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Food Waste Matters
Honey & Fox
43 episodes
18 hours ago
Food waste is everywhere, especially in the places we no longer notice. Food Waste Matters is a podcast where we have conversations with businesses, industry leaders, and researchers who are fighting against food waste. Our guests share real strategies for turning excess into success. Tune in to learn how your surplus can be an opportunity instead of a loss, benefiting both your business and the environment. Subscribe now to take action and make the most of our resources for the planet, the people, and the profit. Produced by Honey & Fox and supported by End Food Waste Australia.
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Entrepreneurship
Business
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All content for Food Waste Matters is the property of Honey & Fox and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Food waste is everywhere, especially in the places we no longer notice. Food Waste Matters is a podcast where we have conversations with businesses, industry leaders, and researchers who are fighting against food waste. Our guests share real strategies for turning excess into success. Tune in to learn how your surplus can be an opportunity instead of a loss, benefiting both your business and the environment. Subscribe now to take action and make the most of our resources for the planet, the people, and the profit. Produced by Honey & Fox and supported by End Food Waste Australia.
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Entrepreneurship
Business
Episodes (20/43)
Food Waste Matters
S3E20 Revisiting Pia Winberg, Venus Shell Systems

In this episode, we dive deep—literally and figuratively—into the ocean's potential to regenerate food systems and tackle food waste. We speak with Pia Winberg, the visionary behind Venus Shell Systems, a company transforming nutrient waste into valuable food and agricultural products using seaweed.

Pia takes us on a journey that started with planetary systems theory and ended up in large-scale seaweed cultivation. Venus Shell Systems captures nitrogen and other nutrients from food industry emissions—like those from wheat processing—and uses seaweed to convert them into high-protein, mineral-rich ingredients. These seaweed products not only reduce coastal pollution but also enhance health and sustainability in our diets.

The conversation explores how seaweed farming in controlled coastal pools can yield zero-waste, protein-rich biomass while reoxygenating water and protecting marine ecosystems. Pia explains the science behind it, including how one kilo of seaweed can absorb 50g of nitrogen and 1.5kg of carbon dioxide—while producing just as much oxygen.

They also discuss the challenges of communicating complex environmental benefits in a soundbite-driven world and why integrating regeneration into mainstream food systems—like pasta with 10% seaweed—could free up a million hectares of land in Australia alone.

🌿 Seaweed isn’t just sushi anymore—it’s a climate solution hiding in plain sight.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters.

More about Pia:

The passionate founder of Venus Shell Systems, Pia has been working across both the marine industry and academia for the past 15 years and has a background in marine systems ecology. Her career has spanned both academic research and industry innovation in the fields of coastal and estuarine ecology, fisheries and sustainable aquaculture systems. Pia’s main research is in marine food production systems that are sustainably integrated with the coastal and marine environment and, as such, her published research efforts span aquaculture and sustainable estuarine systems.

Links

https://www.venusshellsystems.com.au/

https://www.phycohealth.com

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/phycohealth/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/p/Pia-Winberg-100011633761009/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/pia-winberg-37049930/

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 

 

 

Show more...
18 hours ago
28 minutes 20 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E19 Full Circle Beef: Making Every Part Count

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, Robert Mackenzie, Director of Macka’s Australian Black Angus, joins Jayne Gallagher to talk about the bold sustainability moves behind their carbon-neutral beef operation — and how producers, chefs, and consumers can work together to cut waste across the food chain.

Robert shares how his family has built a sixth-generation beef business rooted in quality, integrity, and innovation. From using every part of the animal to creating new value-added products like Angus beef dumplings and award-winning pies, his story shows how sustainability and profitability can go hand in hand.

Together, they explore practical ways to reduce waste at every step — from soil to steak — and why knowing your supplier (and their story) might be the key to building a more sustainable food future.


Key Moments

04:25 The Mackenzie family story – six generations of beef and a commitment to doing it right
07:45 Where food waste occurs in the red meat industry and how full carcass utilisation is changing that
10:12 Working with MLA and chefs to showcase secondary cuts and reduce waste in food service
12:40 Turning “waste” into value – from sausages to Angus beef dumplings and gold-medal pies
15:10 Why sustainability can equal profitability
18:30 Building a brand and a legacy grounded in community, quality, and care
22:15 One practical step: build relationships across your supply chain and understand your product’s story
25:10 Final message: Know where your product comes from, be proud of it, and share its story


Robert Mackenzie
Director, Macka’s Australian Black Angus

Robert Mackenzie is the director of Macka's Australian Black Angus, a family-owned and innovative paddock-to-plate Angus Beef cattle business based in Gloucester, NSW. Macka's currently run 600 seedstock breeders and 3500 commercial cows, which are utilised for breeding consistent high-performance cattle that can efficiently turn grass into beef.

Macka's have now achieved carbon neutrality within their pastoral operation without relying on offsets or large-scale tree planting. With a long-term vision, Robert along with his family and his team strive to enhance carbon levels further and pave the way for a more productive and sustainable future.

 

 

Links:  

 

https://mackasblackangus.com.au/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/ 

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/ 

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/ 

 

Instagram 

https://www.instagram.com/mackasangus/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/ 

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/ 

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/ 

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/ 

 

Facebook 

https://www.facebook.com/MackasAngus

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/ 

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/ 

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/ 

 

LinkedIn 

https://www.linkedin.com/company/mackas-australian-black-angus-beef/

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd 

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus 

 

Show more...
2 weeks ago
29 minutes 24 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E18 From Waste to Raw Material: Rethinking Seafood Bioproducts

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, Daniel Abrahams from the Marine Bioproducts CRC uncovers the enormous untapped value sitting in Australia’s seafood and seaweed bioproducts. With only half of our marine biomass currently being used, billions of dollars in potential products - from collagen and Omega-3 oils to skincare ingredients and biofertilisers - are being overlooked. 

