Turning old bread into flour and then into tasty tortillas

Source: Radio New Zealand

What started with a “stir crazy” chef armed with a Nutribullet during lockdown, is now an award-winning company looking to tackle a major element of the country’s food waste problem.

Rescued Kitchen is aiming to cut down on one food most commonly ending up in the bin – bread – which it is turning back into the very flour it was made from.

This week it was revealed Kiwis are wasting over one million tonnes of food each year.

While the business is currently only able to make a small dent in this number, a major upscaling operation means they are hoping to eventually take a mighty slice out of the country’s food waste.

Royce Bold, the inventor of Rescued Bread Flour, admits taking bread back to the main ingredient it started as is not an easy idea to get your head around.

He said while it may be scientific, it is not rocket science.

“Bread is pretty much 70% wheat, 30% water, a little bit of yeast salt and sugar, that’s good old-fashioned bread.”

“We dehydrate the bread, and once it’s got the right water activity it’s then ground into a fine power, it’s then sieved and that’s when it becomes bread flour.”

From there, the flour goes into cakes, biscuits, baking mixes and more, acting as a more sustainable substitute to a regular flour.

With the flour and the various treats it is made from now being supplied to hotels, catering companies and other businesses, it is fair to say things have come a long way since Bold first came up with the idea.

“Basically, I made the first batch of bread flour during lockdown in my oven and a Nutribullet and it was one of those ‘what the’ moments.”

The bread is donated by supermarkets two days before its sell-by date.

While it doesn’t act exactly like the flour people are used to, Bold said it has it’s own unique selling points.

“The first thing I made out of it was a sweet pastry and it rolled really well which I was quite amazed with, and then when I cooked it, it had a really unique oatiness to it and a really short crumble to it and it was kind of a taste sensation, and then from there I was like this has got limitless applications.”

Five years later, Bold isn’t the only one enjoying the recycled flour.

When Arturo Luna from Remarkable Tortillas was approached by Bold with the idea to try out a batch of tortillas using the bread flour, he didn’t hesitate to jump on board.

It hasn’t all been smooth sailing, Luna said he has lost track of the number of tweaks that have been made since the first trial.

“It wasn’t a straight path, we were doing a good job at the beginning and said yeah it’s working, but one thing is you finish a product and it looks nice, then you also have the shelf life of the tortilla is important, and the texture and the flavour and the actual product itself not moulding, there’s so many variants.”

But after all that trial and error, the tortillas have exceeded all expectations, with the company planning to soon produce their smallest tortilla size using only recycled flour.

“From the feedback we have been getting, the flavour is better than a usual flour tortilla, and it has a more rich flavour, it has a little bit of bread flavour in there which makes it nicer than just a flour tortilla, it’s nice and soft, and it’s sustainable.”

Bold said it is collaborations like these that have allowed them to continue to scale up.

Now they’re not just saving bread.

Twice a week a huge shipment of tomatoes arrives.

Too red, too orange, or too green, too small, too wonky or just not quite right. To the naked eye they look delicious, but they are not good enough to make into onto the supermarket shelves.

While they used to be binned, the Rescued Kitchen transforms them into chutneys, relishes, and the sauce that ends up in school lunches around the country.

But Bold said it is still just the beginning.

“So far we’ve rescued about 200 tonnes of bread, which is quite substantial, but unfortunately it’s just the tip of the iceberg.”

The current process to make the bread flour can take up to a week to make 400kg of the flour, and the time makes the product expensive.

Now the team are partway through upscaling to different system that can process one tonne of bread a day.

“We’ve done a bit of difference, but the only way that we can truly make a difference in the food waste problem that’s facing our planet, not just NZ but our whole planet is by scale.”

The team at Rescued Kitchen hopes to have an upscaled production system up and running by early next year.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Finance Minister urges banks to slash home loan rates after latest OCR cut

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finance minister Nicola Willis said banks should pass on as much as possible. (File photo) Nick Monro

Finance Minister Nicola Willis has urged banks to slash their home loan rates by passing on “as much as possible” of the latest cut to the official cash rate (OCR).

Banks began dropping floating rates on Wednesday after the Reserve Bank cut the OCR by 25 basis points, as expected, to 2.25 percent, the lowest since June 2022.

Speaking in Auckland on Thursday, Willis said the Reserve Bank would monitor how banks responded to the OCR cut, but she hoped it would flow through to mortgage-holders.

“My message to the New Zealand banks is a very clear one: pass on as much as possible,” she said.

“When you do, that makes a significant difference to our economy. And actually, as some of New Zealand’s biggest businesses, you have a stake in this economy. So pass those rates on.”

