EcoHuddle Community

How to green your kitchen

The kitchen is one room in a house where people spend a majority of their time. Why? People love to eat.

Small changes to be more green and clean:

  1. Use your dishwasher
    You may think that using a dishwasher will waste a lot of water, but if you wait to run it when it's completely full you'll actually save more water. Think about it: when you hand-wash your dishes you have a continuous stream of water going. That can add up, especially if you do it every time you have dishes. But if you run your dishwasher once every few days, and turn off the heat-drying option to save energy, you will reduce your overall water use.

  2. Don't throw grease and oil down the drain
    Not only will this clog your drains, it makes things difficult for sewage treatment facilities to do what they do. Or if you're creative enough, you can make fuel from your used grease like the students from UCF or donate it to a grease recycling program like that of SFGreasecycle.

  3. Recycle
    From cans of beans and ketchup containers to milk jugs and glass jars, there are literally hundreds of things you can recycle in the kitchen.You can either use a separate recycling bin for these products, or place them in individual bags so you can carry them easily to the curbside or to the nearest recycling center. Don't forget that you can recycle old steel appliances as well.

  4. Compost your food scraps
    You can compost many things besides throwing them away in the trash. You can make your own compost pile at home, or purchase a composter. And if you're an avid (organic) coffee drinker, check out the wiki on Recycling Your Used Coffee Grinds.

  5. Switch to CFLs (or LEDs)
    Above your stove, over your sink and in your overhead lighting, switch to using compact fluorescent bulbs instead of regular light bulbs. CFLs last up to 10 times longer than regular bulbs, which mean they leave a smaller carbon footprint. LEDs (or light emitting diodes) are another great option (but beware, they do have a bigger up-front cost ... although in some cases, it's definitely worth it).

  6. Use proper cookware
    Use glass and ceramic baking dishes because they require less heat than other types of dishes. Also, use non-stick pans without Teflon because Teflon is made from chemicals that are harmful to humans, and use metal utensils instead of plastic ones so they can be recycled. For more cooking tips, check out the Eco-Cooking Wiki.

  7. After cooking you always need to clean up. What you spray on your counters and in your oven could leave harmful residue that could be absorbed by your food. Always use non-toxic organic sprays, soap, dishwasher detergent and more when cleaning your kitchen.

  8. Reuse your water
    Most people drain the excess water from boiling vegetables and spaghetti noodles right into the sink. Instead, keep the water in a container, let it cool down and then use it to water your indoor and outdoor plants. And if you're really up on your greywater recycling, check out the Envirosink which helps you trap the water from veggie washing, etc. and pump it to water your garden. (Or for an easy water conservation step, look into a low flow faucet aerator to keep your tap from running you dry.)

  9. Purchase biodegradable trash bags
    Many of the plastic garbage bags that people use in their kitchen for trash take years to decompose in landfills. So if you buy biodegradable kitchen garbage bags like the ones offered from Biobag, they will compost easily in the landfill. Or if you're lucky and have municipal composting, it makes it super easy!

    If you can't find biodegradable bags, at least purchase recycled bags like those from Seventh Generation.
You are what you eat:
  1. Grow your own food
    Instead of buying expensive groceries that are processed and wrapped in excess packaging, how about growing your own food? If you have a yard, plant a few of your favorite fruits, vegetables and herbs. It's a great option for fresh (and very local) edibles.

    If you live in an apartment or townhouse in the city and don't have a yard, start an indoor garden. Here's a great article from Apartment Living that shows you how to do this.

  2. Eat local and organic food when you can
    It might not always be possible or practical, but when you can, support your local farmers, eat in season, and choose organic products. Your environment and your body will thank you.
Green kitchen makeover:
  1. Increase your kitchen's efficiency with energy-efficient appliances
    If you're like the average American, you most likely have a few appliances in your kitchen. If you're looking to give your kitchen a facelift, choose Energy Star appliances. These will reduce your electricity consumption and keep your utility bills a bit lower.

