The burgeoning food waste problem is driving environmental pollution and climate change due to landfilling of waste. It is imperative to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and lower carbon footprint through food waste management. In the culinary setting, a vast amount of food waste is generated from food preparation. However, there is no module to educate staff on this. In this study, a culinary waste management (CWM) module was introduced to train culinary arts students to reduce culinary waste in the food preparation process, from cleaning to assembling. It is essential to assess the user-friendliness of the module during practical implementation. This study aimed to explore participants’ awareness and understanding of CWM before and after implementing of a CWM module in teaching kitchens and identify the motivators and barriers to its implementation. A total of 35 participants, consisting of students, teaching chefs and cleaning staff’s were recruited at Sunway University, Malaysia. Themes derived in the pre-module interview revealed a varying degree of engagement among participants, with low literacy, alongside barriers like labor-intensiveness and concern over hygiene. The post-module interview highlighted positive psychological and cognitive impacts on participants with motivators that drive them to practice CWM. Nevertheless, barriers such as resistance to novelty impeded the implementation. Therefore, CWM is the way forward to reduce the significant amount of waste generated in culinary settings. Integrating this CWM module into the education-industrial system will equip future culinary professionals with the knowledge and skills needed for.g a sustainable culinary career.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Cogent Social Sciences
ID Code:
223251
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
19 Aug 2024 11:05
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Aug 2024 23:57