back-to-top
x
close

March 26, 2025 – Saddle Brook, NJ – Table to Table, New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue nonprofit, received a generous $25,000 grant from Avolta’s Journey for Good Foundation in support of its more than 25-year-old mission to reduce food waste and feed individuals and families facing food insecurity throughout northern New Jersey.

Journey For Good Foundation is the philanthropic arm in North America for Avolta, a leading global travel retail and food & beverage player. In the Summer of 2024, Table to Table launched an official partnership with Avolta to begin rescuing a range of food, including ‘grab and go’ sandwiches, salads, and snacks from numerous HMSHost and Hudson locations within Newark Liberty International Airport. This surplus, donated food is then delivered directly to pantries and social service organizations in Newark and surrounding communities, ensuring it reaches those who need it most while it is still fresh.

“Thank you, Journey For Good Foundation – we are incredibly grateful for your partnership. Through your support, Table to Table can keep more quality food out of landfills, and nourish even more children, families, seniors and veterans who struggle to put healthy meals on the table,” said Heather Thompson, Executive Director, Table to Table. “In fact, this incredible gift will provide resources for us to rescue and deliver enough food for approximately 250,000 nutritious meals.” Thompson concluded.

“On behalf of Journey For Good Foundation, we extend our heartfelt gratitude to the thousands of passengers who, through their generosity, have made it possible for us to give back to communities across northern New Jersey,” said Journey For Good Foundation Director Jordan Silverman. “We are deeply humbled to support Table to Table’s work reducing food waste and ensuring that nutritious food reaches our neighbors who need it most.”

About Table to Table 

Table to Table (http://www.tabletotable.org) is New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue nonprofit, bridging the gap between food being wasted and people facing food insecurity. We bring rescued fresh, nutritious food to 303 community partners, including social service organizations, pantries, shelters, fresh produce markets and centralized distribution hubs. Food is provided free of charge. Through this, Table to Table touches a diversity of those in need, including families, children, veterans, and older adults, making good nutrition accessible while serving as a stimulus for other longer-term benefits. Since 1999 we have rescued more than 120,700 tons of nutritious food—enough for 241,400,846 million meals—and delivered it to our neighbors in need, saving over 544 metric tons of methane saved.

About Journey For Good Foundation

Journey For Good Foundation, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) charity whose mission is to fight poverty in the local community with food, shelter, education, and workforce development. Prior to 2024, Journey For Good Foundation, Inc. operated as HMSHost Foundation, Inc. Journey For Good Foundation is a charitable arm of Avolta in North America and was established to unite and build upon HMSHost Foundation, Hudson, and Dufry’s charitable giving efforts. Charitable work carried out by Journey For Good Foundation is done based on pillars of giving:

·        Relieve hunger and promote nutritional wellness through food related initiatives;

·        Combat homelessness through access to safe housing, furnishings, clothing, and stable employment;

·        Encourage the next generation through access to education and training;

·        Provide opportunity for financial stability through hospitality industry training and placement;

·        Honor our veterans and their families by supporting programs that meet their needs for food, shelter, medical care, and job training and placement.

Visit https://journeyforgood.org/ for more information.

Related:

  • Table to Table, NJ’s First and Largest Food Rescue, Makes History by Partnering with HMSHost and Hudson at Newark Airport Stores to Pick Up Food Surplus

Most high schoolers spend their summers unwinding, but Veer Agarwal, spent his brainstorming. Inspired by his passion for service and a knack for coding, Veer built a platform connecting surplus food and leftovers from restaurants to local food pantries. The result? ResQFoods, a tech-driven initiative tackling food waste and leftovers in his community, Suburban Essex magazine reported.

Now, recently backed by Table to Table, New Jersey’s first food rescue nonprofit organization, he uses their I-Rescue app for donating tracking.

With ResQFoods, he’s proving that one idea—and one determined teen—can make an impact.

Read the complete story in Suburban Essex.

