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Turning Food Scraps into Opportunities

Researchers Create New Tool to Track What鈥檚 Left After Processing Foods

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色中色 researchers developed an online tool that tracks agricultural leftovers, like almond hulls shown here in a large pile, to help reduce food waste and inspire new uses. (Gregory Urquiaga/色中色)
色中色 researchers developed an online tool that tracks agricultural leftovers to help reduce food waste and inspire new uses. (Gregory Urquiaga/色中色)

For every juicy tomato or crunchy almond California grows, there鈥檚 a pile of pulp, hulls or scraps that often goes to waste. A new online tool, created by 色中色 researchers, tracks those agricultural byproducts aiming to find innovative ways to put them to use.

The , maintained by the , is an ongoing research project that includes a catalog of byproducts like fruit skins and nut shells, and potential ways to reuse them across different industries.

Edward 鈥淣ed鈥 Spang, principal investigator and associate professor with the Department of Food Science and Technology, said about one third of the food produced worldwide, doesn鈥檛 get eaten. The database consolidates information about food waste in one place, detailing what the various leftovers are made of and where they鈥檙e available in the state. Spang believes it could help guide decisions on reducing waste by potentially turning these materials into new products for food, cosmetics or pharmaceutical industries.

鈥淚n the food production space, there鈥檚 a lot of edible material, or potentially valuable material, that鈥檚 been overlooked for a long time as waste,鈥 Spang said. 鈥淪o, the questions we are trying to understand include: 鈥楬ow much of this material is out there? What is it composed of? Where is it? When is it available?鈥欌

Tomatoes, almonds, pistachios and pomegranates

The pilot phase of the database currently features four major crops: tomatoes, almonds, pistachios and pomegranates. As the research team continues to gather data, they will update the site to include other crops and byproducts, including wine grapes, stone fruits and citrus. In collaboration with Ilias Tagkopoulos with the Department of Computer Science, Spang is looking into developing and applying AI tools to expand the site faster and with less manual work.

For pistachios, the website illustrates that the largest byproduct is the hull, which is often discarded, and that undersized pistachios could be a valuable resource if there was a market for it. The website helps outline the various byproducts for potential upcycling, where leftovers are transformed into new ingredients. Local companies are already developing new products using materials such as brewers鈥 spent grain (a byproduct of beer production), okara (a fibrous byproduct from soymilk production) and grape pomace (leftovers from winemaking). 

Close up view of a pile of pistachios. Pistachio hulls are the largest byproduct leftover from processing. (Gregory Urquiaga/色中色)
Pistachio hulls are the largest byproduct left over from processing. (Jael Mackendorf /色中色)

Researchers are looking at where food gets lost in the field and at the processing plant. With tomatoes, some get damaged on the vine, others get tossed out for not meeting quality standards. Spang said those leftovers, or side streams, are opportunities for upcycling.

 鈥淚t鈥檚 a material that鈥檚 already been cultivated, harvested and processed, so anything you do that鈥檚 economically productive means that all the resources embedded in that material, like fertilizer, water and energy, were not wasted in vain,鈥 said Spang, who also directs the Robert Mondavi Institute of Wine and Food Science. 鈥淚t is a real win-win opportunity.鈥

Finding new uses

The skin and pulp of a tomato contain lycopene, an antioxidant known for its health benefits. Users of the website can visualize where these leftover tomato parts, and its valuable lycopene, are found, helping to imagine new ways to make use of this healthy compound.

鈥淲e expect our primary user to be entrepreneurs who are looking for new business models in upcycling, or who might have an advanced extraction technology to derive value from some of these overlooked materials,鈥 Spang explained. 鈥淏ut producers and growers would also benefit as new revenue streams deliver value up and down the food supply chain.鈥 

A very red, ripe tomato growing on a vine. Skins from tomatoes contain the antioxidant lycopene, which could be used to make other healthy products. (Hector Amezcua/色中色)
Skins from tomatoes contain the antioxidant lycopene, which could be used to make other healthy products. (Hector Amezcua/色中色)

The database will soon include cost estimates and economic variables to help users make more informed decisions. This will allow them to assess factors like how much lycopene is in a byproduct, its value per milligram and the costs associated with extracting it.

New space for agricultural innovation on campus

The research project is funded by a grant from the Resnick Agricultural Innovation Research Fund, created by a $50 million gift by Lynda and Stewart Resnick, co-owners of The Wonderful Company. Part of that donation also establishes the , currently under construction on campus, that will include a large space for biomass staging and extraction, a process to pull valuable compounds from fruits, vegetables and grain residues. 

Food waste happens, but this work is helping build a food system that wastes less and supports sustainability, which Spang hopes will excite everyone.

鈥淲e have to be a little more creative with our food system,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can make our current food system more productive by investigating novel upcycling ideas and processing systems that create more revenue for producers and hopefully deliver more value to consumers as well.鈥

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