In 1997 and 1998 I was sculpting large dolls — three feet high — out of porcelain clay and painting their heads, hands and feet. It was then that I acquired my painting palette, a cheap round plastic palette with a clear plastic top. This morning as I passed my desk I checked to see whether I had closed the palette properly and a large piece of brittle plastic broke off in my hand. I slapped some masking tape on the top and went on about my business, but the incident reminded me that I wanted to write about plastic.
Now, some of you will already be wondering why I didn’t immediately throw the broken plastic in the trash and go out and buy another palette, perhaps even a better one. The answer is two-fold: the lid that broke serves only the purpose of covering the paint so that it will stay moist and, with tape, still serves that purpose, but also plastic is problematic to dispose of properly and I feel it is best to limit plastic acquisitions whenever possible. The bottom of the palette where the paints sit is undamaged and I do not often have guests in my painting room, aka my bedroom. I also prefer to reserve what money I have for travel and other treats instead of using it to replace shabby possessions. If I did a self-portrait in the house jeans I am wearing right now it would tell you a lot about me: they have frayed hems and a side seam that is about to go on the inner thigh. I cannot remember when I bought them or at what thrift store but I can assure you that I have had them for more than five years.
Ahem. Why do I want to talk about plastic? Well, first of all, I read Beth Terry’s blog, My Plastic-Free Life, and follow her attempts to live free from plastic. She lives not far from me and does more than I will ever do to eradicate plastic from her life. I believe she is like a canary in a mine or a Cassandra we do not want to listen to as she chronicles the evils of plastic and its ubiquitousness. She goes to extremes that you might not want to go to — but you might: have a look at her blog and see what you think. She was talking about the amount of plastic packaging at Trader Joe’s the other day. Coincidentally, I had just stopped at Trader Joe’s for a couple of things (coconut milk, limes, dried apricots) and had had to make the unfortunate choice between limes coated with “edible wax” without packaging and organic limes in plastic netting. Which would you choose? Beth would tell me that the cans of coconut milk I bought are lined with plastic and frown that I would even consider buying apricots in a plastic bag. All I can say is that my Mom prefers apricots from Turkey to California-grown and Trader Joe’s meets her price point.
I believe that people want to do the right thing and that the right thing varies according to person and situation. I also believe that many of us are wanton in our use of plastic, that we use it unthinkingly and discard it unthinkingly. Many a young person has probably seen little at the store that is devoid of plastic packaging: it is in my lifetime that we got plastic tamper-proof seals on every bottle of pills, plastic film on cottage cheese and yogurt cartons, plastic bottles of soft drinks, plastic bottles of drinking water. It is in my lifetime that Quaker Oats went from selling rolled oats in a cardboard carton with a string you pulled to open it to the current carton topped with two plastic lids (one you remove to open it, the other reseals the carton). In my lifetime, the Ziploc bag went from something that did not exist to a required item at airports.
I am fortunate to have learned some of the old ways: my grandmother taught me to place a dampened tea towel over rising bread dough and my mother to store leftover pie crust in waxed paper. Plastic wrap often seals poorly anyway, so you will see me rubber-banding paper, wicker plates, cardboard or tea towels over the top of bowls to bring dishes to potlucks. You will see me washing plastic bags and drying them on the line so that we can continue to use them to store food. Like many of you I carry a backpack and canvas totes to pack my food at the grocery store and farmers’ market. I have a marked preference for buying food in glass, which I can re-use, and cans, which I can at least recycle. We use ancient Tupperware around the house, which seems to have the virtue of lasting forever with little degradation. We do our best to re-use those yogurt containers, bought mostly in quart-size, handy for storing soup or taking it on the road. And I carry a quart-sized water bottle with me, which I refill from taps and water fountains everywhere.
I reserve the worst of my spleen for single-use plastic: since I am not going to wash and re-use plastic wrap it is better not to use it in the first place if I can possibly avoid it. I can store food in cooking pots. I can cover a bowl with a plate or a clean cloth. Some foods, for example, cucumbers and mushrooms, keep better if they are not stored in plastic.
How many of you work to minimize the use of plastic in your kitchens? Please raise your hands and share your tips with me and with Beth. The world will thank you for it, although not the plastic-producing corporations.
Great post, Sharyn! I shared on my Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/MyPlasticfreeLife/posts/191277304324120
Thank you, Beth. I hope it will cause more people to think about how they use plastic and what they could do instead.
Good for you, Sharyn! I have cut back on the amount of plastic in this house but I’m far from being plastic-free. Funny thing. I started cutting back about the time I got my parrot. I read that one shouldn’t use certain non-stick pans or appliances with a bird nearby. They give off fumes at high temps that could kill the bird. Well, if it could harm a bird, how about us? I investigated and, in the process, learned about plastic. I started to notice just how much plastic was being used around here and I began cutting back wherever I could — and the same holds for styrofoam. You’ve printed some pretty good tips here, Sharyn, and they’ll help me to use even less of the stuff. Thanks!