In its forecasts released on Wednesday, the central bank said the risks for inflation were “balanced”.

Willis told reporters she expected the economy to pick up and inflation to come down even more next year, meaning a real difference to the cost-of-living.

“Conditions are going to get easier for a lot of New Zealand workers and families,” she said.

“All of the data and indicators I’m seeing tell me that next year will be a lot better.”

Willis accepted people were under “no obligation” to believe her analysis until they started feeling the improvement for themselves.

“New Zealanders have been very resilient,” she said. “Your efforts are not in vain… we have better times ahead of us.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Judge Ema Aitken has bid for legal clarity rejected before conduct hearing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Judge Ema Aitken allegedly shouted NZ First leader Winston Peters was lying. RNZ Insight/Dan Cook

A judge accused of disrupting a New Zealand First event has had her bid for legal clarity rejected.

District Court Judge Ema Aitken was accused of disrupting a function at the exclusive Northern Club in Auckland last November, allegedly shouting leader Winston Peters was lying.

She argued she didn’t shout, she didn’t recognise Mr Peters’ voice when she responded to remarks she overheard and she didn’t know it was a political event.

A judicial conduct panel – made up of retired Court of Appeal Judge Brendan Brown KC (chair), sitting Court of Appeal Judge Justice Jillian Mallon and former Governor-General Sir Jerry Mateparae – will review Judge Aitken’s conduct at a hearing next year.

This week, at a preliminary hearing in Wellington, Judge Aitken’s lawyer, David Jones KC, sought to clarify the legal test for judicial misconduct justifying removal from the bench.

“You have to have something to aim at, you have to have something to establish,” he said. “Here we have the difference – for example – between misconduct and misbehaviour, and we have to know how egregious that has to be, in order for the contemplation of removal to be considered.”

Special counsel Jonathan Orpin-Dowell, one of two lawyers presenting allegations of misconduct to the panel, replied that parliament didn’t intend to set a threshold for misbehaviour.

In a decision released this week, panel chair Brown KC said he wouldn’t decide on a legal test before the hearing, when each case depended on its own facts.

“In the circumstances where we have not read any briefs of evidence, we are currently operating in a factual vacuum,” he said. “In any event, we cannot make findings of facts, until we have heard the evidence [including cross-examination] at the hearing.”

There wasn’t any prejudice against Judge Aitken by not ruling on a legal test, as she has the statement of allegations made against her, Brown KC said.

Judge Aitken’s lawyers sought clarity over the word “heckled” in the allegations made against her, saying the Oxford Dictionary‘s meaning of “interrupting a public speaker with derisive or aggressive comments” wasn’t appropriate for the circumstances.

The request was declined by the panel, who agreed with the opposing lawyers that the word would be considered in the hearing.

Jones KC also sought to clarify the level of knowledge or intention which would need to be established at the hearing.

The Special Counsel said the allegations against the Judge were that she “either knew, or in the alternative, ought to have known she was commenting on politically contentious matters” when she spoke at the event.

Jones KC argued the hearing would need to establish Judge Aitken knew of the political context when she spoke at the event – not what she, as a judge, ought to have known.

He questioned whether the lawyers were making an allegation of dishonesty against the judge in their case against her, but the special counsel submissions were that there was no specific allegation of dishonesty against the judge.

The panel said the question of what the judge knew would be considered in the hearing and it wouldn’t make a ruling on it in advance.

The judicial conduct panel will consider Judge Aitken’s behaviour at a hearing in February.

It will determine facts and write a report to the g-eneral, including whether the removal of the judge is justified.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

New Zealand King Salmon falls to loss

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ King Salmon/Supplied

New Zealand King Salmon has fallen to a loss in the eight months to September thanks to an abbreviated reporting period after changing its financial year, and lower salmon weights reducing harvest volumes.

Key numbers for the 8 months ended September compared with 12 months to January 2025:

  • Net loss $6.3m vs net profit $13.4m
  • Revenue $117.7m vs $210.9m
  • Operating profit $7.1m vs $29.7m
  • Sales volumes 3,260 MT vs 6,582 MT
  • No dividend
  • NB: King Salmon has changed its reporting year from January to September

The company reported a net loss of $6.3 million for the 8 months ended 30th September 2025 compared to a net profit of $13.4 million for the 12 months ended 31st January 2025.

New Zealand King Salmon chairperson Mark Dewdney said the results were the first under its revised balance date, reflecting the shortened reporting period.

The company has been grappling with low fish weights in recent years, which reduced available harvest volumes.