Related:

Saddle Brook, N.J. – February 26, 2025 – Behind the Seams, an annual high-energy fashion show, will benefit Table to Table, a community-based food rescue program, and take place at Bottagra Restaurant in Hawthorne on Wednesday, May 14 from 5:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. This year marks the 15th annual Behind the Seams which attracts over 300 guests each year. Proceeds from Behind the Seams will help Table to Table continue its mission of collecting fresh, nutritious, perishable food that would otherwise be wasted and delivering it free to organizations serving the hungry in Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris, and Passaic counties.

“Behind the Seams is one of my favorite nights of the year because it brings together a group of people who are passionate about giving back to their local communities and they create an energy and excitement that’s unparalleled,” said Joey Mazza, Director of Special Events and Restaurant Partnerships for Table to Table. “We look forward to a night of fine dining, entertainment, and fashion that will allow Table to Table feed our neighbors.”

Since Table to Table was established in 1999, it has:

  • Rescued 120,700 tons of nutritious food
  • Rescued and delivered enough food for 241,400,846 meals
  • Saved 544 metric tons of methane

Behind the Seams will consist of a lavish cocktail hour, gourmet food and beverage stations, silent and live auctions, and a tented runway show featuring 2025 spring and summer styles by two clothing boutiques with long-standing roots in New Jersey. Male styles will be presented by Sal Lauretta for Men, a men’s shop in Midland Park that specializes in fine made-to-measure and designer menswear. Boutique 811, a women’s fashion boutique in Franklin Lakes that offers unique styles plus personal styling services, will showcase seasonal trends for women.

Tickets for Behind the Seams 2025 are currently on sale. To purchase a ticket, reserve a table, or secure a sponsorship, visit: https://tabletotable.org/fashionshow/

About Table to Table
Table to Table (http://www.tabletotable.org) is New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue nonprofit, bridging the gap between food being wasted and people facing food insecurity. We bring rescued fresh, nutritious food to 303 partner organizations including social service organizations, pantries, shelters, fresh produce markets and centralized distribution hubs. Food is provided free of charge. Through this, Table to Table touches a diversity of those in need, including families, children, veterans, and older adults, making good nutrition accessible while serving as a stimulus for other longer-term benefits. Since 1999 we have rescued more than 120,700 tons of nutritious food—enough for more than 241 million meals—and delivered it to our neighbors in need, saving over 544 metric tons from being released into the environment. 

Photos available upon request

Perhaps the happiest person at Taste of Morristown was Nicole Berezny, Morris County coordinator for Table to Table, a food-rescue organization participating in its first Taste of Morristown, Morristown Green reported. Nicole rescued 13 trays and boxes of food that was delivered to the Market Street Mission.

“We take the food that’s left at the end of the night that would normally be thrown away and we donate it to local organizations,” Berezny said.

Read the complete story in Morristown Green.

Nicole Berezny of Table to Table at Taste of Morristown

Listen to the exciting journey of school food waste solution leader: Table To Table’s Executive Director Heather Thompson. In this episode, Heather shares about her 20 plus year journey in the not for profit world, which includes learning about food waste, and then pursuing solutions to school food waste through a program called I-Rescue Lunch.


I-Rescue Lunch encourages K-12 students to rescue, recycle and reduce food waste. Partnering with schools, wholesome, unopened food is donated to people in the community who are in need.

As New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue, our mission is to reduce food waste and provide nourishment to our food-insecure neighbors throughout North Jersey. We rescue millions of pounds of fresh food annually that would otherwise be wasted and deliver it to partner organizations who support the nearly 1 million people in our area who need it most.

Together, we can reduce food waste in our home and make a positive impact on the planet. Every little bit of effort—no matter how small–leads to change.  

It may come as a surprise, but reducing food waste does a lot more than just ensure more food for people who need it. Food waste and loss reduction is actually a powerful tool in the fight against climate change. It’s an issue that Table to Table has embraced as a core part of our mission, focusing on rescuing perfectly good food that would otherwise be discarded in landfills and redirecting it to people facing food insecurity. This approach not only helps address hunger but also mitigates environmental harm. The best part is that anyone, anywhere can make a difference by simply reducing the amount of food they waste. 

