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Here's the new Lomi Kitchen Composter |
Finally another blog on composting, but instead of my green bin I'm featuring a new, high-tech kitchen composter. An impressive Canadian company called Pela, known for their bio-degradable phone cases, has recently introduced a countertop machine that actually "minimizes food waste at the press of a button." Pela's goal is to create a waste-free future, so for a start they've created this futuristic, high-tech version of a green bin with many fewer steps. You simply fill it with food scraps, press the button and in a few hours you've turned your leftovers into nutrient-rich dirt. If you don't have your own compost pile and garden, or you live in a place that doesn't have a city-wide recycling program, this sounds like a great solution (all you need is $499.)
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Here's my green bin 10 years ago . It still stands in the same place on my kitchen counter |
Though Lomi's kitchen composter is awesome, I'm not planning on retiring my green bin any time soon. I praised it ten years ago when I started this blog and I'm still as enamored as ever. In the first "Me and My Green Bin" post on May 7th 2012, I described "MONDAY MORNING"--- the time when Berkeley recycle trucks pick up green waste in our neighborhood.
Exactly10 years later I still collect veggie and meat scraps in my green bin...
...then dump them into the large curbside receptacle provided by the city, which gets COLLECTED early Monday morning. The previous link describes what happens to the contents of the bins after they are collected.
There are also other solutions: Every week or so my sister takes her food scraps from the freezer in her apartment in Manhattan to her home in CT where she composts it for her garden. Strangely enough, New York City does not have city wide curbside pickups. Instead they have bins near some community gardens and green markets where locals can take their compostable items. I took the photo below in 2015 when I visited the 92nd street greenmarket near my sister's apartment.
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92nd Street Greenmarket vegetation collection |
More recently, the city has instituted voluntary green waste collection in selected neighborhoods and the NYC Dept. of Sanitation has issued brown bins like the one below. Despite these minor improvements, my sister Lucia continues to schlep her kitchen scraps to the country for her garden compost pile.
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New York CIty's handsome brown bins |
With Lomi, the transformation from food waste to compost happens in your kitchen; and it happens lickety split. Pela has a great Website with all the details and their weekly newsletter contains fascinating information about their zero waste philosophy. Lomi News is so useful that I've started saving the emails in a file on my desktop for future reference. Why delete info on topics like the garbage problem or 15 steps to a zero-waste kitchen or can you cook with compost?
I admit I'm impressed with Lomi, but not enough to abandon my green bin and all the low-tech steps that involves. Never fear, "Me and My Green Bin" will continue!
Green Bin Forever! Yay!
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