Food waste 'supermarket' launches in Leeds


Updated on 23 September 2016 | 0 Comments

The Real Junk Food Project stocks surplus goods from supermarkets and lets people pay what they want.

A new food waste 'supermarket’ has opened in Pudsey, near Leeds.

The Real Junk Food Project (TRJFP) is a warehouse where shoppers can "pay what they feel" for food that would have otherwise gone to landfill.

Major supermarkets, local allotments, cafés, food banks and caterers all supply food to the warehouse.

The food isn’t just for people who are struggling to make ends meet; TRJFP says it wants to feed everyone.

Adam Smith, co-founder of the project, wants to open a warehouse in every city in the UK.

Food waste 'supermarket' opens in Leeds

Image credit: Facebook / The Real Junk Food Project

Not just tins of beans

The warehouse has a variety of fresh and baked goods, as well as tinned produce.

The Guardian reports a “mountain of food” including Marks & Spencer cakes and Ferrero Rocher chocolate, grapes, tomatoes, posh crisps and jars of olives. 

In fact, volunteers at the warehouse have been given so much bread that they struggle to shift it – supermarkets just make so much of it.

The store receives between two and 10 tonnes of food a day.

And there's no need to fret about food safety. The Real Junk Food Project sticks to all environmental health regulations and volunteers smell, look at and taste the food to make sure that it’s fit to eat.

The majority of its cafés in the UK have a 3 or more star rating from their local health authority.

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Tell me more about ‘Pay as you Feel’

 As mentioned earlier, the warehouse and cafés operate a ‘Pay as you Feel’ policy.

This means customers can pay in two ways: either make a donation based on what they can afford or what they think the food is worth, or donate their time and volunteer for the project instead.

‘Pay as you Feel’ cafés are open up and down the country as well as other parts of the world.

Some have professional chefs on staff.

As if that wasn’t enough, volunteers are pioneering a related project called Fuel for School to give schools wasted food which goes to feed every pupil, regardless of their background. 

If you want to start a café you can request a starter pack or if you want to get involved with your local café, get in touch through TRJFP’s cafés page.

The warehouse can be found in Grangefield Industrial Estate, Pudsey.

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