Daniel shares how innovation is shifting from disposal to utilisation, the commercial models making it viable, and why Iceland’s 100% fish model offers inspiration (not imitation) for Australia. He also explores the role of First Nations partnerships, the importance of designing for demand, and the future of high-value marine products made from what we currently throw away. 

 

04:41 Defining Marine Bioproducts and Market Opportunities 

09:01 Insights from Marine Bio Connect 2025 

12:08 Lessons from Iceland's 100% Fish Approach 

15:05 Challenges and Opportunities in the Australian Context 

20:03 First Nations Collaboration and New Skincare Product Launch 

24:14 Advice for Business Owners and Entrepreneurs 

 

Mr Daniel E. Abrahams FCPAChief Executive Officer 

Daniel is a highly experienced executive with leadership, finance, strategy, execution, risk management and governance credentials across a wide variety of industries. He has a track record of driving profitable business performance, innovation, and long-term growth plans, with a strong focus on building high performance teams and effective relationships with stakeholders. Daniel has extensive capital raising experience in crowd-funding, private equity and capital markets. He has worked in SME, start-up to scale-up and ASX listed entities. 

 

 

Links:   

 

https://mbcrc.com/ 

Lanje SkinCare 

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/  

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/  

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/  

  

Instagram  

https://www.instagram.com/marinebioproductscrc/ 

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/  

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/  

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/  

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/  

  

Facebook  

https://www.facebook.com/marinebioCRC/ 

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/  

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/  

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/  

  


LinkedIn  

https://www.linkedin.com/company/marine-bioproducts-crc 

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd  

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus  

 

Show more...
1 month ago
31 minutes 17 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E17 Halving Food Waste by 2030

Halving Food Waste by 2030: A Conversation with Tristan Butt, CEO of End Food Waste Australia

 

In this podcast episode, Tristan Butt, the CEO of End Food Waste Australia, shares insights into his background and the organization's mission to halve food waste in Australia by 2030. Tristan discusses the economic and social impacts of food waste, highlighting Australia's annual waste of 7.6 million tons of food and a $37 billion economic cost. He explains the multi-faceted approach of End Food Waste Australia, which includes research, policy, business action, and consumer behavior. Tristan also touches on consumer campaigns like 'The Great Un Waste' and the importance of industry collaboration, including initiatives like the Australian Food Pact. He emphasizes the significant opportunity for businesses to save costs and improve profitability while contributing to environmental sustainability. The discussion also covers support for small businesses, the importance of benchmarking and reporting, and innovative ways to repurpose food waste.

 

01:35   The Mission to Halve Food Waste by 2030

02:36   Current Progress and Consumer Campaigns

07:11   Engaging Small Businesses in Food Waste Reduction

10:54   Innovative Uses for Food Waste

15:48   International Models and Future Plans

 

More About Tristan

Tristan Butt is a purpose-driven CEO and Board Director with 25+ years of leadership across food & beverage, FMCG, retail, and ecommerce in the UK, Europe, APAC, and the US.
He has led transformational growth at both global giants (L’Oréal, Unilever, Mars, Amazon, Woolworths) and high-growth ventures—responsible for portfolios spanning 100+ categories, 1,400+ stores, and $3B+ in revenue. His career bridges supplier and retailer, public and private, global and local—anchored by sharp commercial strategy, operational discipline, and an unrelenting customer focus.
As a leader, Tristan is recognised for building high-impact, values-aligned teams that move with pace, think boldly, and deliver lasting outcomes. He brings clarity, ambition, and rigour to complex challenges, empowering people to raise the bar - leaving organisations stronger than they were found.
Currently serving as Chief Executive Officer of End Food Waste Australia, Tristan is driving national food system transformation to deliver environmental, economic, and social impact.
He has also partnered with CEOs & Boards in scaling consumer brands through advisory, NED and investor roles.
He is a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors (GAICD) with a Law degree (LLB Hons) from the University of Birmingham UK.

 

Links:

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 

Show more...
1 month ago
27 minutes 8 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E16 Part 2 - Be Brave with Best Before - Lukas Parker

n this episode of Food Waste Matters, Dr. Joanne Freeman welcomes back Associate Professor Lukas Parker from RMIT University to continue their discussion on date labels and storage advice.
Last time, Lukas shared insights from consumer research revealing just how confusing “best before” and “use by” dates are for everyday Australians. This follow-up episode explores the next stage of his work, where supermarkets, food brands, government, and consumers came together to co-design and test clearer, more effective labeling solutions.
Listeners will hear about:
- The “hop, skip, jump” label designs developed to spark industry and consumer conversations.
- The triangle of inaction—where government, industry, and consumers all wait for each other to act.
- Why colour, icons, and even QR codes could transform how we understand and use food labels.
- How clearer guidance could help households cut back on the $2,600 worth of food wasted per year—and why systemic change is still needed across industry and policy.
Whether you’re a food producer, policymaker, or simply someone who wants to waste less, this episode sheds light on how small changes to packaging could have a big impact on reducing household food waste.
As always, if you have questions, feedback, or your own story about reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. And don’t forget, you can catch up on all our past episodes on your favourite podcast platform—just search for Food Waste Matters.