You’ve just proved my point, John, that people want to do the right thing: in your case, concern for your parrot led you to learn more about plastic and to get rid of some of it. Beth Terry is the plastic-free ace around here and it was her concern about wild birds that started her on her plastic-free quest.
A great post Sharyn, and a great reminder to us all. As to tips on reducing I think I can only learn from others. I know I hate buying food in plastic, and rarely do so, but as you pointed out the tins of coconut milk have a plastic lining. There are so many decisions to make, but we can start with being informed, and your post certainly does that.
Claire, I suspect that the U.K. is better than the U.S. about offering alternatives to plastic packaging. Is this true?
I don’t think so Sharyn, if and when I go to the supermarket everything seems to be in those trays and then wrapped in plastic – it’s one of the many reasons I try to avoid supermarkets!
There was a great story a few years ago in Germany, when the authorities decided to start charging people for the packaging they threw away in their bins, so what happened was the consumers started to unwrap/unpack their goods at the supermarket checkout and left the packaging for the supermarket to throw away (and get charged for). This apparently made the producers re-think how they packaged food.
That is a great story, Claire. Thank you.
It’s a real “people -power story” !
I try. I don’t know how well I succeed, as we still have copious amounts of single use plastic that land in our trashcan, but then I’m also not the only person who buys groceries in the household. My husband leans heavily towards preprepared and convenience foods, which are almost impossible to purchase without adding to the plastic in our landfill.
Emily, being aware of the issue is the first step to making change and change comes slowly for many of us. Thanks for taking the time to visit and to comment.
Awesome post – becoming anti-plastic and recycling plastic as much as possible right now is the best we can do as giving our part to help the environment 🙂
Your post is a fantastic way of spreading the awareness!
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru
Thanks, CCU. I would love it if there was a bigger uprising against plastic and a bigger demand for alternatives.
The amount of plastic used is insane – on the subject of veg, I wonder if there’s actually *anything* that keeps better when wrapped in plastic? First thing I do is pull off all the plastic when I get veg home because it traps in moisture in the fridge and lowers the shelf life significantly.
I find the worst is things like some kinds of cookies – they have first a big cardboard box, wrapped in a fine film of plastic. Inside the box is another plastic tray, then there are cookies which are separated into “snack size servings” (thanks manufacturers! :p ) of 2 or 3 cookies, again wrapped in plastic. Those cookies inside may or may not be individually wrapped again… just ridiculous.
A good reason to make your own cookies, Charles (I know you can). In the fridge we use plastic bags to keep messy things like fennel and broccoli from getting all over the place and to protect delicate lettuces. But we don’t ever buy plastic bags — we re-use what we get: for instance, the farm box had a bag of spinach leaves today. When we have eaten the spinach the bag will go into our bag storage area for the next vegetable that needs it.
Kudos to you Sharyn for the reminder to stay awake and sensitive to the ubiquitous plastic. The more I look the more I see it, and even though I think I’m eradicating it from my life posts like yours remind me that I’m not doing a 100% purge – the damn stuff is EVERYWHERE!!
Indeed it is everywhere. Beth Terry is the expert. She’s just published a book about her efforts to replace all plastic in her life with other things (and, no, I am not on her payroll).
My favourite storage containers are glass mason jars…. I use them for everything, for my pantry, for packing my lunch. They seal well and are easy to wash. Great post!
I had considered replacing our other containers with the versatile mason jar, but my mother is worried about breakage (jars cascading out of the packed freezer, etc.).
Here, here! Love this post.
Also, just so you know, I dream that one day I will have one of your paintings hanging in my kitchen.
That is all.
Thank you so much, Movita. Keep dreaming that dream. If you have any ideas about which one you like and let me know, I’ll save it for you.
I wouldn’t hold myself up as an example, really, but I am aware and I’m trying! I try to buy with minimal packaging but it is a definite challenge. I reuse plenty. I do feel a responsibility to help teach my granddaughters awareness so thank you for the very strong reminders! Debra
Buying with minimal packaging is difficult, Debra, because many manufacturers don’t want us to have that choice. Re-use is great.
Great reminders for all of us. I think if each of us does just our own little part it will help the whole. Bringing our own reusable grocery bags to the store is one easy way to really help out. In Asia they charge you for plastic bags to haul your food and goods away. Do they charge you for plastic bags in other places in the world? Take care, BAM
The Berkeley Farmers’ Market charges you for plastic bags if you use new ones instead of bringing your own, BAM. Most stores that I know of are not charging yet and some stores still pack your groceries in plastic unless you stop them and bring your own bags.
When I moved to London I was shocked by the amount of plastic packaging in grocery stores — almost all fruit and veg are individually wrapped and/or packacged in plastic. It’s horrifying — and also frustrating from the purely selfish perspective of someone who likes to squeeze and smell her produce before purchasing. I do my best to reduce my plastic consumption, and shop at farmers markets when I can, and use a tote for my shopping, but I have a long way to go to ‘plastic-free.’ Thanks for this reminder!
Good for you, Susan. I had no idea that London had a packaging problem. Farmers’ markets are the best. Do you have health food stores or other places where you can buy staples from bulk bins?
great post sharyn… plastic is a real menace. it is also a menace in india… people don’t have enough awareness about the effects of plastic on the environment.