“Despite facing some challenges with fish performance over the 24/25 summer, we have made significant strides by strategically investing in our future growth,” Dewdney said.

Chief executive Carl Carrington said the company had “several initiatives underway to strengthen our core business and improve fish health and performance, some of which are already yielding meaningful results”.

Among the initiatives was a deliberate decision to reduce harvest volumes to rebuild stocks, and trialling new diets to increase salmon weights.

The company projected 2026 operating profit to be between $9m and $15m, with a harvest volume between 5500 and 5900 metric tonnes.

Capital expenditure was forecast between $28m and $36m.

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Unions call for Luxon to step in and resolve collective bargaining impasses

Source: Radio New Zealand

A letter has been sent to the Prime Minister. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Unions want the Prime Minister to step in and resolve their collective bargaining impasses, frustrated that progress is not being made.

The joint letter to Christopher Luxon was signed by the Association of Salaried Medical Specialists, New Zealand Nurses Organisation, New Zealand Professional Firefighters Union, Post Primary Teachers’ Association, NZEI Te Riu Roa, and the Public Service Association.

“The recent strike action, rallies and marches is evidence of that frustration on the part of union members. At those rallies and marches there was a clear call for the government to listen to those workforces and to urgently make progress on the matters relating to those workforces and the bargaining,” the letter said.

“We believe that it is appropriate in these circumstances for the Prime Minister to step in and meet with the unions’ leaders to explore possible ways forward and settlement options. While there are different issues in each sector we see there is sufficient commonality across the bargaining to make that an appropriate step.”

The unions believed the prime minister’s intervention would mean the impasses could be moved on, and bargaining could be concluded satisfactorily for all parties.

The prime minister’s office confirmed to RNZ the letter had been received, and said the sender would be responded to directly.

More than 100,000 people walked off the job last month, despite rallies in some parts of the country not going ahead due to weather.

Last month, Luxon heavily criticised the organisers of the strike, saying it was “politically motivated” and he felt no need to meet with them.

“The negotiations, the terms and conditions, are done between the Public Service Commissioner doing the centralised bargaining and also the CEO of Health New Zealand, who are the employers, with the respective unions,” he said at the time.

The strike was held on the same day as former Prime Minister Jim Bolger’s funeral, which Luxon attended instead.

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Businesses outraged at local board vote against having more events at Auckland’s Eden Park

Source: Radio New Zealand

Metallica play at Auckland's Eden Park, November, 2025.

Metallica playing at Auckland’s Eden Park last week. (File photo) Tom Grut

A local community board has voted against having more concerts at Auckland’s Eden Park, angering a local business association.

The government wants to boost the number of gigs allowed at the venue to 12 large and 20 medium concerts a year. At the moment it was limited to six artists playing a total of 12 gigs a year.

RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop wrote to Auckland Council with an eye on loosening restrictions on Eden Park’s operations which he said were costing hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue.

The government was now seeking feedback from the public and council on the findings.

The Albert-Eden local board has voted no to supporting that plan, which infuriated the Dominion Rd Business Association.

The association’s manager Gary Holmes told Checkpoint the decision was “economic vandalism” in his eyes.

“We’ve got business on Dominion Rd fighting to survive a rescission and here we’ve got a local board turning away $250,000 of economic stimulus for our area alone per event and they’re ignoring their own voters.

“We know over 70 percent of locals support more concerts. It’s not just out of touch with businesses but out of touch with reality.”

Holmes said the association had market view data that had shown the impact of spending over time.

“For example, when Coldplay played last year our dining revenue jumped by 25 percent.

“Because we’re competing with Sydney and Melbourne it’s crazy to turn away that kind of money due to restrictions on Eden Park.”

Holmes said the local board needed to listen to residents who wanted a “vibrant city”.

“We want to be a destination.”

Eden Park’s CEO Nick Sautner told Morning Report on Thursday morning, the national stadium was being “hampered by a bureaucracy of restrictions”.

“If I was the CEO of a toll road or a shopping centre and had 90 percent idle capacity people would be asking questions. My idle capacity is a result of our constraints and so, Chris Bishop’s initiative to implement these changes enables business to do business.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Health Minister Simeon Brown demands revamped decision-making from Health NZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

Simeon Brown expects Health NZ to revise policy by 31 December. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The health minister has told Health New Zealand he wants more of a focus on decision-making closer to the frontline and expects a plan by the end of the year.

Simeon Brown’s letter of expectations to chair Lester Levy sets out the government’s priorities for 2026/27 and his feedback on the 2025/26 year so far.

