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Sustainable Food Options

Camosun aims to offer affordable and healthy food services options which evaluate and minimize their impact on the environment and local community. On campus, students have a variety of food options, offered by our food services partner Aramark, the Professional Cook programs, and the student-run Farm Box program.

Aramark has been operating Camosun's dining establishments with sustainability initiatives as part of its contractual agreement since 2008. Aramark helps Camosun limit its environmental impact.

Sustainable food

As part of Aramark's聽, sustainable food means purchasing and providing sustainable, locally grown/raised and socially responsible products.

Learn more聽about how the College is taking on these challenges and striving to serve up sustainability through local options.

Responsible procurement and disposal

This involves considering the environmental impact of purchasing practices and how the business is operated, and making sustainable choices with regards to disposable packaging, paper products, cleaning products, and source packaging.

Education and engagement

Aramark wants clients to know how their food choices impact their own health, as well as the health of the environment, communities and the planet. 聽They provide this information through initiative such as themed meal days focusing on locally grown or vegetarian options and providing information about menus and ingredients explaining the benefits of eating locally and of eating food from lower on the food chain.

Learn more about Aramark and their .

Chris White
Aramark Director, Food and Catering Services at Camosun
aramark@camosun.ca
250-370-3650

At the Interurban campus, professional cook apprentices from the Professional Cook programs operate the Helmut Huber Culinary Arts Centre. It offers high quality and affordable meals and snacks and on-campus catering. Revenue generated goes back to support the program.

At both facilities, food use is maximized and any remaining kitchen waste and leftover food is composted via reFUSE. Fats, oils and grease are collected and recycled through GREASEcycle. Disposable cutlery and take-out containers are compostable, with the exception of plastic cutlery. Food containers are often reused for other purposes, or go to the college's gardeners or recycle bin.

Edible herb gardens

There are a variety of edible plants around both campuses, particularly Interurban, but in order to enjoy this natural treat, one has to know how to find and identify them. Recently the Culinary Arts department has been working to create an educational program about fresh herbs and edible plants, which will also have spin-off benefits such as enhancing the green space around the Culinary Arts Centre. Future plans for the project include:

  • Planting additional edible plants in existing and future gardens
  • Creating a map/inventory of plants
  • Creating a basic instruction manual and educating professional cook apprentices to identify, care for and harvest the plants

Learn more about the聽student-run food options聽and view their聽schedules and menus.

Contact

David Lang
Chair, Culinary Arts
250-370-3778
langd@camosun.ca

Edible Garden

Green maps

Looking for a place to recycling your soft plastics? Wondering where to charge your electric scooter? Use our Green Maps to find sustainability-related points of interest on Camosun's campuses.