More about Lukas

Associate Professor Lukas Parker is a leading social marketing and advertising scholar whose research sits at the nexus of behaviour change, communicating health and digital advertising. Leading teams of researchers, his research addresses pressing social problems related to health and sustainability. He has over fifty peer-reviewed publications including influential co-authored books Social Marketing and Advertising in the Age of Social Media (2020) and Social Marketing and Behaviour Change: Models, theory and applications (2014) which guide social marketing practitioners and scholars.

Associate Professor Parker leads 3C (Communication and Change Co-lab) that undertakes projects that create change through communication - whether that be social, behavioural, or cultural. He also co-leads Co-Lab.

Learn more about Lukas here: https://www.lukasparker.com/about.html


Links to research:

Date Labelling and Storage Advice Collective Intelligence Workshops: Position Paper

National Date Labelling and Storage Advice Project – Phase 1c Pilot Designs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0rdGP_YDQ0

 

EFWCRC Phase 1d Collective Intelligence workshops Final Report Overview

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtZmKRMG2x4

Other Links

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/drlukas/?originalSubdomain=au

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 

 

This podcast is brought to you by Honey & Fox, whose passion is food and the people who produce it. Honey & Fox works with fishers, farmers and small food businesses to help them find and sell to their perfect customers – people who will buy without questioning the price. Find out more at www.honeyandfox.com.au.

This podcast is supported by End Food Waste Australia, which is leading impactful and research-informed food waste actions. To learn more about how they are working toward a more sustainable future, please visit ⁠www.endfoodwaste.com.au⁠.

Show more...
2 months ago
23 minutes 47 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E15 Part 1 - Be Brave with Best Before - Lukas Parker

Most consumers can't tell the difference between “best before” and “use by” dates on food and use them interchangeably.

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, Dr Joanne Freeman sits down with Associate Professor Lukas Parker from RMIT to delve into the intricacies of food labelling and how clear instructions could help mitigate food waste.

Lukas is based in the School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, where he leads 3C, Communication and Change Co-lab. He is also a member of End Food Waste Australia, leading the National Date Labelling and Storage Advice Project.

Specifically, his team worked with End Food Waste Australia to collect data from 125 consumer interviews, which explored how consumers use (or do not use) existing food datelabelling and storage advice to determine food freshness. Tune into this episode as Jo and Lukas discuss key findings and information, including:

·     Confusion about existing labels and how to deal with food freshness, reliability, and storage.

·     How advice such as ‘store in a cool, dry place’ was interpreted as vague, unhelpful, and less likely to be perceived as reliable or trustworthy for more humid climates.

·     Differences in demographics when making decisions about food quality and waste.

·     The usefulness of food dates to manage food at home and from a businessperspective.

·     Riskier food categories and the differences in discernment when assessing if food can still be consumed.

Date labels are not straightforward, and this episode touches on key points from consumers and researchers alike. To find out more about the national date labelling and storage advice (phase 1) please visit https://endfoodwaste.com.au/projects/national-date-labelling-and-storage-advice-phase-1/. Additional details about 3C (Communication and Change Co-lab) are also available at https://www.rmit.edu.au/about/schools-colleges/media-and-communication/research/communication-change-colab.  

If you would like to reach out to Lukas he can be reached on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/drlukas/.

This podcast is brought to you by Honey & Fox, whose passion is food and the people who produce it. Honey & Foxworks with fishers, farmers and small food businesses to help them find and sell to their perfect customers – people who will buy without questioning the price. Find out more at www.honeyandfox.com.au.

This podcast is supported by End Food Waste Australia, which is leading impactful and research-informed food wasteactions. To learn more about how they are working toward a more sustainable future, please visit ⁠www.endfoodwaste.com.au⁠.


Show more...
2 months ago
29 minutes 41 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E14 The Packaging Puzzle - Zaidee Jackson - Revisited

Packaging design goes beyond aesthetics; it must also be functional, efficient, and aligned with broader environmentalgoals.

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, we welcome Helen Johnston from Honey & Fox who is chatting with Zaidee Jackson.

Zaidee is the National Business Development Manager for Sustainable Packaging at Ball & Doggett and the driving force behind Ecoporium, the go-to destination for sustainable packaging. Not only do Helen and Zaidee share a mutual love for biltong, but they also have apassion for packaging. Listen in as the conversation unfolds to hear about:

·     Complex challenges small businesses face in implementing truly sustainable packaging solutions thatbalance functionality, environmental impact, convenience, and cost.

·     Fit-for-purpose and functionality of packaging that reduces a carbon footprint and promotes a circular economy.

·     Design efficiency and usingfewer materials which involves innovative thinking and re-engineering traditional packaging concepts.

·     The role that consumers play by choosing products with sustainable packaging and supporting small businesses.


Sustainable packaging is not just about meeting the demands of today but also about safeguarding the future. Byensuring that packaging is functional, efficient, and environmentally aligned, we can make a significant impact in the fight against food waste.

We encourage you to follow Zaidee as she inspires and creates impactful experiences. Her links are listedbelow:

www.ballanddoggett.com.au

www.ecoporium.com.au

 

https://ecoporium.com.au/article/ecoporium12-practical-steps-to-your-sustainability-pathway/

https://ecoporium.com.au/ecoaudit/

https://ecoporium.com.au/product-index/

https://ecoporium.com.au/article/compostability-guide/

https://ecoporium.com.au/article/anhely-millan-founder-sustainability-for-kids/

 

https://www.linkedin.com/in/zaideejackson/

 

https://www.instagram.com/ballanddoggett/

https://www.instagram.com/ecoporium.com.au/

 

This podcast is brought to you by Honey & Fox, whose passion is food and the people who produce it. Honey & Fox works with fishers, farmers and small food businesses to help them find and sell to their perfect customers – people who will buy without questioning the price. Find out more at www.honeyandfox.com.au.

