A quiet revolution is brewing in Britain’s food industry, and it smells like sourdough. A wave of startups across the country is resurrecting an ancient preservation technique – fermentation – and applying it to the modern scourge of food waste. Their mission: to transform discarded vegetable peelings, stale bread, and overripe fruit into valuable, edible products. And they are making money doing it.
The scale of the problem is staggering. According to the Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), UK households throw away 6.4 million tonnes of food annually, much of which is perfectly edible. Supermarkets and restaurants contribute millions more. But where most see rubbish, a new generation of food entrepreneurs sees a feedstock for fermentation vats.
Take Croper, a London-based startup founded by former chef Maria Santos. Their flagship product is a tangy, umami-rich ‘ketchup’ made from surplus beetroot and apple cores. “Fermentation is the original upcycling,” Santos explains, standing next to rows of bubbling ceramic jars in her Hackney Wick kitchen. “Lactobacillus bacteria do the work for free. We just add salt and time, and we get a product that sells for £8 a jar.”
The science is elegantly simple. Lactic acid bacteria (the same ones that turn cabbage into sauerkraut or milk into yoghurt) consume sugars and release preservative acids. This creates a hostile environment for spoilage organisms, effectively pickling the waste. By controlling temperature, salinity, and strain selection, startups can tailor flavours from sour to funky.
But the commercial implications extend far beyond artisanal condiments. Fermentation has become a low-tech, high-impact solution to the food industry’s biggest headache: waste disposal costs. Supermarkets currently pay to have unsold produce incinerated or sent to landfill, where it generates methane. By supplying it to fermenters instead, they can offset disposal fees and even earn a new revenue stream.
I visited a facility in Brighton where plump, blemished tomatoes destined for the skip are transformed into a smoky, black garlic-style paste called “umamu”. The founder, Dr. James Hargreaves, a former biochemist, explained the economics: “A supermarket pays £50 per tonne to dispose of these tomatoes. We buy them for £20 per tonne, ferment them for six weeks, and sell the paste for £3,000 per tonne. The margins are obscene.”
Environmentalists are cautiously optimistic. The fermentation process uses minimal energy, requires no packaging beyond glass jars, and creates a circular economy. But some worry about the potential for greenwashing – turning a premium product from waste that could have been redistributed to food banks. Santos insists her model is complementary: “We use what is too ugly for charities or past its shelf life. The priority is always human consumption first.”
The trend is gaining traction from regulators too. The UK government’s Food Waste Champion recently endorsed fermentation as a “scalable solution”. Meanwhile, the British Standards Institution is developing a new certification for ‘fermented from waste’ products, hoping to avoid the kind of ethical ambiguities that dogged the palm oil industry.
Yet challenges remain. Fermentation is an art as well as a science, and scaling up consistently is difficult. Microbial contamination can ruin a batch, and the distinct sour taste may not appeal to British palates accustomed to bland, sugary condiments. To overcome this, startups are experimenting with hybrid techniques: combining fermentates with vinegar, chillies, or smoke to create familiar flavours.
The bigger threat, however, is the potential for a Black Mirror-style disruption. What happens when large food corporations buy up these startups, industrialise the process, and start fermenting waste on an immense scale? Could we see a dystopian future where perfectly edible food is diverted from the hungry straight into fermentation vats because the financial incentive is too great?
Dr. Hargreaves dismisses the concern: “You have to think about the bigger picture. If we can make waste valuable, we disincentivise waste in the first place. The real Black Mirror moment is our current system where trillions of pounds worth of food gets dumped every year.”
For now, the British fermentation movement is a testament to human ingenuity – a way to reconnect with ancestral food preservation techniques while solving a modern industrial problem. It is messy, unpredictable, and smells faintly of vinegar. But it might just be the most important food trend you have never heard of.










