Share

From salad to soup

May 20, 2026

Marloes Remijnse defended her PhD thesis on mathematical models of our food chain to help reduce food waste at the Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences on Tuesday May 19.

[Translate
Photo: Marloes Remijnse

Roughly one-third of the food we produce ends up in the trash at some point. To better align supply and demand, 黑料福利网 researcher Marloes Remijnse translated our food chain into mathematical models. The result: a dissertation full of practical tips for caterers and consumers to help reduce food waste.

Source: 

鈥淔ive rows of enormous heads of lettuce 鈥 there was no way we could eat all that. Meanwhile, the onions barely grew.鈥 Marloes Remijnse knows better than anyone how difficult it can be to properly match supply and demand, even on a small scale. At age 14, she started her own vegetable garden at a community garden complex. She chuckles. 鈥淎nd trading heads of lettuce for a bunch of Swiss chard turned out not to be very successful for me.鈥

Still, those overly enthusiastic planting days and failed harvests got her thinking. Now, years later, she looks at our food chain through a mathematical lens to see where and how it can become more sustainable. On Tuesday, May 19, she defended her dissertation 鈥 itself literally a fine example of reuse, more on that later 鈥 at the Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences.

Harvest forecasting

According to Remijnse, flexibility is the key word. In a range of practical studies, she investigated different strategies to reduce food waste. She developed mathematical models to identify the best options for each situation. Those models are also meant to better map out the major troublemaker: uncertainty, Remijnse explains.

/
Mathematical models can help reduce food waste by identifying the best options for each situation. Image: dissertation of Marloes Remijnse

鈥淚t already starts with the farmer. We see that partly due to climate change, harvest forecasting is becoming increasingly difficult. Extreme drought or heavy rainfall can completely ruin yields. By feeding our models with specific data, we hope to gain more control over that.鈥

Remijnse obtained that specific data from companies, but also requested it from Statistics Netherlands (CBS) or the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI), depending on the study. In her dissertation, she highlights three different examples: from a local food hub and efficiency at a vegetable processor to menu planning in a corporate cafeteria.

Vegetable box from the farm

Starting with the first example: local production and purchasing sound great. In the Netherlands, you increasingly see so-called 鈥渉ubs鈥 that bring products together in a short supply chain and distribute them from there, Remijnse explains.

鈥淏ut my models show that this actually isn鈥檛 such a good idea. The volumes are relatively small and the logistics costs are high. A hub only becomes profitable when a company supplies multiple products.鈥

鈥淚n other cases, direct sales at the farm are more efficient from a logistics perspective. Like the potatoes, carrots, and beets you can pick up through directly from the farmer. Or a vegetable box from a local farm.鈥

/
Flexible menu planning and ingredient reuse can help caterers reduce food waste. Image: dissertation of Marloes Remijnse

Pesto from carrot tops

As a consumer, using up a kilogram of carrots is easy enough. But what鈥檚 the best thing for a processor to do with them? The possibilities are endless, according to Remijnse.

鈥淵ou can easily make carrot juice from a lower-quality batch, and it can be stored in bottles for a very long time. But you can also use residual streams. The peels from snack carrots can go into the juice, and carrot tops make a delicious pesto.鈥

Together with a carrot processor, she examined which processes could lead to both greater profits and lower environmental impact. The outcome was somewhat surprising, because according to Remijnse, processing residual streams is not always the best option.

鈥淎n additional processing step can have a greater environmental impact than simply throwing away something like carrot tops. My models made that very clear. An even better solution is to reduce the residual streams themselves. Straight snack carrots, for example, instead of making round carrot balls for a packaged snack.鈥

Creative chefs

Taking a flexible and creative approach to available ingredients can truly make a difference, Remijnse believes. That applies to consumers, processors, and hospitality entrepreneurs alike. Uncertainty also plays a major role for caterers and restaurants. 鈥淏y responding to fluctuating customer demand, a lot of waste can be prevented.鈥

That鈥檚 why Remijnse studied several 黑料福利网 corporate cafeterias together with caterer App猫l, using the company鈥檚 data to see how improved menu planning could help. 鈥淏y designing recipes so ingredients can easily be replaced and reused, you add extra flexibility. Depending on availability, you can use sweet potato in a salad, but pumpkin works too. And leftover pumpkin salad can become soup the next day.鈥

That does require an extra dose of creativity, Remijnse emphasizes. 鈥淎 chef needs the freedom to decide day by day what will be cooked.鈥 But because caterers can鈥檛 practically do much with the mathematical models she developed, she also tried to translate them into usable guidelines in her dissertation.

