The Real Junk Food Project: revolutionising how we tackle food waste
The Real Junk Food Project started in Leeds and has grown into a global phenomenon. Its mission? To end food waste (and help local schools along the way)
Keith Annal (front left) and other Real Junk Food Project team members at its food rescue warehouse in Leeds. Photograph: Murdo Macleod for the Observer
Sunday 18 September 2016 06.30 EDT
Adam Smith is blunt and to the point when I call him to suggest an interview. I want to talk to him about the Real Junk Food Project, which he founded, and suggest doing it at the cafe he set up in Leeds which uses waste food and operates on a pay-as-you-feel basis. “Which cafe? There are 30 of them. And that’s just in Leeds.”
Bluntness may well be Smith’s defining characteristic. A chef by training, who had, by his own admission, a troubled childhood, he set up the project only three years ago, and it’s been a roller-coaster ride since then. He reels off some statistics. “We’ve got a 6,000-square-foot warehouse just here in Leeds and we’re intercepting between two and 10 tons of food a day. It’s just gone crazy. There are 125 Real Junk Food cafes worldwide now, not just in Britain, but in Israel and Australia and we’re about to launch 16 of them in America.”
And, no, he doesn’t have time to do an interview. “It’s really not about me,” he says. “I haven’t even met half the people who’ve set up the cafes. It’s much bigger than me now.” It is pretty big, it’s true, but I go up to Leeds anyway and, in the warehouse, it becomes more obvious why the project has taken off so dramatically. There’s a mountain of food. Marks & Spencer cakes and Ferrero Rocher chocolates and punnets of grapes and tomatoes and posh crisps and jars of olives and out-of-date bottles of that well-known easily perishable food substance – water – and down one aisle, dozens of clear plastic bin liners all filled with bread.
“It’s the bane of our lives, bread,” says Keith Annal, the operations manager. “The supermarkets make so much of it. And then they chuck out so much of it.”
There are rolls and baguettes and bagels and croissants. There’s poppy seed bread and granary bread and ciabatta and sliced white. They try to give away as much of it as they can but it’s a challenge. Annal points to the van outside. “I’ve filled that twice already today. I got 22 boxes of fruit and veg from Morrisons – that’s just three days’ waste from one supermarket.”
And it’s all perfectly good food, which if they hadn’t rescued it would now be rotting at the bottom of the bin. “Look at those bananas,” says Annal. “Nothing wrong with them.” But then there doesn’t seem to be much wrong with any of it, apart from the fact that it’s packaged, and everything in a package has either a “use by” or a “best before” date.
It’s certainly eye-opening seeing how much is coming out of a handful of supermarkets in one mid-sized British city. Leeds is just the start. The beginning, Smith hopes, of a global movement: to end food waste. Because, at the moment,we throw away 15 million tonnes of food a year, more than any other country in the EU, even those, like Germany, which have a bigger population than us.
Smith’s response has been to invent the concept of a Real Junk Food cafe. Send off for a welcome pack, sign an agreement and then feed people waste food. The only rules are that you must feed everyone, not just poor people, and customers should only pay what they feel the meal is worth. If they have no money, they can volunteer labour and skills instead. Because the project has done deals with certain supermarket chains – Sainsbury, Morrisons, Ocado – at a national level, the food is there, ready for the taking.
At the back of the warehouse scanning the shelves for produce is Duncan Milwain. He’s the partner in a law firm but got involved when he received an email from Smith asking for legal help setting up the company. He did that but then found himself being drawn in. “When I began to see the volume of waste coming in, I just thought it was obvious that something had to be done.”
Two years ago, Milwain gave up a day a week at his job and opened the Saltaire Canteen, a Real Junk Food cafe in the upmarket town of Saltaire, a world heritage site and home to one of the largest collections of David Hockneys in the world. “Some people were convinced we should be feeding the poor, not serving cake in the posh part of town, but it’s about food waste, not poverty per se.”
Though there is poverty too. I hop in the van with Annal and boxes of cakes and bags of potatoes and loaves of bread and head off to Parklands Primary School in Seacroft. It’s one of the most deprived parts of Leeds and it’s been one of the first schools to sign up to a new initiative the Real Junk Food Project is pioneering called Fuel for School.
