Lodi News-Sentinel

Seattle gives new life to ‘ugly’ produce

- By Tan Vinh

SEATTLE — Crooked-neck parsnips with wickedly long whiskers. Double-jointed carrots and knobby spuds. These fruits and veggies never make it to the catwalk of the supermarke­ts.

Misshapen with skin blemishes, the ugly ducklings end up in landfills or go to food banks.

There’s an underworld full of ugly produce, waiting to be gobbled or turned into pie fillings. But who will have them?

Seattle, apparently, has its hand raised.

San Francisco-based Imperfect Produce, which delivers boxes of rejected “ugly” fruits and vegetables to doorsteps in California and in Portland, Ore., tested the Seattle market in late October.

The goal was to sign up at least 300 Seattle households by the end of 2017.

The company met that goal weeks before even delivering one pockmarked lime to a Seattle ZIP code. According to administra­tors at its delivery-dispatch facility near Sea-Tac and at its headquarte­rs in California, more than 2,000 Seattle customers signed up in less than four weeks.

“We had to start a waiting list right away,” said Ben Simon, CEO of Imperfect Produce. “We were super happy with that response, surprised in the best possible way.

“As soon as we saw the demand was that high, a week before the launch ... we had to go on a hiring spree.”

The delivery service trucks in more than 30,000 pounds of surplus produce to Seattle each week, much of it undersized, bruised or contorted like a Cirque-du-Soleil figurine, imperfect in appearance but perfectly edible.

In 2010, the last count, the nation wasted 131 billion pounds of food, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. That raised concerns about wasted water, fossil fuels, fertilizer, labor and farmland.

In targeting Seattle, Imperfect Produce believed the food-waste problem would resonate in a city with composting and recycling laws.

While the company claims that its ugly produce is 30 to 50 percent cheaper than supermarke­t prices, that’s not its main sales pitch. It preaches that buying rejected produce saves the environmen­t, such as keeping wasted food from rotting in landfills, which creates greenhouse gas.

Imperfect Produce didn’t revolution­ize the “ugly-food” concept. It has taken an oldschool component of farmers markets to the mainstream.

Across the country, environmen­talists and farm advocates have long pushed for grocery chains and the mainstream to embrace ugly produce, much like they do in Europe.

 ?? ELLEN M. BANNER/SEATTLE TIMES ?? Literature from Imperfect Produce says that it provides affordable fruits and veggies that aren’t perfect enough for grocery store standards, and thanks customers for eating ugly.
ELLEN M. BANNER/SEATTLE TIMES Literature from Imperfect Produce says that it provides affordable fruits and veggies that aren’t perfect enough for grocery store standards, and thanks customers for eating ugly.

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