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Climate Kitchen | College of Agriculture and Life Sciences | ¶¶Òõ̽̽(title)

The ¶¶Òõ̽̽ Climate Kitchen is a maker's space for collaboration and experimentation to help us reimagine the connection between food and climate change. All researchers and learners are welcome to join us in a process of emergent discovery.
Two students working at a cooktop

Our Mission

Our mission is to facilitate researchers, students, and communities in using the Climate Kitchen as a living laboratory as they explore new food systems possibilities.

Five Tenets for Building Sustainable Practices

Overview

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The ¶¶Òõ̽̽ Climate Kitchen is based around five tenets for building sustainable practices. These five evidence-based tenets address the push and pull between climate change and our food system and will inform research questions and experiments, and aid curriculum design.

Tenet One: Plant Forward

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Assessing macro-micronutrient quality, experimenting with new plant and insect protein sources, enhancing culinary techniques. 

Tenet Two: Integrating Tastes and Habits

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Documenting eating preferences across various populations; building alternative foods that respond to sensory preferences. 

Tenet Three: Low Waste

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Designing waste out of food transformations (processing, preserving, cooking); alternative packaging and preservation systems. 

Tenet Four: Whole Food Utilization

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Using entire ingredients; promoting nutrient dense whole foods through the entire food system. 

Tenet Five: Regional/Local Sourcing

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Addressing the opportunities and barriers of seasonality. 

Researchers weighing bags of food waste

Summer Research Institute

The Climate Kitchen Summer Research Institute allows ¶¶Òõ̽̽ researchers and collaborators to work with the Climate Kitchen team to develop an emergent approach to formulating research questions, research hypotheses and proposals that seek to address food systems and climate change.

More About The Summer Research Institute

Vision

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This new kitchen of the future will bring together researchers, students, and communities at ¶¶Òõ̽̽ and beyond to develop more sustainable practices – from sourcing, to cooking, to eating – using the kitchen environment as a living laboratory for: 

  • Food Research and Experimentation 
  • Recipe Development 
  • Sustainable Kitchen Practices 
  • Reimagined Cooking Spaces 

Kitchen of the Future

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The Climate Kitchen is a place to figure out what to do next. The emphasis is on anticipating the future. And to do so while keeping in mind there must be more opportunities for mitigating climate change and promoting individual and planetary health. As part of this vision, data is collected on what happens in kitchens today and researchers and students work in a kitchen that facilitates our understanding of the best practices for climate friendly cooking and eating in the future. For example, in our current space there is now a high-speed low energy dishwasher being used and metered to collect data on water and energy use. There are also Instapots, Deyhdrators, Flour Mills, induction burners and other technologies that help imagine and test future scenarios for how we will cook and eat.

We are developing the design and actively raising the funds to create a vibrant, integrated teaching/research/outreach venue to support all the Climate Kitchen activities. We work together with a professional kitchen designer, architect and the ¶¶Òõ̽̽ planning and facilities as we imagine the necessary spaces and equipment for the kitchen of 2050.

Climate Kitchen Design and Development

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Climate Kitchen design mockup

Our innovative new kitchen space will be constructed at ¶¶Òõ̽̽ in collaboration with designers and architects. The Climate Kitchen will include a variety of kitchen space prototypes, equipment, and technologies to provoke ideas and actions for more sustainable food systems. 

Partnerships and Donors

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The core ¶¶Òõ̽̽ Climate Kitchen faculty and researchers have a long history of success in research funding, curriculum development, and published scholarly works. Our focus is on creating opportunities for broader collaboration, partnerships, funding and support. The Climate Kitchen is funded in part the ¶¶Òõ̽̽ Food Systems Research Center.

Climate Kitchen Curriculum

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The Climate Kitchen sponsors courses at the undergraduate and graduate level that teach students necessary skills and concepts – in kitchens and beyond - that can address individual and planetary health. 

The Climate Kitchen courses integrate the sustainability tenets of the Climate Kitchen throughout the curriculum: plant forward, integrating tastes and habits, low waste, whole food utilization and regional/local sourcing. The undergraduate course, Foods for Planetary Health, combines in-person lectures and labs and is offered by the Nutrition and Food Sciences department. The graduate course, Cooking for Individual and Planetary Health, is an all-online course.

The Climate Kitchen, in collaboration with the Culinary Medicine program at ¶¶Òõ̽̽ Medical Center and the Osher Center for Integrative Health, has developed learning modules that explore key concepts for future professionals in nutrition and health science that will be used across University of Vermont and University of Vermont Medical Center. 

Climate Kitchen Video

Our Food System and Climate Change

Stock image birds eye view crop harvest
About a third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions is linked to food.
eggs being sorted
Animal-based foods are generally associated with the highest greenhouse gas emissions, while plant-based foods use less energy, land, and water.
landfill
Almost 1 billion tons of food goes into trash bins every year. Producing, transporting, and letting that food rot contribute more than 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

For more information, contact Emily Barbour emily.barbour@uvm.edu

The Climate Kitchen is funded in part by the .