Food waste in the commercial food service industry is a massive issue, estimated at roughly $100 billion annually. At Macrina, we make every effort to reduce waste. Four years ago, Macrina, PCC, and FareStart began talking about a way to collaborate to reduce food waste and create a great new product. It’s now in high demand, and customer feedback is excellent.
“FareStart’s Mighty Croutons are a great way to upcycle, turning perfectly fine unsold food into a really tasty product,” says Leslie Mackie, Macrina’s founder. “And by providing a paid training ground, it benefits Farestart’s mission to help people address the root causes of poverty and food insecurity.”

Photos by Meryl Schenker [From PCC’s Sound Consumer]
Farestart’s Mighty Croutons, A Recipe for Change
By Rebecca Denn
Behind every savory, crunchy FareStart crouton is a partnership between three essential Northwest companies.
FareStart’s “Mighty Croutons” — originally available in PCC’s salad bars, now packaged for home use and sold at all PCC stores — are made with unsold loaves of Macrina bakery bread, transformed into croutons in FareStart’s Interbay kitchen. FareStart, a James Beard Award-winning nonprofit, is devoted to food security and to culinary job training for people dealing with poverty, homelessness and other employment barriers.
After years of development and a pandemic interruption, the croutons became a delicious, paprika-and-marjoram-scented solution to several issues. The key challenge: “There’s so much food waste out there but also so much hunger,” said Corissa Helm, a FareStart marketing manager.
Developing a Crouton
Croutons are simple to make at one level: Cube crusty day-old bread, toss it in oil and spices, and bake until crunchy. Home bakers typically make croutons to avoid wasting leftover loaves.
Leftover takes on a different scale at grocery stores, which try to generously stock bread and avoid disappointing shoppers with empty shelves — without wasting either money or food. Stocking bread is an imprecise day-to-day science that sometimes means extra loaves at the end of the day, especially with items like artisan breads that have a short shelf life.
The crouton idea was first baked up when Leslie Mackie, who founded Macrina in 1993 and saw it rise to countless national best-of bakery lists, met Rachel Tefft, PCC’s manager of community food systems. They connected in 2019 at a Seattle Public Utilities meeting devoted to reducing food waste.
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