Hi,
Any leftovers I bring home are my Dad's breakfast.
In my other life, asking for a doggie bag in a Soviet era restaurant got wildly disbelieving reactions. My friends, who felt like digging a hole and hiding, kept reminding the staff, "It's something American's do," with rolling eyes.
My friend Helen worked in a Chinese restaurant. They always fit the food into the smallest boxes and threw away whatever didn't fit in. She almost always packs her own leftovers in restaurants.
I went to a Russian restaurant in the United States that had a soup-to-nuts-plus-vodka dinner for a set price. Service opens with zakuski which are many trays of smoked fish, composed salads, pickles, meats and some hot dishes like creamed mushrooms. More food than anyone can eat followed by a substantial main course and dessert. I asked for the excess food from our group to be doggie bagged. At evenings end, we had over 12 take-out boxes and a perturbed manager.
My cousin and her husband are Depression era children. If there are two green beans left after supper, then they are wrapped in plastic wrap for the next meal. A few years ago, I learned she went through a lot of plastic wrap. I gave her a Costco sized restaurant capacity plastic wrap, which I joked I would inherit someday. Three months later she phoned for another box because she had run out. I had the very same container for years and never finished it. She has since cut back on her plastic wrap consumption, now it is every 5-6 months she needs a new box.
We do have a mulch pile for kitchen waste. Near the kitchen sink are 2 quart plastic containers for the scraps. I don't mind doing it, though I think a member of my family goes a little overboard sometimes. We had a last minute visitor from goodness knows where Russia a few years ago at Thanksgiving. She helped herself to a banana, then threw the peel into the garbage. The over-enthusiastic one made a loud gasping noise, then swooped down to recover the banana peel and put it in the right container. I think this person could have at least waited for the visitor to leave the room.
Regards,