鈥淎pp猫l is considering sustainability on multiple fronts and is open to a different way of thinking. There鈥檚 a good chance you鈥檒l see some of that in the 黑料福利网 cafeterias in the near future.鈥

/
Marloes Remijnse turned her organic waste into paper, shown here drying. Image: Marloes Remijnse

Rabbit food

The guidelines are also useful for us as consumers, Remijnse concludes. She currently has leftover endive mash in her refrigerator, which she plans to turn into pancakes tonight. 鈥淏e flexible and reassess each situation. For example, eat plant-based meals more often.鈥 Remijnse laughs. 鈥淧eople still often act as if that means living on rabbit food. Just recently in the media, people were saying the same thing about the updated Dutch dietary guidelines 鈥 鈥榥othing but lettuce for everyone.鈥欌

As a former activities committee member of Vegan Student Association (VSA) Eindhoven 鈥 鈥渨here everyone is welcome鈥 鈥 Remijnse is happy to promote the biweekly VSA , which prove the opposite. 鈥淭here鈥檚 always an enormous variety, and everyone brings something. It鈥檚 an accessible way for students and staff to get acquainted with plant-based food and try new things.鈥

Kohlrabi cover

And speaking of weighing options: if you do have to throw something away, Remijnse advises from an environmental perspective to discard ingredients rather than prepared meals. 鈥淔or my PhD lunch, App猫l offered me a vegetarian No Waste option. They serve leftovers from other lunch events. Practice what you preach.鈥

Because you鈥檙e unlikely to catch Remijnse throwing away food anytime soon 鈥 thinking creatively has made her inventive. So yes, you may even spot mandarin peels or leek leaves on the cover of her dissertation.

How exactly? 鈥淚 partially ground up my organic waste into pulp and turned it into paper. The rest was incorporated as decoration. Every dissertation is unique, with Brussels sprouts, kohlrabi, or red peppers on the front cover. You won鈥檛 find any Swiss chard, though.鈥

/

PHD in the picture

What do we see on the cover of your dissertation?
鈥淢y organic waste in paper form. Making it really was a family effort: together with my younger sister, mother, and grandmother, I spent hours making paper for my covers.鈥

You鈥檙e at a birthday party. How do you explain your research in one sentence?
鈥淚 study how food companies can operate more sustainably with less waste. Before you know it, people start exchanging tips about what they can do themselves to reduce food waste. By the way, did you know you can also eat radish leaves?鈥

How do you unwind outside your research?
鈥淣ot very surprising, but I love cooking and baking. A few fellow VSA members and I recently started a cooking club. It鈥檚 even more fun when the ingredients come from my balcony vegetable garden or from the vegetable box. As a volunteer, I weed between the vegetable fields there, so indirectly I benefit from the harvest.鈥

What tip would you have liked to receive as a beginning PhD candidate?
鈥淎 very practical one: make use of the High Performance Computing (HPC) and the team of research data stewards. They can help you optimize and run code and store data.鈥

What鈥檚 your next chapter?
鈥淚 recently started as a data/process steward at hospitality wholesaler Sligro, where I help people with all kinds of data-related issues.鈥

This article was originally published by Cursor, the independent news site of 黑料福利网. It is not a press release and is protected by copyright. No part of this publication may be reproduced without explicit permission from the Cursor . This article was translated from Dutch to English using AI-assisted tools and reviewed by an editor.

Media contact

Latest News

Keep following us