Dumpster diver is making family Christmas dinner from food she has found in BINS

Dumpster diver is making family Christmas dinner from food she has found in BINS

A dumpster diver is making her family Christmas dinner from food she has found in bins - and says her parents say they hope it's clean.br br Sofie Juel Andersen, 29, has been eating from bins for three years and spends just £70 on shop-bought groceries a month.br br She says her friends and family are supportive of her fight against food waste - and she often brings food from skips to dinner parties and get-togethers.br br She has salvaged fresh produce, meat, cheese and packaged snacks from bins outside supermarkets - which have designated dumpsters for the different types of food. br br This year, Sofie is contributing to the Christmas dinner with a winter salad made from greens found in a shop bin and pickled red cabbage she salvaged from a restaurant skip.br br Sofie, a restaurant manager, from Aarhus, Denmark, said: “My entire family knows I dumpster dive - my mum says it’s not an issue.br br "I’ll be bringing a winter salad and pickled red cabbage to Christmas.br br “There’s no need for me to go out and buy stuff - my family support my fight against food waste.br br “I’m seeing a lot of festive foods being thrown out by the supermarkets - you can usually tell by the amount of dessert ingredients, cabbages and meats in the dumpsters.”br br Sofie says she’s successfully found food in bins to make a salad big enough to feed her extended family of 20 on Christmas Eve.br br She scavenged cheese, nuts, fruits and pre-mixed salads from skips, as well as “hundreds” of pre-mixed salad creams.br br “The other day I found a kilo of cashew nuts,” she said.br br “I’ll definitely be adding those to the dish.br br “I found a lot of cheese - shredded cheese and parmesan, which won’t go bad until the New Year.br br “I’ve got some apples, which will go really great with the cabbage I found.br br “I do often find pre-mixed salads, and in the ones where the leaves have wilted, I just take the salad cream. I have hundreds of packets of sauce saved up.”br br Sofie says she can tell when supermarkets start to throw out Christmas stock - by the amount of flour, butter, duck and pork which gets dumped.br br In Denmark, the traditional meats to eat for Christmas dinner are duck and pork - and most households eat a festive rice pudding dessert.br br She added: “Supermarkets often have a price war around this time of year, and butter and flour ends up being really cheap.br br “They ordered so many last year, they had a ton of surplus stock and threw a lot out.br br “You’ll always find a lot of oranges and clementines, as they’re usually in season.br br “It’s the same with kale and cabbage - which is why I’m deciding to bring a winter salad along to Christmas dinner.”br br Sofie’s family have already planned out the entirety of their Christmas dinner - with potatoes covered in sugar, rice pudding and almonds.br br And they’ve never had reservations about part of their Christmas dinner coming from a bin.br br “My mum came to me and said, ‘we’re doing a big family dinner - please make sure it’s clean'," Sofie said.


User: SWNS

Views: 183

Uploaded: 2023-12-20

Duration: 00:52

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