  2. Build your kitchen with green materials
    Bamboo kitchen - by Oriental BambooBamboo furniture boards are an ideal green material for manufacturing your kitchen cupboards and counter tops. Not only is Bamboo sustainable (it takes 5-6 years to mature to harvest quality), it is also a highly renewable resource. Once harvested, bamboo does not need to be replanted as a new shoot simply takes it's place.

    Bamboo is harder than Red Oak and Maple, has a higher tensile strength than cold-pressed steel, and is the most moisture-resistant of all hardwoods; ideal for you kitchen surfaces. 

Huddler's tight-knit community of eco-minded consumers share their knowledge about sustainable products and services ranging from electric cars to organic toothpaste. This post was originally published at http://greenhome.huddler.com/wiki/how-to-green-your-kitchen. Click here to participate.
Email IM Bookmark del.icio.us Digg

You do not appear to have Yahoo! Messenger installed. Click here to download and install it.

Email this article

There is a problem with one or more email addresses entered

Enter email addresses, separated by commas.

There is a problem with the email address entered

Email addresses will only be used to email this information on your behalf and will not be used for any marketing purposes.

Alerts

Get an alert for updates:
  • from this author
  • on Food and Drink
  • on How-To
  • on Home and Garden
  • on Cleaning
  • on Recycling
  • on Composting
  • on Lights
  • on House
  • on Saving water at home

View All Green Alerts »

comments from our community

Showing 1 - 5 of 5 comments

Post Comment
  • Posted by carcree33 Wed Nov 12, 2008 4:21am PST
    All you need for household cleaning-washing is salt, sodium, vinegar, laundry soap. Massive chemical industry for household is total waste. Brainwashed customers are buying toxic fresheners, cleaners etc. Few meters around them everything must be perfectly clean and smell like flowerfield. To produce those chemicals people and nature is suffering. All for that stinky spay or powder you pay for to poison yourself. Those chemical big brothers need to arrest. Brainwashed people die for their profit.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by carcree33 Wed Nov 12, 2008 5:30am PST
    Point nr. 10 Try to live without cooler-freezer. Cooler is total waster. Instead electric bill and cooler investment you can spend more for better food. So, and if you dont have any cooler you must eat much fresher food. This will also change your eating habits for better. You will buy less meat, fish, milk. Or you will buy smaller quantity for instant consuming. More veggie, fruits, dry products(rice, peas, beans, dryied fruits) for home cooking with pressure cooker. So and yes, you dont need also biiiig oven und stove. Those are waste of enegry. Instead to buy expencive oven-stove you can buy energy saving pressure cooker. Save money for better food material. Too much chemicals inside and tecknic around food. Too much miles and kilowatts. Too much noise, lies, myths produced by stinky food industry.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by HelenO Sun Nov 16, 2008 10:16am PST
    I totally agree with carcree33 that commercially produced household cleaners are a total waste of money. I use store cupboard basics to make natural, chemical free household cleaning recipes which are just as effective as store bought products. Also the new waterless cookware is a good energy efficient product, it uses less heat and shorter cooking times. This method also retains more nutrients and flavour.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by Tarts N Fri Dec 5, 2008 9:36pm PST
    another creative way to save water is to simply urinate on all your plants. Oh, they don't mind. Just think of all the nutrients, vitamins and minerals your consuming anyway--esp. if your taking supplements pal. Just think abt it. But please, please don't poo on your household plants.
    Report Abuse
  • Posted by Bruce Thu Apr 30, 2009 9:36am PDT
    I'll debate the use of the dishwasher. My present wife, my ex, and my sister in law all have a dishwasher and (except my wife who I taught to fill it) run a partially filled dishwasher using the full cycle every day. They also rinse dishes very well with constantly running hot water, sometimes with soap before putting them into the dishwasher. If people used a dishwasher to WASH dishes there might be a lot of savings.
    Report Abuse

Leave a Comment:

You must first sign in.

Green Picks Playlist