First, there’s what the headteacher, Chris Dyson, calls “Funday Friday!”, or a lively assembly involving karaoke-ing along to Take That and a fiendishly difficult times table competition. There are stars and certificates for the children and then, at the end, they and their families file out and there are five tables laden with food, free for anyone to take, in exchange for a small donation if they have it and nothing if they don’t. It has the rather grand title of a “food boutique” but it’s making use of food that would otherwise go in the bin.
“We love it,” says Dyson. “Some parents were a bit proud at first but now they’re piling in. We never shut. We come in, in the holidays, to do this. There are families for whom it’s a continuous struggle. They get access to food banks but that’s only three times a year. It’s brilliant to be able to provide a bit extra.”
Pupils from Richmond Hill Primary School, Leeds, with their headmaster Nathan Atkinson. Photograph: Chris Floyd for the Observer
Richmond Hill Primary, in another deprived bit of Leeds, is just a few miles away. Its head, Nathan Atkinson, took over in 2014 and, while he says it’s “an amazing place” with pupils speaking 48 languages, nothing he tried seemed to be working. I’ve followed him from Seacroft, where he took part in the assembly, to Wigan, where he’s speaking to a room full of headteachers. “I’d been in vulnerable schools, schools in special measures,” he tells them, “but when we tried the same things here, they didn’t work. We had good teachers, a good curriculum, but we realised the children weren’t in a place where they were ready to learn.
“It came to a head after one half-term, their behaviour was just atrocious, and we realised some of them hadn’t had a hot meal in a week.” The first thing he did was to buy toasters for every classroom, “but then I needed food. I’d met Adam by chance and I said, ‘Why don’t you open a junk food cafe in the school?’ He was like, ‘No thanks. But you can do it.’”
Richmond Hill, he explains, is a “food desert” – it’s impossible to buy fresh fruit and veg in the postcode. But half a mile away, it turned out was one of Leeds biggest wholesalers. “We jumped in the school minibus and straightaway they gave us 27 boxes of bananas and ten boxes of cucumbers.”
The school now provides breakfast every day to 650 pupils, has its own cafe and a weekly “food boutique”. It has improved punctuality and attendance and helped build bonds between the parents and the school, he says. To showcase what was possible, he and the Real Junk Food Project fed 10,000 children across Leeds on one day last autumn, entirely with waste food. “We want to make food available to children,” he says. “It’s so simple. Yet it’s tragic that we have to do this.”
The teachers in the room nod their heads thoughtfully. They’ve been invited by Ann Fairhurst and Shirley Southworth, who’d heard of Smith’s success and decided to set up their own Real Junk Food cafe in Wigan. It’s called Fur Clemt – Wigan-ish for “I’m starving” – and when a friend of theirs told them about children going into school hungry, they decided to set up a Fuel for School too.
They’re another incredibly dynamic duo. They both have full-time jobs but set up the cafe in a community centre owned by the Wigan Warriors rugby league team and have become expert at sourcing fresh food from suppliers in the local area. The Real Junk Food Project has been supportive, but they’ve largely done it themselves. As have Save the Date in Dalston, east London, Curb Kitchen in Southampton, the Trash Cafe Network in Gosport … the list goes on.
In one afternoon, I’ve met half a dozen inspiring people who have taken Smith’s idea and run with it. Sometimes it’s hard to know what drives people but for some reason a mountain of perfectly good food that’s destined to end up rotting seems to have done the trick.
Customers at the Saltaire Canteen, Saltaire, Yorkshire, one of the many Real Junk Food cafes nationwide. Diners pay whatever they feel the food is worth. Photograph: Murdo Macleod for the Observer
The Saltaire Canteen is as attractive and tastefully appointed as Saltaire itself. It’s a handsome Victorian model village and the cafe has big plate glass windows, discreet branding in shades of grey, scrubbed pine tables and a small notice explaining the pay-as-you-feel concept. I’ve just missed lunch but I chat to Katie and Michael Tonks from Sheffield who are polishing off their croque monsieur, salad and what they describe as “posh chips”.
