Composting cooked food

  • 16 Replies
  • 4448 Views
*

celjaci

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: North Yorks
  • 386
  • celjaci = Bosnian peasant!
Composting cooked food
« on: May 03, 2009, 12:12 »
All our left overs go to the chickens but friends with a small hotel want to compost their food waste including cooked food.

Commercial rat-proof compost bins or digesters seem very pricey at £90

Any body got experience of composting food waste? Rat proofing a compost bin? Any other system?
Presumably it will need lots of 'browns' adding but they should have shredded paper and cardboard.
Playing all the right notes but not necessarily in the right order!

*

Eatyourgreens

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • 263
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #1 on: May 03, 2009, 12:17 »
Get your friends to find out if you have any local pig keepers, then do a trade of scrap food for Bacon.

Bob

*

celjaci

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: North Yorks
  • 386
  • celjaci = Bosnian peasant!
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #2 on: May 03, 2009, 13:27 »
Get your friends to find out if you have any local pig keepers, then do a trade of scrap food for Bacon.

Bob
Understood that was now illegal!

*

Yorkie

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: North Yorkshire
  • 26365
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #3 on: May 03, 2009, 14:07 »
Apparently the Bokashi composting system takes all sorts of food, but is quite expensive and relatively small scale.

You can rat-proof a compost bin by using weldmesh over the bottom of the bin, to stop them getting in - but I'd still be worried about meat or other harmful bacteria not being killed off in a domestic bin.  Don' t know enough to say whether those concerns are unfounded, though.
I try to take one day at a time, but sometimes several days all attack me at once...

*

Trillium

  • Guest
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #4 on: May 03, 2009, 15:25 »
There is a specific compost bin that relies on solar light to compost it but I just can't remember the name. The lower section is buried in the ground and even meat can be composted in this powerful yet small unit. A restaurant might want to invest in 2 or 3 units due to sheer quantity, but it can be done. To further rat proof the units, I recommend that a ring of weldmesh surround the buried portion and a mat of weldmesh for it to sit on. Even rats can't burrow through that.

*

Eatyourgreens

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • 263
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #5 on: May 03, 2009, 15:29 »
Get your friends to find out if you have any local pig keepers, then do a trade of scrap food for Bacon.

Bob
Understood that was now illegal!

The world has gone mad.


Bob

*

oldbean

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • 270
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #6 on: May 03, 2009, 16:15 »
Quote from: Eatyourgreens
The world has gone mad.

Madder than you know. Commercial composters are able to use raw meat in the right process. The snag is the meat must be ok at the start. This means if it is not fit for human consumption it cannot be used. The punchline is that if it has passed it's sell by date, it is defined as being unfit  >:(

*

richyrich7

  • Paper Potter
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Sunny Leicester, The answers in the soil !
  • 10379
    • My home business Egg box labels and more
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #7 on: May 03, 2009, 16:33 »
Green cone composter have come right down in price they where about £90 but quite often councils will heavily subsidise and even do the hard work and put it in for you. They do need a sunny spot & not in the shade. Saying that all our cooked food waste goes in, bones and all + the dead rodents etc. the cat brings back. All seem to disappear over time.  :)
He who asks is a fool for five minutes, but he who does not ask remains a fool forever.

*

celjaci

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: North Yorks
  • 386
  • celjaci = Bosnian peasant!
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #8 on: May 03, 2009, 16:51 »
Regretfully our local councils are no longer subsidising compost bins.
 £90 seems really OTT. Wouldn't you think they could make them much cheaperand use recycled plastics - doesn't even need to be a uniform green colour

*

mumofstig

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Kent
  • 58018
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #9 on: May 03, 2009, 16:58 »
Regretfully our local councils are no longer subsidising compost bins.
 £90 seems really OTT. Wouldn't you think they could make them much cheaperand use recycled plastics - doesn't even need to be a uniform green colour

Our council have even stopped green waste collections!, but at least it means i get neighbours lawn mowings :)

*

Kristen

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Suffolk
  • 4065
    • K's Garden blog
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #10 on: May 03, 2009, 20:40 »
Just stuck my postcode into:

http://www.recyclenow.com/home_composting/in_your_area/in_your_area.html

and the Green Cone here is subsidised by about 3 quid :( although the big Dalek that I paid 20 quid for last year is 15 quid this - which is good to encourage folk (RRP = £50.00)

*

richyrich7

  • Paper Potter
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Sunny Leicester, The answers in the soil !
  • 10379
    • My home business Egg box labels and more
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #11 on: May 03, 2009, 21:23 »
£65 quid now for us, I was lucky tho' I won mine in a comp  8) 8)

Them big darleks I have two of them down the lottie,  I wont use them at home every year they become a rat hotel in the winter  :mad:

*

Trillium

  • Guest
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #12 on: May 04, 2009, 01:43 »
Thanks Richy. Green Cone was the name I was trying to remember. It's that specific colour to create the solar internal heat. A bit pricey, yes, but friends who have it swear by it and won't use any other. Its all composted in about a month.

*

richyrich7

  • Paper Potter
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Sunny Leicester, The answers in the soil !
  • 10379
    • My home business Egg box labels and more
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #13 on: May 04, 2009, 16:47 »
They are really great, they do a green joanna as well not 100% sure what that one does I'll have to have a google  :)

*

compostqueen

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • 16597
Re: Composting cooked food
« Reply #14 on: May 04, 2009, 16:51 »
the Joanna is the one for cooked food and there is compost at the end of it unlike the green cone. if they are running a small hotel perhaps there would be too much. Chickens might be a good idea  :)



xx
Composting

Started by casper on General Gardening

14 Replies
3001 Views
Last post April 24, 2021, 15:52
by jezza
xx
Composting - Lid On / Lid Off.

Started by sausage on General Gardening

16 Replies
11412 Views
Last post May 07, 2007, 00:42
by leeky
xx
Composting Yew

Started by sion01 on General Gardening

4 Replies
7482 Views
Last post August 22, 2011, 18:15
by sion01
xx
Composting

Started by pepsi100 on General Gardening

32 Replies
4532 Views
Last post April 04, 2022, 22:16
by pepsi100
 

Page created in 0.148 seconds with 36 queries.

Powered by SMFPacks Social Login Mod
Powered by SMFPacks SEO Pro Mod |