“It is clear to me that Health NZ is too centralised,” Brown wrote. “Too many decisions are made by people who are removed from the problems that frontline clinicians are trying to solve.

“This is causing significant frustration for local districts and stifling innovation, which could lead to efficiencies, which deliver more care for patients within the budgets, which have been set.”

Brown said he expected Health New Zealand to develop policy by 31 December, showing how it planned to devolve decision-making to regions and districts.

The government re-established the Health New Zealand governance board in July, with Levy moving from his commissioner role to chair.

On Thursday, it was revealed hospitals in Wellington were waiting up to six months for Health New Zealand approval to begin recruitment for frontline roles.

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Series of scrub fires break out in Otago and Southland

Source: Radio New Zealand

A scrub fire in Palmerston. Supplied / Martin Neame

Fire crews and helicopters are battling a series of scrub fires in Otago and Southland fanned by strong winds.

In Southland, nine trucks and two helicopters were tackling a forestry block fire near Mataura that broke out about 2.10pm.

The fire has closed State Highway 96 between State Highway 1 and Waimumu. It is expected to remain closed overnight.

In Palmerston, six trucks and three helicopters were dealing with a fire in pine trees near Goodwood.

Four crews were also called to a paddock fire in Papakaio in the Waitaki district sparked by a trampoline blowing into powerlines.

Two crews were working on a smouldering tree near Whitstone.

The wind blew three branches onto two cars in Oamaru but Fire and Emergency (FENZ) said a dog in one of the cars was not hurt.

A paddock fire that broke out on Johnston Road on the outskirts of Balclutha about 1pm has been contained.

FENZ said 30 firefighters on the ground and two helicopters with monsoon buckets were now working to put it out.

People are advised to avoid the area and said anyone affected by smoke should close their windows and doors and stay inside if possible.

Fire and Emergency had warned people to avoid lighting fires outdoors in Otago on Thursday and Friday because of warm, windy conditions.

Paid firefighters were due to strike around the country on Friday by walking off the job from 12pm to 1pm.

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How to cool your house down without turning on the heat pump

Source: Radio New Zealand

Feeling the heat? Keeping the air conditioning on full blast might feel tempting, but your bank account won’t thank you for it.

Luckily, ventilation experts Stephen McNeil and Dr Manfred Plagmann have a few tips on how to cool your house naturally – without the sky-high energy bill.

“The fundamental issue is really solar gain, it’s the sun coming in through your windows that’s the main reason your building’s getting too hot,” explains McNeil, a senior building scientist at the Building Research Association of New Zealand (BRANZ).

BRANZ ventilation experts Stephen McNeil and Dr Manfred Plagmann have a few tips on how to cool your house down this summer.

Supplied / Becky Collins

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Seats vanish from bus stops across Auckland, AT yet to file police report

Source: Radio New Zealand

Benches have been disappearing from bus shelters across Auckland. Supplied/ Jon Turner

Benches are being stolen from bus shelters across Auckland but the city’s transport agency has yet to file an official report to police despite knowing about the issue for three weeks.

Auckland Transport told RNZ it was aware of benches being removed from about 65 of the city’s 3000 bus stops.

“It’s possible these benches are being sold as scrap metal. We are in the process of sourcing benches constructed from different materials making them difficult to graffiti and a less desirable scrap product,” said its manager of public transport real time and response, Rebecca Temple.

Temple said it’s unfortunate that anti-theft bolting on the seats wasn’t able to stop them being removed.

AT said in a statement that it “notified” police about three weeks ago, when it first became aware of the seats going missing.

But it said it’s yet to file a formal report.

“We have not filed a formal police report because we are still gathering information on the sites where seats have gone missing to include in a report to police,” it said.

“We have been gathering information on all 3000 bus shelters to try and understand the full extent of the issue across the network. This is due to be filed in the next day or so,” said AT.

“We work with the police daily and so lodging this complaint is just the formality not the reality. We sit together in our operations centre,” it added.

Meanwhile, a police spokesperson said they were not “immediately aware” of bus stop benches being stolen.

One of the shelters where there is nowhere to sit. Supplied/Jon Turner

‘Are they just waiting for more to be stolen?’

Puketāpapa Local Board member Jon Turner said he first noticed the missing benches when going for a run down Mount Eden Road, and spotted eight missing.

Since he posted to social media, he’s received reports of others missing in Sandringham, Avondale and around Greenwoods Corner on Manukau Road.

Turner said AT should be taking action now, rather than waiting longer to make a police report.

“How long are they going to keep waiting to make a report, when the things have already been stolen?

“Are they just waiting for more to be stolen to add to the list?,” he said.

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