8 thoughts on “Rethinking Food Packaging

  1. Sarah

    Love this post! I recently found a website that is fantastic for helping pursue a no packaging lifestyle. It’s at zerowastehome.blogspot.com. I wrote a post on my website last week about the same topic from a different perspective. I like the part of your post about alternative packaging, although the used peanut shells would be a big no-no for me since I’m allergic! I always enjoy your posts, so keep up the good work!

    Reply
  2. aaronjlin Post author

    @Sarah: Glad you liked the post! I’ve spent the last half year trying to get towards zero-waste. I’m close to 95% waste-free, but that last 5% has always escaped me. The hardest part seems to be getting milk in reusable containers. I’ve heard some people have had success with reusing glass jars, but where I live, it is extremely difficult to find organic milk, let alone local organic milk.

    Reply
    1. Sarah

      I buy my milk at Kroger. They carry a brand called Homestead Creamery, Inc. which is based near me. They have the glass reusable bottles that you pay a deposit for and return. The milk is hormone free and tastes great. Hopefully you can find a good source in your area soon. It’s amazing how much better it tastes than the mass produced stuff shipped from who knows where.

      Reply
    2. aaronjlin Post author

      That’s great. We are probably looking in to getting a dairy goat within a few months. It definitely won’t work for everyone, but I found buying organic milk in the countryside just too difficult and expensive.

      Here’s something worth checking out: a third-party review of just how “organic” brand-name dairy and egg producers actually are. The Cornucopia Institute creates scorecards every year evaluating just how accurate the organic labels truly are. One part that surprised me was that chain store organic milk usually flunks because they don’t actually pasture their dairy cows.

      Reply
  3. Dan D.

    Hmmmm, do you think soy, rice, or almonds could be local in your area? If so, you can make milk out of those. Its a pretty delicious and healthy workaround.

    I’ve been trying to buy my peanut butter in the glass jars as of late so i can reuse them afterwords, they’re great for storing the perfect serving size of left overs.

    Reply
    1. Dan D.

      Ah, its actually funny that you linked me that article since I’ve recently pushed meat and dairy out of my eating routine. However, I do have to applaud you for thinking our eating habits over, most people don’t even bat an eyelash. Eating meat and dairy that have been locally produced on special occasions is a LOT better then when its produced in factories, thats for sure.

      Sounds a lot better then buying a separate watering bucket to me! It really is amazing what you can reuse bottles for.

      Reply
  4. Sean O'Brien

    Aaron,
    I just recently discovered your website and it you give me so much inspiration to better myself. I am fascinated with your all of your topics that you write about. You are very knowledgable and I am just thankful I have found a worthwhile website to better myself. Thank you sir.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>