This podcast is supported by End Food Waste Australia, which is leading impactful and research-informed food waste actions. To learn more about how they are working toward a more sustainable future, please visit ⁠www.endfoodwaste.com.au⁠.

Show more...
3 months ago
36 minutes 43 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E13_Michelle Mascher_Ugly Duck Fine Foods Revisited

Where you might see a blemish, Ugly Duck FineFoods creates a delicacy.

 

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, host Dr. Joanne Freeman of Honey & Fox interviews Michelle Masher, the owner and founder of Ugly Duck Fine Foods in Queensland. Michelle shares her journey, inspired by her German grandparents' dairy farm, to combat food waste by transforming imperfectproduce into delicious jams and relishes. Tune in to hear more about:

·     The hurdles she faced in starting the business without a food industrybackground.

·     The importance of collaboration with farmers and other businesses.

·     How Michelle's creative approach has not only saved tons of imperfect but perfectly good produce, it has also garnered numerous awards, including the prestigious 'Best in Show' at the Royal Melbourne Show.

 

This discussion emphasises the growing consumer awareness and appreciation for sustainable practices and how important it is for businesses to leverage these trends to reduce food waste.

To learn more about Michelle and Ugly Duck Fine Foods please visit her website at uglyduckfinefoods.com.

A big thank you to Michelle and Ugly Duck Fine Foods for her time and support in fighting against food waste.


Instagram

⁠https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/⁠

⁠https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/⁠

⁠https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/⁠

⁠https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/⁠

 

Facebook

⁠https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/⁠

⁠https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/⁠

⁠https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/⁠

 

LinkedIn

⁠https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd⁠

⁠https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus⁠


Show more...
3 months ago
24 minutes 2 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E12 Whey to go: Upcycling dairy's by-product

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, Dr. Joanne Freeman sits down with researcher Jack Hetherington from the University of Adelaide to explore one of dairy's lesser-known but significant challenges - whey waste. Jack shares findings from his recent study that exposes the scale of liquid whey being discarded by Australian cheesemakers and investigates why so many viable upcycling solutions remain underutilised. 

Listeners will gain insights into the volume and types of whey produced during cheese manufacturing and the practical and economic barriers preventing smaller producers from valorizing this by-product. From the potential to craft alcoholic beverages like whey-based vodka to more collaborative, cost-effective models such as distillery partnerships, Jack outlines several innovative ways to rethink whey waste. 

The episode also dives into the complexities faced by small to medium-sized cheesemakers - limited time, capital constraints, and a lack of centralised infrastructure - all of which contribute to placing whey reuse in the "too hard" basket. However, Jack emphasises the growing opportunities available through improved sector coordination, the emergence of upcycled food certifications, and increasing consumer awareness around sustainable food choices. 

Whether you're in the food industry or simply passionate about reducing food waste, this episode offers a compelling look at how reimagining food by-products like whey could unlock both environmental and economic value. 

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters. 

 

More about Jack 

Dr Jack Hetherington is a researcher at the University of Adelaide's Centre for Global Food and Resources (GFAR). Jack is passionate about sustainable and inclusive agri-food systems and addressing complex societal challenges through robust, practical evidence to support decision-makers, influence policy, and drive meaningful change. He recently completed his PhD with support from End Food Waste Australia, CSIRO, and the University of Adelaide exploring how various business models can enable the transition towards a more circular food system. His research focused on the Australian cheese manufacturing sector and the liquid by-product whey, offering valuable insights for the broader agricultural sector. 

 

Links 

Here is the link to Jack’s full report called: 

Transitioning to the circular economy through different business models 

 

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/  

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/  

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/ 

 

Instagram 

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastema=ers_podcast/  

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/  

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/  

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/ 

 

Facebook 

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/  

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/  

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/  

 

LinkedIn 

https://au.linkedin.com/in/jack-hetherington-7a3a33160  

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd  

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus  

Show more...
4 months ago
29 minutes 3 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E11 Food waste meets its match: Black Soldier Flies with Sofia Katzin from FlyMumma

S3E11 Food waste meets its match: Black Soldier Flies In this fascinating episode of Food Waste Matters, we dive into the world of insect bioconversion with Sofia Katzin, founder of FlyMumma.

Discover how black soldier flies are transforming food scraps into high-value animal feed and nutrient-rich fertilizer all in just 12 days.

Sofia shares her personal journey from witnessing food waste in Australian hospitality to launching her consultancy that empowers farmers and producers to turn waste into opportunity.

With a background in food science and years leading R&D in the insect farming industry, she now helps global clients fine-tune their systems to keep millions of larvae thriving and productive.

In this conversation you will hear about : 

  • How 1kg of fly eggs can process 30 tonnes of organic waste
  • What “frass” is and why it’s valuable for soil health
  • How decentralised systems like Goterra are scaling local waste solutions
  • The challenges of consumer perception and why fly-based products are safe, scalable, and sustainable
  • Plus, hear about the new $2M insect industry roadmap released by AgriFutures and the University of Adelaide to help scale Australia’s black soldier fly sector over the next five years.


As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hearfrom you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au.

And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters.

