Artful, Delicious, Waste Free Cooking with Chef Keith Lord with Four Recipes You Can Make Right Now

By Erin Jackson / Photography By | Last Updated February 01, 2019
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Keith A. Lord is a global chef with a creative and conscientious approach to food. As culinary director at the Wild Thyme Company, he strives to reduce waste by rescuing imperfect produce from local farmers, regrowing watercress in coolers behind the catering kitchen, and turning kitchen “trash” into treasure.

Lord says he’s motivated by an abiding respect for food—and sees waste as a personal challenge. He credits his principled approach to cooking in two formative kitchens: one in Hawaii, where the majority of ingredients came out of the water, and another in San Francisco, where the fridge was packed to the brim with local produce each week. His mission was to use every last morsel so the kitchen could start over again with fresh ingredients the following Monday.

In the catering world, waste is a reality, but Wild Thyme has implemented simple and inventive practices that make a positive impact. Lord says one of the easiest methods to reduce waste is to consider the potential of kitchen scraps that would otherwise be bound for the bin. In the Wild Thyme kitchen, strawberry tops are incorporated into tapenade, carrot greens are transformed into pesto, and charred onion scraps become a sweet and decorative ash to top shots of Mexican street corn.

Some of the catering company’s most eye-catching dishes have been inspired almost entirely by cast-offs, like the Tuscan Five-Spice Grouper with seasoning crafted from bruised mint, citrus peels, and vanilla pods and a root vegetable peel salad. “It’s a beautiful dish, and most of the flavor comes from scraps,” says Lord.

But Wild Thyme’s most dynamic presentation of waste reduction might be their painted tablescapes—lively food installations highlighting deconstructed takes on savory and sweet dishes ranging from cassoulet to peach cobbler. The experience unfolds like a flash mob performance, where elements of the dish are strewn and swirled across the table covered in recycled paper. Guests scoop up bites with edible implements like toast or doughnuts. There’s no cutlery or plates involved, and practically no waste.

With time and creativity, it’s possible for every chef and home cook to reduce waste and use ingredients to their full potential.

The Wild Thyme Table

555 West C St. #103
thewildthymecompany.com

 


Four Waste-Free Recipes to Make at Home
 

Waste Less Cooking: Tuscan Five-Spice Grouper with Shaved Vegetable Salad

This beautiful recipe makes the most of bruised or leftover herbs and citrus. Feel free to substitue other local fish. Recipe courtesy of chef Keith Lord of The Wild Thyme Table.

Waste Less Cooking: Avocado Feta Ranch Dressing

Don't throw away that discolored avocado or the juice left in your feta container. This recipe from chef Keith Lord will turn your scraps into a luscious dressing.

Waste Less Cooking: Barley Mash Country White Bread

Some chefs go beyond reducing waste in their own kitchens and form partnerships to help reduce food waste throughout the county, like Vicky Sorrisio Scully, pastry chef for The Wild Thyme Company...

Waste Less Cooking: Furikake Fried Vegetable Peels

Instead of throwing away your potato peels, make a batch of these addictively crunchy, umami-rich snacks. Recipe courtesy of chef Keith Lord of The Wild Thyme Table.
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