The entire lifecycle of food—from growing and packaging to distributing, storing, and ultimately throwing it away—accounts for up to one-third of global greenhouse gas emissions. Within this, food loss and waste alone contribute to a staggering 10% of those emissions. By tackling this issue, we have a chance to significantly reduce our environmental footprint. 

A particularly concerning aspect of food waste is the methane it produces when decomposing in landfills. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas that has a much stronger impact on global warming than carbon dioxide. However, methane breaks down relatively quickly in the atmosphere, usually within about 12 years – a much shorter time span than carbon dioxide. This means that reducing methane emissions can have a rapid and noticeable cooling effect on the planet, providing a short-term solution while we continue to work on longer-term climate strategies. 

The global community has recognized methane as an urgent priority, describing it as an “emergency brake” to slow the effects of climate change. By addressing methane emissions, we can quickly lower atmospheric greenhouse gases and reduce short-term warming. Since food degrading in landfills is responsible for an estimated 14% of U.S. methane emissions, reducing food waste is an essential, immediate step to create a more sustainable and resilient future for our planet. 

 ReFED, a U.S.-based nonprofit that works to advance solutions to food waste, released new data with support from the Global Methane Hub that reveals the methane hotspots for uneaten or “surplus” food in the U.S., and highlights solutions that can reduce waste and slash methane emissions.  Learn more here: ReFED Blog.  

Since starting our food rescue mission in 1999, Table to Table has prevented more than 544 metric tons of methane gas from being released into the atmosphere. You can be part of the solution right here in New Jersey!  To help reduce food waste in your community, you can claim a food rescue using our I-Rescue app or volunteer

Editor’s note: This blog was written by Valerie Jacklin, who oversees Research & Analytics for Table to Table.  

Table to Table's Valerie Jacklin

Trying to be more active? Stay creative? Make a difference? These local organizations will keep you honest and help you thrive.

If you resolved to make a difference.

Bergen has no shortage of volunteer opportunities for those who want to help their neighbors. Help combat food insecurity and hunger in our county by helping rescue fresh food at Table to Table; donate your time and help at a homeless shelter through Family Promise of Bergen County; help build homes for those in need with Habitat for Humanity of Bergen CountyBergen Volunteers will give you opportunities to take part in mentor programs and more.

Related:

AJ Capella has spent years as a silent creative, developing some of the top menus in New Jersey for over a decade. Now, at 35 years old, he’s making a name for himself.

AJ Capella lent his culinary expertise to make Table to Table’s 25th Anniversary Chefs Gala an unforgettable experience. He not only cooked tableside for guests, but was a co-chair. His efforts, and the efforts of more than 25 of New Jersey’s best chefs, helped raise enough funds to provide 4.5 million nutritious meals.

Table to Table, NJ’s first food rescue organization, collects fresh and perishable surplus food that would otherwise be wasted and delivers it to organizations that serve people experiencing hunger in Bergen, Hudson, Essex, and Passaic counties in Northern NJ. We bring rescued fresh, nutritious food to 200+ partner organizations including social service organizations, pantries, shelters, fresh produce markets and centralized distribution hubs. Food is provided free of charge. Through this, we touch a diversity of those in need, including families, children, veterans, and older adults, making good nutrition accessible while serving as a stimulus for other longer-term benefits. Table to Table raises all its own funds annually, and last year delivered enough food to provide over 23 million meals.  

Credit: CBS Mornings

Livingston High School junior Veer Agarwal has started the nonprofit ResQFood to help alleviate food waste throughout town.

With the assistance of the non-profit organization Table to Table, ResQFood allows restaurants and residents to donate excess food to those in need. During its inaugural year, ResQFood has partnered with nine Livingston restaurants to take their excess food and deliver it to various local food banks.

