Various fresh fruit and vegetables - including cabbage, leeks, berries, apples and herbs - laid out on a light-coloured marble surface.

Interview with Prof. Dr Guido Ritter: The science of freshness

The key points

Prof. Dr. Guido Ritter sits in a bright laboratory room with white cabinet fronts; medium close-up in a relaxed conversation situation.

Prof. Dr Guido Ritter, Professor at Münster University of Applied Sciences, Department of Oecotrophology. Teaching area: Food law, food sensory analysis and product development

"What typical mistakes can we avoid when buying and storing our food so that we can enjoy it for as long as possible?"

Facts about food waste

1,052,000 tonnes

132 kilograms

60%

"What was the most surprising result for you in your storage tests?"

"What impact does the humidity level have on food?"

Open BioFresh drawer in a fridge showing cauliflower, fennel and asparagus stored at 0°C for optimal freshness.

BioFresh-Safe: Temperatures just above 0 °C and the perfect humidity

"And the influence of temperature?"

"What happens to vitamins and nutrients over the storage time?"

"Can you explain this process to us using an apple as an example?"

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