Anyone with Counter Mounted Compost Bins? - Updating a Discussion
13 years ago
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- 13 years agolast modified: 9 years ago
- 13 years agolast modified: 9 years ago
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counter mounted waste bin?
Comments (23)I may be the source of the "hotel tray" idea. Got a couple food service shallow containers and showed them to my cab maker. These long compost receivers were supposed to go into two drawers offset under each of two pull-out cutting boards so I could just drag my hand to push compost into the holding container. For now, I've settled for one at the major chopping station and let go of the idea of having one below the baking breadboard to accept excess flour, etc. Works great. Making salad? Pull out the drawer and scrape the celery heel and the mushroom trimmings and pepper seeds out of your way. You can close the compost tray drawer with an elbow if you need to. We had planned to have a narrow drawer that only contained the container, but life happens. We ended up with a wider drawer that has this tray-like stainless item on one side. If someone's really messy, I have to pull out all the items stored in there and wipe out the tomato splash or whatever. Directly below the drawer that has the temp compost container is the pull-out waste bin--takes bones and moldy cheese and other non-compostable refuse. Push in the drawer and bombs-away below with noncompostables. And then pull out the compost drawer again and dump in the onion skins and garlic ends and apple peelings and nasty cilantro parts and crummy lettuce leaves. I sit at a stool while chopping and this container prevents all that timewasting to stand up and hop around to clean off the chopping work space after waste begins to take over the board. I can just keep working. Stand up and dump the compost holder into the compost bucket only once, at the end of the episode....See MoreIn Counter Compost
Comments (26)We are drawing plans for our kitchen now, and the integrated compost bin is a Must Have. We have a big veg garden and we eat a ton of vegetables. We empty the compost pail at least twice a day. We compost vacuum dirt and lint... we use our compost pail more than any other waste container, but you don't hear people arguing against finding a sleek solution for the trash/recycling. We live in a warm clime and would like to go another step: installing compost access in the kitchen exterior wall, adjacent to our outdoor garden sink. The compost bucket will be emptied from outside, whenever someone is at the garden sink. Finding the sweet spot in the counter will be the big challenge, but dang if that hole isn't getting drilled :-) In fact, I'd like to use the drilled out stone as a cover, if we can. Tip: I catch water that would otherwise go down the drain, into the compost pail, so that it's a pretty sloshy mix. It empties nicely into the compost pile, which is simply a moveable frame that we reposition around the garden when it fills. Water that would have gone down the drain makes it into the garden. Every little bit helps, around here....See MoreSoapstone counters - which faucet & sink?
Comments (5)You could also consider white fireclay apron front which is classic with soapstone counters. The apron front style is very ergonomic too. If you don't want a fireclay apron front, several soapstone people on this forum installed Blanco Silgranit sinks in the anthracite color, which is a black/charcoal which looks unbelievably awesome with soapstone. Although I do not have soapstone counters, I've just installed our Silgranit anthracite sink, and I am in love with it. Not just the appearance, but its ease of use, no scratching, no chippping, easy cleanability, no water spots, heat resistant to 536 degrees temperature, isn't noisy when dishes and pots land in it (teenagers). We've just come from a stainless steel sink, with its scratches and water spots, and I will never go back to stainless. Sorry to all you stainless sink fans--just MHO! The Blanco silgranit sinks come in other colors besides anthracite, like white, beige, brown and gray. But I like the anthracite color best. As to faucet, there are so many choices! You can stay traditional with a "bridge-type" faucet. If you are still under construction, you can go really traditional with a wall-mount faucet (search this forum for the threads). And there is no reason not to go super modern faucet either. I myself like the ease of a single-handle faucet. I recommend a faucet with spray in the faucet rather than a side spray--they work better, and it is one less hole in your soapstone. There was a long thread recently which I will link where people posted pics of their faucets, and you could look through there to see if something catches your eye. Here is a link that might be useful: Kitchens Forum Thread with 100+ posts of faucets...See MoreLeaving my compost bin for vacation
Comments (35)The difficulty with getting a small container of food scraps to "cold compost" is not lack of bacteria - those will be there regardless - but lack of sufficient oxygen in the system to support aerobic bacterial growth, which would otherwise drive a "cold composting" process. As the food scraps decompose they continually release water. Even if you provide air holes and drainage holes and such in the container, a soggy mass of organic waste is not permeable to oxygen. Anaerobic bacteria do break down organic matter, but they are much, much slower to work than aerobic bacteria, and in the process they create noxious smelling gases - not something most people want to live with. In a worm bin, of course, those byproducts of anaerobic decomposition also kill or drive out the worms. The reason a worm bin can work without becoming anaerobic is that you fill it with "bedding" materials which break down more slowly than the food scraps, absorb and distribute the excess water, and create a matrix that is permeable to oxygen, and you manage the bin to keep it in that 60% percent water saturation range. Worms are only the most visible inhabitants of the worm bin which also contains bacteria, protozoa, fungi, mites, and various other critters from time to time. (Mine has a slime mold which is named Fred.) It's not necessary for the material to ever be "in contact with the earth" for this population to appear; all those things find their way in as you add food scraps and possibly garden waste and other odds and ends. If you assembled a similar system to this but didn't put in worms, other life forms would still be there - although the worms do a lot to influence the composition of the ecosystem, much more than just mechanically grinding the food. They have specific bacteria in their guts and others that live in their slime, and worm slime and worm poop shift the general bacterial population in specific ways - for instance, worm slime can disrupt bacterially generated biofilms, such that certain types of bacterial colonies will have a harder time establishing. You will all be fascinated to know that maggot slime does something similar. Yum, yum. Anyhow, if you built a small bin like a worm bin, with the components of a worm bin system, but for some reason didn't want to use worms, you'd still get things decomposing - though it would certainly be slower and less efficient than the same thing with worms in it. You'd probably need to do more work to shred or break up the food scraps and manually mix around the contents of the bin, to prevent anaerobic clumps from forming - with a worm bin you don't have to "turn" the contents since the worms are doing that already. Some people do shred or blend scraps for the worm bin just to make everything go along faster, but it's not necessary - I don't....See MoreRelated Professionals
Arcadia Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Haslett Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Henderson Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Leicester Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · St. Louis Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Reedley Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Citrus Park Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Glade Hill Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Linton Hall Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Overland Park Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Fairmont Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Brea Cabinets & Cabinetry · Davidson Tile and Stone Contractors · Scottdale Tile and Stone Contractors · Castaic Design-Build Firms- 13 years agolast modified: 9 years ago
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