More about Sofia:

Sofia Katzin is a Food Technologist and global consultant specialising in the upcycling of food waste using BlackSoldier Fly larvae. With over five years’ experience in the insect protein industry, she has led R&D teams, developed sustainable feed ingredients, and now runs her own testing facility in Perth. Sofia works with clients worldwide to design practical, scalable, and profitable waste transformationstrategies, with a focus on quality, innovation, and circular economy outcomes.

Links

To learn more about Australia’s insect industry:

https://agrifutures.com.au/rural-industries/insects/

https://www.flymumma.com/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/sofiakatzin

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

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4 months ago
24 minutes 38 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E10 From Waste to Nutrition with Pia Winberg

S3E10 From Waste to Nutrition with Pia Winberg. In this episode, we dive deep literally and figuratively into the ocean's potential to regenerate food systems and tackle food waste. Host Joanne Freeman speaks with Pia Winberg, the visionary behind Venus Shell Systems, a company transforming nutrient waste into valuable food and agricultural products using seaweed.

  • Pia takes us on a journey that started with planetary systems theory and ended up in large-scale seaweed cultivation.
  • Venus Shell Systems captures nitrogen and other nutrients from food industry emissions like those from wheat processing and uses seaweed to convert them into high protein, mineral-rich ingredients.
  • These seaweed products not only reduce coastal pollution but also enhance health and sustainability in our diets.
  • The conversation explores how seaweed farming in controlled coastal pools can yield zero-waste, protein-rich biomass while reoxygenating water and protecting marine ecosystems.
  • Pia explains the science behind it, including how one kilo of seaweed can absorb 50g of nitrogen and 1.5kg of carbon dioxide while producing just as much oxygen.
  • They also discuss the challenges of communicating complex environmental benefits in a soundbite-driven world and why integrating regeneration into mainstream food systems like pasta with 10% seaweed could free up a million hectares of land in Australia alone.


As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au.

And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters.

More about Pia:

The passionate founder of Venus Shell Systems, Pia has been working across both the marine industry and academia for the past 15 years and has a background in marine systems ecology. Her career has spanned both academic research and industry innovation in the fields of coastal and estuarine ecology, fisheries and sustainable aquaculture systems. Pia’s main research is in marine food production systems that are sustainably integrated with the coastal and marine environment and, as such, her published research efforts span aquaculture and sustainable estuarine systems.

Links

https://www.venusshellsystems.com.au/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/p/Pia-Winberg-100011633761009/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/pia-winberg-37049930/?originalSubdomain=au

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus


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4 months ago
28 minutes 52 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E9 Don't overcomplicate your waste with Natalie Bolt

S3E9: Don't overcomplicate your waste with Natalie Bolt

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, host Jayne Gallagher sits down with hospitality veteran Natalie Bolt, whose 17+ year global career—from Europe to Asia—took a transformative turn in Indonesia.

What began with a drive to cut costs evolved into a passionate crusade against food waste after witnessing stark contrasts between abundance and hunger, and environmental degradation.

Natalie shares how her company, Table Food Consultants, helps food service businesses design sustainability into daily operations—not as an afterthought, but as a foundational strategy. She walks us through their three-step framework: conducting simple food waste audits, engineering menusthat account for potential waste, and delivering hands-on workshops that empower teams to turn trimmings into treasure.

From turning watermelon rinds into curries to transforming lettuce into dressings, Natalie proves that creativity can cut waste and boost profits. Her philosophy is grounded in the triple bottom line: people, planet, and profit—and she insists that real sustainability must consider all three.

We also dive into the bigger picture: how systemic change in education and a sector-specific sustainability framework could transform the future of hospitality. Natalie advocates embedding sustainability training into core hospitality curriculums—so the next generation enters the industry already thinking sustainably.

Whether you're a hospitality pro or just sustainability-curious, this episode is packed with insight, practical steps, and inspiration.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hearfrom you.

Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au.

And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters.


More about Natalie

Natalie Bolt is a hospitality professional with 17 years of experience working across the Middle East, Asia and Europe. While she was always aware of food waste in kitchens, a pivotal moment in Indonesia changed everything. Seeing food thrown out while people starved, followed by plastic-filled oceans and bleached coral, pushed her to take action. A food waste campaign she led reduced costs by 3% and marked the start of her journey into sustainability.

Years later, after facing burnout, Natalie recognised that true sustainability in hospitality must balance people, planet and profit. That realisation led her to launch The Table Food Consultants, a consultancy helping businesses make practical, achievable changes that work in real kitchens and real teams.

Natalie is known for bridging the gap between sustainability theory and daily hospitality operations, always with a focus on impact over fluff.

Links

https://www.thetablefoodconsultants.com.au/

https://www.thetablefoodconsultants.com.au/resources/https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

Social Media Tags

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/thetablefood/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/thetablefood

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/natalie-bolt-5a338a9b/

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 

YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/@FoodWasteMatters


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5 months ago
31 minutes 18 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E8 Behind the farm gate with Melissa Smith, Real Skills Ag Training

S3E8: Behind the farm gate

In this episode, we head straight to the paddock withMelissa Smith — farmer, educator, and Churchill Fellow — to unpack on-farm food waste and the practical steps needed to address it.

Melissa shares lessons from her international researchtour through Europe and the US, where she explored how global producers manage fruit and vegetable waste. From whole crop purchasing to gleaning programs and secondary markets, Melissa highlights scalable solutions that could benefit Australia’s growers.