How was it? “Delicious. I’m impressed. I’m always getting confused by the difference between ‘use by’ dates and ‘best before’ and I sometimes worry if I’ve got something in the fridge that’s a few days out of date.”
I’m here because, after a month or so of phone calls, texts and emails, I’ve finally pinned down Smith. He turns up with his young son, Joshua, and the words that no interviewer who’s travelled 200 miles wants to hear, “I’ve only got 15 minutes.” He softens up when we actually start talking but it’s calling a spade a spade that has probably got him as far as he has. There’s no doubting his anger for what he considers “criminal levels of waste” and, though it was a video on the Guardian website that gave the Real Junk Food Project its first proper blast of publicity, he’s reluctant to do anything that might be construed as courting the press. He declined to be photographed for this piece.
“There’s just so much going on. I’m totally overwhelmed. I said right from the beginning that I wanted to feed the world and I haven’t even started yet. We’ve fed nearly half a million people in 30 months but there’s so much more we can do.” But the pace of growth has been exhausting. “I’ve just got off the phone with people in the South Korean government, because we’re launching there. I get emails all the time from all over the world. Yesterday, in the space of about three minutes, we had emails from Indonesia, Spain, Canada, and Loughborough. It’s non-stop.”
Why has it captured people’s imaginations?
“There’s nothing complex about it. It makes sense. It’s sustainable. And it’s the right thing to do. I think that’s why people get inspired. It’s something they can do. If some kid from Leeds can do it, they can. I’ve been in prison, I was in care, I’ve been in mental health homes. I was on drugs and alcohol. I was found nearly dead in a car from a suicide attempt.
“It’s about empowering people to change their own lives and when you do that, that’s when a movement happens, and in the space of two years we’ve had thousands of people around the world standing up and doing stuff.”
The idea came to him while he was working as a chef in Australia. He’d worked his way up to head chef, on a big salary, in Melbourne, working all hours. And then, to extend his visa, he’d gone to work for a few months on a farm. “It was February 27, 2013 and I’d just seen the farmer get a delivery of a tonne of courgettes, freshly picked, that he was feeding to his pigs. I said, ‘Why don’t you just give this to charity?’ And he said, ‘I just don’t have the cost and logistics to get it where it needs to go.’ That’s when it came to me.”
He returned to the UK, set up the first cafe in Armley, Leeds, often going skip-diving outside supermarkets to get ingredients, and for the first two and a half years, during which time his son was born, he didn’t even take a wage. He was living off £92-a-week tax credits. And, though he’s persuaded many of the supermarkets to work with him, he’s still angry about what he sees them doing: the waste that seems to be built into the system.
“I’m sick to death of the media and supermarkets who say it’s all to do with consumers. It’s nothing to do with them. We didn’t want this saturation of supermarkets on our high street selling food 24 hours day, manipulating us into purchasing more.”
France has recently introduced a law that bans supermarkets from destroying unsold food. They have to give it to charity, or face a fine. It’s a prime example of the kind of thing Smith believes ought to be introduced here but is bound up in exasperating bureaucracy.
“I’m fed up being invited to Westminster and wasting my time with people who are creating targets for 20 years’ time. It needs to happen now, on a local level. I think a lot of it is about grassroots education. There’s a huge demographic of people who are completely uneducated about food.”
Meanwhile, Joshua has picked up an old-looking satsuma from the window display and put it in his mouth. There’s no ‘Joshua! Joshua! Put it down,’ from Smith though. “Are you going to eat the skin as well?” he asks him. Joshua starts eating the skin. “OK, well, your choice. Let’s see how you get on with that. You won’t do it again if you don’t like it, will you?” People are so fearful of food, he says. “Eighty people died from food poisoning last year, whereas 75 were hit by lightning. We’ve probably got the safest food ever. It’s about getting people to understand food.”
Then, to Joshua, “Have you finished that?” He has, skin and all. He’s gnawing on a rock-hard stale loaf instead. The next generation of junk food pioneers in action.
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