Your kitchen in zero waste mode: tips, recipes and tutorials

A wealth of ideas to gradually convert your kitchen to zero waste mode

No matter what's the reason for your decisionto adopt a sober, coherent and "zero waste" lifestyle, you’re at the right place ! Let’s continue our fight against waste by tackling the most important room in the house : the kitchen. This room is the source of many different types of waste that can easily be avoided.

It’s time to stock up on ideas to gradually convert your kitchen to zero waste mode. 

Zero waste kitchen

CONTENTS

  1. Make washable and reusable products your first choice 

  2. Buy quality and durable utensils

  3. Plan in order to avoid waste

  4. Buy loose and cook simple meals

1. Make washable and reusable products your first choice 

A lot of waste in your kitchen can easily be avoided by replacing it with sustainable and reusable items. 

Reusable bulk bags
  • Store your loose food in Tupperware's or even better in  glass jars that you save. Le Parfait jars have been around since the dawn of time and after being shunned for a few decades, they are back in fashion.

Reusable bulk bags
Repurposed jars for loose shopping
Washable and reusable "zero waste" utensils

This list is not exhaustive but it gives you an idea of the many alternatives that will empty your bins.  Be creative, you will also save money. 

2. Buy quality and durable utensils

In your kitchen as well as throughout your house, choose wooden, stainless steel or glass utensils.  Say goodbye to plastic!  These noble materials do not give any taste to your food and will not end their life buried in the ground or in the oceans as micro-plastics but will be recycled at the very end of their long life...

Zero waste kitchen

Choose a  water bottle and take it with you on your trips.  The plastic water bottle is no longer popular! Get a glass bottle  and reuse it many times.

Kitchen utensils for stirring, mixing, beating and licking should be made of  stainless steel lunch boxes and wood rather than plastic, and one of each is sufficient.

Extend the lifespan of your  chopping board by choosing a wooden one to last a lifetime and avoid plastic cuts in your food.

3. Plan in order to avoid waste

Take the time to write out a menu each week that you can keep and rewrite on. Making a shopping list accordingly will greatly reduce waste, ensure you don't forget anything and save you money.
Be creative to use as many ingredients as possible to throw away as little as possible.  Use up your leftovers and reuse them in a new recipe.

  • The tops (of radishes, carrots or turnips) can be used in a soup

  • Dry bread can be turned into a good French toast

  • Vegetable peelings can be turned into vegetable chips

  • Potato cooking water can be used as a weed killer

  • Make smoothies with old fruit...

If you improvise a restaurant, postpone the menu from one day to the next.

If you have any organic waste left over, you can compost it.  Don't have a garden? Have you thought about the  bokashi (kitchen composter) to make your organic bin smaller ?  

4. Buy loose and cook simple meals

A lot of waste is produced when you buy your food, go for  zero waste shopping by favouring local and seasonal products. Transform your kitchen with shelves full of handy jars that are always at your disposal. 

Zero waste kitchen

Cook simple things, enjoy the taste of steamed or oven-baked vegetables. Cupboards full of spices, oils and vinegars that you only use once don't make sense.

On the internet, there is no lack of ideas for zero-waste recipes : Moroccan lentils, zero waste pasta, lacto-fermentation, pasta with pesto sauce etc

Avoid expensive, over-seasoned ready meals of which ingredients are anything but healthy. 

Cooking becomes an enjoyable activity when you share it with others or when you share what you have cooked.

In conclusion...

Remember to take it one step at a time, it doesn’t need to be done all at once!
Every step counts and don't forget to share your experiences with others.

Our selection for you

How to de-clutter your kitchen and make it minimalist?
9 questions to ask yourself to turn your normal kitchen into a zero waste kitchen