Key topics include:

  • The $2B+ cost of on-farm food waste in Australia
  • How stronger grower-retailer collaboration can reducewaste
  • Global case studies like Tesco’s bumper crop strategyand Right Revival’s full crop buying model
  • The role of food rescue organisations and why economic viability must come first for farmers
  • Value-added processing and how growers can transformsurplus into opportunity
  • The importance of consumer education and slow cultural change
  • Why “gleaning” might be the next big step incommunity-driven food recovery


We also explore Real Skills AG Training, Melissa’s family-run business helping farms build safer, smarter operations through practical training.

With just five years left to reach Australia’s goal of halving food waste by 2030, Melissa calls for industry-led action and pilot programs to turn knowledge into measurable change.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a storyabout how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you.

Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au.

And if you want to check out all our previous head to your favourite podcast channel and search for Food Waste Matters.

More about Melissa

After growing up in pineapple country on Queensland's Sunshine Coast, Melissa moved to Northwest New South Wales to help run the in-law's cotton and grain farms aroundMungindi. She later owned and managed a commercial passionfruit farm near Yandina.

More recently, she has worked with End Food Waste Australia to help food businesses and horticultureenterprises improve their efficiency and profitability by reducing food waste through process improvements.  With her extensive experience in agriculture, Melissa understands life "behind the farm gate" and that farmers and food businesses need solutions that are both practical and profitable.

Links

Access the reporthere:  https://www.churchilltrust.com.au/fellow/melissa-smith-qld-2023/

https://realskillsagtraining.com.au/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

Social Media Tags

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/troy_realskillsagtraining/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/RealskillsAgtraining

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/troy-smith-b9483b17a/?originalSubdomain=au

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/@troysmith7405

https://www.youtube.com/@FoodWasteMatters

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5 months ago
26 minutes 17 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E7 Turning waste into an opportunity with Ryan Collins Planet Ark

S3E7 Turning waste into an opportunity with Ryan Collins from Planet Ark

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, host Dr. Joanne Freeman welcomes Ryan Collins from Planet Ark, a leading environmental organisation in Australia. They discuss the crucial role of businesses and communities in reducing food waste, along with the practical resources and initiativesavailable to support them.

Ryan highlights Planet Ark’s efforts in promoting sustainability through programs like the Australian Circular Economy Hub (ACE Hub) and the Recycling Near You platform.

He explains how these resources help businessestransition towards a circular economy, where food waste can be minimised, repurposed, or recycled effectively.

The conversation covers:

  1. Why food waste reduction matters its impact on the environment, economy, and businesses.
  2. Planet Ark’s initiatives – including business recycling tools, waste audits, and case studies showcasing successful sustainability efforts.
  3. Barriers to change – the knowledge gap in businesses about waste management and the importance of clear, jargon-free communication.
  4. Behavioural science in sustainability – using positive reinforcement rather than guilt to encourage recyclingand waste reduction.
  5. The benefits of composting for businesses from cost savings to environmental improvements.
  6. Recycling Near You website recently launched
  7. Future initiatives research on business attitudes toward waste.


Key Takeaways:

  • Businesses want to reduce waste but often lack the knowledge or resources.
  • Planet Ark provides practical tools and research to help businesses implement sustainable solutions.
  • Behavioural change techniques like positive messaging and employee engagement can improve waste reduction efforts.
  • The ACE Hub portal connects businesses, governments, and experts to collaborate on sustainability solutions.

 

About Ryan: Ryan Collins, is the Head of Impact and Research at Planet Ark. After nearly a decade working in the banking and finance industry, Ryan was drawn to a career in sustainability that saw him work in Sydney, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Fiji in diverse roles such as monitoring and evaluation, threatened species and sustainable agriculture. With a background in psychology and environmental management, Ryan’s role at Planet Ark since 2012 has focused on developing positive environmental behaviour change programs and research that help individuals, businesses, government and schools transition to a circular economy.

Links

https://planetark.org

https://businessrecycling.com.au/

https://planetark.org/programs/australian-circular-economy-hub

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

https://recyclingnearyou.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/planetark/?hl=en

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/@planetark/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://au.linkedin.com/company/planetark

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at www.foodwastematters.com.au. 

And if you want to check out all our previous podcasts head to your favourite podcast platform and search Food Waste Matters.

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6 months ago
24 minutes 37 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E6 More Taste Less Waste with Kelly Johnson Woodlane Orchard

More Taste, Less Waste

A big congratulations to Kelly Johnson from Woodlane Orchard, who has just taken out the Sustainability Award at this year’s Food South Australia Awards.

To celebrate her recent win, we thought it was the perfect time to replay our episode with Kelly from last year where she talks about how Woodlane Orchard came to be, the thinking behind SPhiker, and what drives her commitment to doing things differently.

Kelly's business revolves around purchasing surplus produce from local farmers and transforming it into dehydrated products like soups, meals, snacks, and garnishes. Tune in as we chat about:

  • The establishment of Woodlane Orchard and how it was born out of necessity for employment and the realisation of surplus produce going to waste.
  • How Kelly sources her produce directly from farmers, focusing on obtaining "ugly" and second-hand produce that would otherwise be discarded.
  • The reality is that much of the excess fruit that doesn't meet supermarket standards is allowed to rot as farmers can't afford the labour costs associated with harvesting them.
  •  Why Woodlane Orchard creates family-sized meals as well as smaller, lightweight meals for hikers and caravanners under the Sphiker brand.
  • Kelly now has a compostable packaging solution, aiming to make her business 100% sustainable in the future.
  • The reason for advocacy towards a local circular economy system where one central hub coordinates the distribution of surplus food among businessesand local industries.


