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Food Waste Management | Winnow

Smart Food Waste Management for Commercial Kitchens

Turn waste into insight, track, reduce, and act on food waste with data that drives cost savings, sustainability impact, and operational improvement.

Food Waste Management Overview

Food waste is edible food that is discarded instead of being eaten.

The FAO defines food waste as "food appropriate for human consumption being discarded, whether it is kept beyond its expiry date or left to spoil."

Food waste management focuses on preventing waste at the source, then managing unavoidable waste responsibly to reduce cost and environmental impact.

This typically includes:

  • Measuring and reducing food waste
  • Redistribution through food banks
  • Using food as animal feed
  • Energy recovery via anaerobic digestion
  • Composting or responsible disposal

Why food waste tracking matters

The most effective way to reduce food waste is to measure it accurately.

Historically, food waste tracking has not been a priority for commercial kitchens.

As a result, many kitchens don't know how much food they throw away — or how much it costs. Where tracking does exist, it is often manual, time-consuming, and inaccurate, leading businesses to significantly underestimate their true food waste levels.

For hospitality operators, robust food waste tracking is essential to cut food costs, reduce carbon emissions, and improve operational efficiency.

Modern food waste management

Advances in technology have transformed food waste management.

Today, software combined with kitchen-ready hardware enables accurate, automated tracking in busy kitchen environments.

In 2019, Winnow began automating food waste management using AI, allowing kitchens to track waste consistently without manual data entry.

How food waste management works

With automation handling most data collection, food waste management follows a simple process:

  • Food is discarded into a designated waste bin
  • AI captures the food type while a scale records the weight
  • Waste is tracked throughout the day, including overproduction, prep waste, cooking errors, and plate waste
  • Data is sent to the cloud, enriched with cost and environmental impact
  • Chefs use clear insights to make operational changes that reduce future waste

Challenges in food waste management

Why is food waste a global issue?

Food waste is a major contributor to climate changeand affects every country.

Greenhouse gases are generated throughout the food system, including methane released when food waste goes to landfill. According to the FAO, if food waste were a country, it would be the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, after China and the United States.

Food waste also represents a massive misuse of land and resources — an area larger than China is used to grow food that is never eaten. At the same time, over 800 million people globally face food insecurity, making waste reduction both an environmental and ethical priority.

What causes food waste in commercial kitchens?

Food waste occurs across the supply chain, but commercial kitchens play a critical role.

Once food reaches the kitchen, waste is most often driven by overbuying, poor planning, and overproduction. Research by Oakdene Hollins shows that 66% of kitchen food waste is pre-consumer, while 34% is post-consumer.

While solutions like anaerobic digestion can recover energy, the greatest impact comes from preventing surplus food before it is wasted.

Food waste management in hotels and catering

Hotels and catering operations face particularly high waste due to buffets, events, and advance production. As sustainability expectations rise, reducing food waste has become a core ESG and cost-control priority.

At Marriott's Grosvenor House Dubai, Winnow helped the culinary team understand exactly what was being wasted at each service.

In the first year:

  • 72% reduction in food waste
  • 50,000 meals saved
  • ~300,000 AED ($81,000) saved

For contract caterers, food waste management can deliver 3–8% food cost savings while significantly reducing emissions. Research from the World Economic Forum and Ipsos shows 86% of people want a shift toward a more sustainable world, accelerating demand for action.

How management can reduce food waste

Reducing food waste starts with leadership. Management plays a critical role in setting expectations, processes, and a culture focused on waste prevention in the kitchen.

The most effective approach follows the food recovery hierarchy, prioritising prevention first and disposal last.

The food recovery hierarchy

  • Source reduction Prevent waste by buying only what's needed and simplifying menus to reduce overproduction.
  • Feed people Donate surplus, safe-to-eat food to food banks, shelters, or community organisations.
  • Feed animals Where permitted, redirect suitable food scraps to animal feed to support local agriculture.
  • Industrial uses Repurpose waste through options like anaerobic digestion for energy or converting used oils into sustainable fuels.
  • Composting Work with local partners to turn unavoidable food waste into compost.
  • Landfill or incineration The least sustainable option and one that should be avoided wherever possible.

How much food do restaurants need to prepare in advance?

Most restaurants fall into two broad categories, and each carries different food waste risks.

1. High pre-production kitchens

These kitchens prepare 50–75% of food before service, including:

  • Buffet-style restaurants
  • Contract catering
  • Hospitals and education

Because demand is harder to forecast in these environments, overproduction is a major source of food waste.

2. Made-to-order kitchens

À la carte kitchens cook meals to order, with only some items (such as sauces or vegetables) prepared in advance. While waste risk is lower, prep errors and plate waste still occur.

How restaurants decide how much food to prepare

Most kitchens estimate advance production using a simple formula:

(Projected usage × buffer %) − quantity on hand

Before ordering, kitchens complete an inventory check. Once a food waste audit and plate waste analysis are added, planning becomes far more accurate and waste can be reduced.

How long can restaurants keep food?

Food safety laws vary by region but are often strict, especially for cooked food and meat products.

In the UK, buffet-style pizza restaurants must discard food after a short holding period due to hygiene and temperature regulations.

In the US, states such as Massachusetts have introduced food waste bans for large generators, as landfill capacity declines. This has pushed restaurants to reduce waste at the source and increase food donation.

What can restaurants do with leftover food?

For food that cannot be sold at full price, restaurants can:

  • Resell surplus via platforms like Too Good To Go. One example is Accor Hotels who have partnered with the app to save more than 10,000 meals.
  • Donate edible foodto food banks and community organisations
  • Recover energy or compost unavoidable waste through anaerobic digestion or composting programs

Many hospitality businesses are stepping up in times of need, as highlighted in our Hospitality Heroes stories.

What's the best way to manage food waste in restaurants?

The most effective way to manage food waste is to measure it and act on the data.

Conducting a food waste audit helps kitchens understand when, where, and why food is being wasted — so preventative measures can be put in place.

During service, try to identify:

  • The top three food items being thrown away
  • The weight and cost of the most valuable wasted item
  • What that waste would cost over a full year if it continued daily

Answering these questions often reveals the true financial impact of food waste and enables better planning, purchasing, and production decisions.

Why manual food waste audits fall short

Ongoing manual food audits are time-consuming and often inconsistent.