What's the deal with airline food?
Paula Cao
You ever notice how airline food tastes like your dentist's waiting room floor? You have your little bowl of pasta, and it looks like they fished it out your sink drain. And you can't bring food onto the plane, so you're stuck with either hours of not eating the food or hours of wishing you hadn't eaten the food. And they spend half an hour pushing the little cart and blocking the aisle so you can't get to the bathroom, which strangely enough, smells exactly like what you just ate.
But even worse than eating airline food (hard to believe) is the waste airline food generates. The last time I was on a plane, I had two meals. Everything was individually wrapped: the bread, the main course, two sides, even the Kit-Kat bar that was already in a wrapper. Everything came in these plastic containers. Seems like a ton of waste.
Every tray of food brought onto the plane is thrown away, even if no one eats it (due to health concerns), which is quite wasteful.
With a little Fermi calculation, we can estimate the annual waste of airline food. In addition to all the plastic, I didn't eat all my meal, so let's estimate 2 lbs of waste per meal, times about 2 meals per person, times about 500 people on the flight, times about 10,000 flights per day, times about 400 days per year, results in 8,000,000,000 lbs, or 4 million tons of waste produced per year! (The actual statistic anywhere from 3 to 5 million tons).
Of course, it's not just the food that's waste. There's also those wrappers of peanuts or crackers or whatever they serve, the wrapper for those blankets and pillows, and those plastic cups they serve ginger ale (here's a tip: if you speak with a deep voice, you can order beer).
Yes, airline food produces tons and tons of waste, but is there a more efficient method of packaging and transporting airline food? Would it be easier to just starve for ten hours? And of course, what is the deal with airline food?
You ever notice how airline food tastes like your dentist's waiting room floor? You have your little bowl of pasta, and it looks like they fished it out your sink drain. And you can't bring food onto the plane, so you're stuck with either hours of not eating the food or hours of wishing you hadn't eaten the food. And they spend half an hour pushing the little cart and blocking the aisle so you can't get to the bathroom, which strangely enough, smells exactly like what you just ate.
But even worse than eating airline food (hard to believe) is the waste airline food generates. The last time I was on a plane, I had two meals. Everything was individually wrapped: the bread, the main course, two sides, even the Kit-Kat bar that was already in a wrapper. Everything came in these plastic containers. Seems like a ton of waste.
Every tray of food brought onto the plane is thrown away, even if no one eats it (due to health concerns), which is quite wasteful.
With a little Fermi calculation, we can estimate the annual waste of airline food. In addition to all the plastic, I didn't eat all my meal, so let's estimate 2 lbs of waste per meal, times about 2 meals per person, times about 500 people on the flight, times about 10,000 flights per day, times about 400 days per year, results in 8,000,000,000 lbs, or 4 million tons of waste produced per year! (The actual statistic anywhere from 3 to 5 million tons).
Of course, it's not just the food that's waste. There's also those wrappers of peanuts or crackers or whatever they serve, the wrapper for those blankets and pillows, and those plastic cups they serve ginger ale (here's a tip: if you speak with a deep voice, you can order beer).
Yes, airline food produces tons and tons of waste, but is there a more efficient method of packaging and transporting airline food? Would it be easier to just starve for ten hours? And of course, what is the deal with airline food?
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https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/531649/Bringing_food_into_the_UK_leaflet.pdf