This podcast is brought to you by Honey & Fox, where theirpassion is food and the people who produce it. Honey & Fox specialise in getting you in front of the right people, in the right place, at the right time. Find out more at www.honeyandfox.com.au.

 

Bio: Kelly Johnson

After 15 years as a Scout Leader, Kelly Johnson knew a thing or two about creating fast, tasty meals that didn’t relyon refrigeration. Drawing on that experience, she launched Woodlane Orchard in 2019 with a clear goal: to make the most of surplus and seconds produce. Based in the Murraylands region of South Australia, Kelly sources locally and transforms what others might overlook into dehydrated soups, meals, snacks and garnishes. Her practical, no-waste approach celebrates local food, supports farmers, and shows that with a bit of creativity, there’s plenty of value inwhat’s left behind.

 

Links

https://www.woodlaneorchard.com.au/

https://www.sphiker.com.au/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Social Media Tags

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/sphiker.com.au/

https://www.instagram.com/woodlaneorchard/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/woodlaneorchard/

https://www.facebook.com/Sphiker/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

 

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/company/woodlane-orchard

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

 


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6 months ago
17 minutes 35 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E5: Cairns Ecofiesta - fun, friendship & eco inspiration with Dan Walton Cairns EcoFiesta

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, we head to the stunning tropical city of Cairns, home to the Great Barrier Reef and the lush wet tropics rainforest. Our guest, Dan Walton, shares insights into Cairns Eco Fiesta—Queensland’s largest sustainability festival—and how it's driving real change in the community.

Key Topics Discussed:

What is Cairns Eco Fiesta?

A free community festival focused on sustainability, running for 10years.

Features hands-on workshops, clean technology displays, local food, and interactive family activities.

Sustainability Initiatives & Waste Reduction

  • "Wash Against Waste": A large-scale reusable crockerysystem that has dramatically cut event waste.
  • How the festival’s focus has shifted from just recycling to waste uavoidance as the top priority.

Mainstreaming Sustainability ("Mainstreaming Green")

  • How making sustainability fun and accessible encourages behaviour change.
  • The role of festivals in spreading eco-friendly practices beyond the core "green" audience.

Cairns Council & Regional Collaboration

  • Council’s role in supporting sustainable initiatives and providing a platform for community engagement.
  • Partnering with regional councils and environmental agencies to expand Eco Fiesta’s impact.

What’s Next for Eco Fiesta?

  • Plans for Eco Week, extending the festival’s reach throughsatellite events.
  • Expanding collaborations and potential new event formats to bring more people into the "sustainability circle."

Final Takeaways:

Cairns Eco Fiesta proves that sustainability can be engaging,educational, and fun. By prioritising waste avoidance and community participation, it sets a benchmark for eco-conscious events.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a storyabout how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. 

 

About Dan Walton:

Dan is a sustainability officer at Cairns RegionalCouncil. Raised on an off-grid farm in Far North Queensland, Dan has over 20 years experience in local government sustainability and cut his teeth at Tweed Shire Council in Northern NSW. While at Tweed he put the implemented the in the council’s Health Safety and Environment System and ran community programs such as the Tweed Solar Neighbourhood Scheme, household retrofit programs and catchment management education. More recently his work at Cairns Regional Council has included the creation of a Nature-based Learning Grant to help get more school students on excursions to the Great Barrier Reef and Wet Tropics Rainforest and Cairns Ecofiesta, Council’s main community engagement event around all things sustainable. 

 

Links

https://www.cairns.qld.gov.au/experience-cairns/events/ecofiesta

https://www.cairns.qld.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0007/486754/CRC-Wash-Against-Waste.pdf

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

 

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

 

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/EcoEventsCairns/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

 

LinkedIn

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

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7 months ago
26 minutes 47 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E4 There's nothing wrong with seconds with Susan Cornish from Kenton Valley Cherries

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, we travel to thepicturesque Adelaide Hills to meet Susan Cornish of Kenton Valley Cherries, a family-owned orchard with six generations of history. Susan shares how her family business is tackling food waste while ensuring their orchard remains financially sustainable.

Key Topics Discussed:

The Realities of Farming & Food Waste

The high cost of growing, picking, and handling fruit makes reducing waste a necessity, not just an environmental choice.

Market specifications from retailers mean that even perfectly edible fruit can be rejected.

Value-Adding as a Waste Reduction Strategy

Susan and her family transform surplus and second-grade cherries and figs into jams, chutneys, and chocolate-coated treats.

By offering these products at their on-farm café, they maximise the use of their harvest while creating additional revenue streams.

Consumer Perceptions & Education

Many customers are open to purchasing “seconds” when they understand there’s nothing wrong with them.

Education about food storage and supporting local growers plays a big role in reducing waste.

Industry Challenges & Opportunities

The broader industry focuses on increasing first-grade fruit rather than addressing food waste.

There is potential for more collaboration and innovation in the sector to improve sustainability efforts.

Final Takeaways:

Susan’s story demonstrates that reducing food waste is not just about sustainability—it’s also good business. By innovating and adapting, small growers can turn surplus produce into profitable products while engaging consumers in the fight against food waste.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you. Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. 

About Susan Cornish:

Susan is part of the family that owns and operates a 40 hectare cherry and 12 hectare fig orchard with packing facility located in picturesque Kenton Valley between Gumeracha and Lobethal in the Adelaide Hills. The property has been owned and operated by the Cornish family forsix generations and cherries have been grown for export and domestic markets since 1994.