Creating ResQFood

After spending his summer volunteering to teach orphaned Indian children English via Zoom, Agarwal decided he wanted to help his local community.

“After that experience, I knew I wanted a meaningful way to serve the immediate community and to do so in a unique way,” he said. As he brainstormed, he kept returning to the issue of food waste, which historically affects more affluent neighborhoods.

He used the skills he gained in his AP computer science course, taught by LHS teacher Matthew Van Pelt, to create the interactive website and app, ResQFoods.com.

Agarwal shared that three of his classmates volunteered to help with ResQFood. LHS juniors Jack Liu, Parth Jain, and Armaan Mishra, are assisting with logistics, as well as food pick-ups and deliveries.

Current Collaborations

Since completing its first food pick-up in October, ResQFood has begun collaborating with different Livingston restaurants. Currently, Viva Guacamole, Blaze Pizza, Panera Bread, Bagel Nosh, Paris Baguette, Seymour’s Cafe, Sombrero Tacoria, and Bubbakoo’s Burritos all collabo- rate with ResQFood to alleviate food waste throughout town.

Table to Table

After Agarwal spent the summer building the ResQFood website and developing a standard operating procedure for food donations, he and his volunteers realized they could benefit from the assistance of a larger organization. Agarwal then partnered with the community based food rescue program Table to Table.

Heather Thompson, CEO of Table to Table, shared that many local restaurants were eager and willing to donate unused food but “wanted to make sure the donations were being coordinated through an established nonprofit.” The organization was able to help ResQFood register as a nonprofit, obtain a federal tax ID, and provide volunteers with certified volunteer hours.

After her first conversation with Agarwal, Thompson said she felt inspired.

“When younger people like Veer are paying attention to issues in their own communities, like food waste and food insecurity – and actually taking initiative to do something about it,” she said, “I feel like our future is going to be okay.”

Moving Forward

Agarwal explained that in the upcoming calendar year, he hopes ResQFood will be able to “corner the Livingston market” to significantly lessen the town’s food waste. He aims to increase the frequency of pickups from restaurants.

“Once we capture Livingston, we plan to expand to neighboring towns like Millburn and go from there,” he said.

He shared that he is especially invigorated by the enthusiasm of those younger than him.

“We’re passing the baton to the younger generation and we’re sure the cause of food rescue is in safe hands,” he said. “We’re invigorating high schoolers to engage with the community and to start doing so at an early age so they can continue to do so.”

Thompson discussed that while the collaboration is just beginning, there is room for near limitless growth.

“We want to ramp up our volunteer base and grow our food donors in Livingston and beyond,” she said.

“We also see ResQFood as a model for food rescue clubs in high schools throughout New Jersey.”

Thompson shared that one of her goals is for children and teenagers “to grow up aware of the challenges of food waste and food insecurity, but also feeling like they can create solutions, which is what Veer and his ResQFood volunteers are doing.”

Agarwal pointed out that volunteering for one to two hours each week can make a significant difference in donating food that may have otherwise gone in the trash.

“Especially now that many students are getting their driver’s licenses, they can use their newfound independence to do good,” he said.

ResQFood is not solely for high school students. Anyone can volunteer to help. For additional information, email info@tabletotable.com or visit resqfoods.com.

“One way people can help is, once they eat dinner somewhere, to ask the manager if there’s an opportunity to donate through ResQFoods,” Agarwal said. “We’re grateful for any and all food. If they have anything to give at the end of the day they might otherwise throw away, we’d happily take that.”

Credit: West Essex Tribune

Table to Table teamed with one of its community partners Bessie Green Community Inc. for the event.

Two nonprofit organizations came together on Friday to make sure every New Jersey resident has access to nutritious food.

Table to Table and one of its community partners, Bessie Green Community Inc., joined forces to take unused food from Newark Liberty International Airport and donate that food to people in need.

News 12 has highlights from the distribution event.

Credit: News 12 New Jersey