Nutrients (Oct 2019)

Measuring Food Waste and Consumption by Children Using Photography

  • Agnes Giboreau,
  • Camille Schwartz,
  • David Morizet,
  • Herbert L. Meiselman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11102410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2410

Abstract

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A photography method was used to measure waste on food trays in school lunch in France, using the 5-point quarter-waste scale. While food waste has been studied extensively in US school lunches, the structure of the French lunch meal is quite different, with multiple courses, and vegetables (raw and cooked) in more than one course. Vegetables were the most wasted food category as usually seen in school lunch research, especially cooked vegetables, which were wasted at rates of 66%−83%. Raw vegetables were still wasted more than main dishes, starchy products, dairy, fruit, and desserts. Vegetables were also the most disliked food category, with the classes of vegetables falling in the same order as for waste. Waste and liking were highly correlated. Sensory characteristics of the food were cited as a main reason for liking/disliking. There is a strong connection between food liking and food consumption, and this connection should be the basis for future attempts to modify school lunch to improve consumption. The photographic method of measuring food waste at an individual level performed well.

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