 Links

https://www.kentonvalleycherries.com.au/

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

 Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/


Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/KentonValleyCherries/

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

 

LinkedIn

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus

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7 months ago
20 minutes 47 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E3_The Biggest Wins with Dr Steve Lapidge, CEO, End Food Waste Australia

Guest: Dr. Steven Lapidge, CEO of End Food Waste Australia
Host: Jayne Gallagher, Honey and Fox

Summary:

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, host Jane Gallagher checks in with Dr. Steven Lapidge, CEO of End Food Waste Australia, to discuss recent progress in tackling food waste across the country. Steven shares exciting updates on initiatives such as the Great Unwaste campaign, the Australian Food Pact, and key research findings shaping the fight against food waste.

Key Topics Covered:

The Great Unwaste Campaign:

Launched on the UN’s International Day of Food Loss and Waste Awareness (Sept 29, 2024).

A multi-platform campaign (social media, radio, billboards, Netflix ads) aimed at raising awareness.

Increased public awareness from 6% to 23% in just five months.

Over 100 million impressions and $5 million in earned media coverage.

Australian Food Pact Impact Report:

A milestone three-year analysis of food waste reduction efforts.

13% reduction in food waste among participating food producers and retailers.

16,000+ tonnes of food saved and $57 million in costs avoided since 2022.

A major shift toward sustainable waste management

Tailoring Solutions for Small Businesses:

Recognising the unique challenges faced by SMEs in reducing food waste.

Strategies being developed to support smaller food businesses with customised solutions.

Leadership Transition:

Dr. Lapidge announces his resignation as CEO, transitioning to a board role.

A new leader will guide End Food Waste Australia into its next phase of growth.

This episode highlights the tangible impact of national food waste initiatives and the importance of continued efforts from businesses, policymakers, and individuals. Dr. Lapidge leaves a lasting legacy in the sector, with the organisation poised for its next phase of innovation and influence.

As always, if you have questions, feedback, or a story about how you’re reducing food waste, we’d love to hear from you.

Drop us an email at foodwastematters@honeyandfox.com.au. 

Links

The Australian Food Pact Impact Report 2024

https://www.honeyandfox.com.au/

https://endfoodwaste.com.au/

https://thegreatunwaste.com.au/

Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/honey_and_fox/

https://www.instagram.com/foodwastematters_podcast/

https://www.instagram.com/endfoodwasteaus/

https://www.instagram.com/thegreatunwaste/

Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/HoneyandFox/

https://www.facebook.com/EndFoodWasteAus/

https://www.facebook.com/thegreatunwaste/

LinkedIn

https://au.linkedin.com/company/honey-&-fox-pty-ltd

https://au.linkedin.com/company/endfoodwasteaus


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8 months ago
18 minutes 35 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E2 Rescuing today, preserving tomorrow with Maggie Quach, Beyond Best Before

In this episode of Food Waste Matters, host Joanne dives into the inspiring journey of Maggie Quach, one of the creativeforces behind Beyond Best Before. This unique retail initiative tackles food waste by offering discounted, high-quality products that are near or past their“best before” date but still perfectly safe and delicious.

Key Highlights:

The Birth of Beyond Best Before: Maggie and her sister Katie launched Beyond Best Before in July 2023 as a pop-up shop, which quickly evolved into two permanent store locations inSydney and an online store delivering nationwide.

Innovative Business Model: The enterprise reduces food waste by rescuing surplus stock and products with minorpackaging imperfections, making premium brands accessible at lower costs.

Community Impact:Beyond Best Before collaborates with universities, non-profits like Head Space,and local organisations to raise awareness and support food waste reductioninitiatives.

Addressing Misconceptions:Maggie sheds light on widespread myths about “best before” dates and thequality of surplus food, demonstrating how food waste extends beyond individualhouseholds to systemic supply chain issues.

Future Goals: Beyond Best Before aims to expand partnerships with larger corporations, deepen community engagement, and launch more educational campaigns to combat food waste.

Maggie shares insights into their popular initiatives,including:

Meals in Minutes: Quickrecipes using rescued ingredients to inspire creativity in the kitchen.

Myth-Busting Sessions:Debunking common misconceptions about food safety and waste.

Waste-Less Wednesdays:Practical tips for reducing waste in everyday life.

This episode is a call to action for listeners to rethink their approach to food consumption and waste. Explore how innovative solutions like Beyond Best Before are reshaping perceptions, saving resources, and contributing to a sustainable future.

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8 months ago
24 minutes 55 seconds

Food Waste Matters
S3E1_The Great Unwaste Campaign with Mandy Hall, Campaign Manager

Discover practical ways to reduce food waste, save money and make a real difference.

In our first episode ofFood Waste Matters for 2025, we sit down with Mandy Hall, the driving force behindThe Great Unwaste, a national campaign helping Australians reduce food waste in their homes. Mandy shares practical tips, smart shopping strategies, and simple habits that not only save food from the bin but also save money

We also explore how food waste connects to bigger global challenges, including the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, and why reducing waste isn’t just good for your wallet—it’s good for the planet.

Let’s turn food waste around—one meal at a time.

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9 months ago
26 minutes 46 seconds

Food Waste Matters
Food waste is everywhere, especially in the places we no longer notice. Food Waste Matters is a podcast where we have conversations with businesses, industry leaders, and researchers who are fighting against food waste. Our guests share real strategies for turning excess into success. Tune in to learn how your surplus can be an opportunity instead of a loss, benefiting both your business and the environment. Subscribe now to take action and make the most of our resources for the planet, the people, and the profit. Produced by Honey & Fox and supported by End Food Waste Australia.