Thanks, Dassana. I hope that we can all spread some information and create or use alternatives.
I’ve read nia’s post about water conservation and today yours on plastic. It is wonderful to remind us of these issues.. we can easily get complacent and plastic become a common-place object we don’t even notice until reminded. Thanks for this today, Sharyn!
You’re welcome, Smidge. I’ll have to look up what Nia has to say.
Wow, incredible post, Sharyn. You may recall, I was kind of addicted to zip lock baggies, bringing my cellery sticks to work each day in a new baggy…my new year’s resolution was to reduce or eliminate my use of the zip lock baggy and I am very pleased to say that I am succeeding. Now, the only things I store in ziplocks is items for the freezer so I can get all of the air out of it (you can’t do that with containers). We’ve replaced most of our plastic storage containers with glass one’s and they are wonderful to reuse (sadly I cannot figure out a non-plastic lid, but at least it too is reusable).
At the store, I choose the item with the least packaging (cosmetics are the MOST horrific abusers!) We recycle our plastic and glass and we return our libation empties to the Liquor store.
Wonderful. Eva. Beth Terry has at least one post on cosmetics. You could try Googling her name or “plastic-free life” plus cosmetics to see if she has any useful information for you.
Bravo! I was looking forward to this post, since you suggested you might discuss plasitc at some point. One phrase stands out: “I believe that people want to do the right thing and that the right thing varies according to person and situation.” This statement could be summed up in one word: acceptance. but as you point out in the end, we also learn from each other, thus “the right thing” evolves as we change our perspective.
Some ideas used in this wee house:
1- Glass pickle jars serve as food storage containers. All that is required is proper tawing practice, in the fridge and in time, so as to avoid a cracking jar.
2- No soda is consumed in this home so that takes care of those plastic bottles (only a very occasional can or two).
3- Canvas grocery bags and produce bags accompany every food and supplies foraging adventures… and I stand my ground when the kind fella who bags my food asks if I want the meat/poultry in plastic. Nope. One canvas bag is reserved for that.
4- I will end with this minor detail of great importance to me: I only purchase tissue in boxes that do not have plastic in the opening and t. paper wrapped in paper instead of those that come 4 to one plastic wrap. Costs me a bit more, but saves on nature’s bill!
Thanks again for a great commentary.
Thanks for sharing your practices, Granny. We rarely drink soda here — sometimes we have Coke floats as a treat in hot weather, but we can sometimes get Mexican Coke made with real sugar and bottled in glass. Keeping a separate bag for meat and poultry is a good idea — are you getting it from a butcher, wrapped in paper like in the old days?
Ha! You had to get me going about meat wrapping! 🙂
Since you ask. No. It is all double-wrapped. First wrap is plastic. And another thing. I used to bring my own containers for meat from the butcher’s counter, only to be told that the fresh cuts on ice in the display originally arrive wrapped in guess what? Foam and plastic. I am not an authority on the topic, however, since I purchase very little meat. Mostly chicken for the cat and dog’s stew and fish for everyone. But there is only one human mouth to feed.
Great post. Here in Austin we have single-stream recycling, which doesn’t address health risks of plastic packaging per se but it does keep most plastics out of the landfill. Sigh… its not easy at all, is it?
Hi Rachel. I’m not familiar with the term “single-stream recycling.” I do know that many plastics are not recyclable and that sometimes companies collect them and ship them overseas, which is deplorable.
Great Post! I feel the same way about plastic. I don’t use any plastic containers in our house and store everything in glass. My kids use either wax bags (which they compost), glass containers or those cloth snack bags for their school snacks. We also use Lifefactory glass water bottles. Do you know about those? It’s funny because we were on vacation recently and my son happened to drink water out of a plastic bottle and he said it was the worst tasting water because he could taste the plastic. Gross! I can’t even drink bottled water anymore because I do taste the plastic as well.
It’s scary how plastic and processed foods came about in our lifetime. We became the convenience generation, but there are a lot of us that are changing that and our kids are learning to eat whole foods, recycle and compost. They are much more conscious about the environment. I actually commented to my kids yesterday as we were recycling some boxes that recycling was not something I even did as a kid. We threw everything into the trash. We have come a long way in that retrospect and that makes me happy 🙂
Hi Jackie. Good for you and your kids. Mom was an early environmentalist, so we were composting things early and taking things by car to the El Cerrito recycling center. Mom did things like rip apart a box spring: she burned the wood in our fireplace, worked the cotton into the backyard soil and took the springs to the recycling center. We never bought bottled water and drank our annual case of soft drinks (for camping trips) out of recyclable cans.
[…] Dimmick, of The Kale Chronicles, recently suggested she might feel tempted to indulge in a rant about plastic and I looked forward […]
This is a very timely post for me, Sharyn. As I just moved and am settling in, I realized I didn’t buy any plastic wrap at my first shopping trip to stock my kitchen. Now, I’m going to challenge myself to NOT purchase it AND challenge myself to avoid as much plastic as I can. I have switched to mostly glass, I’ve asked my daughter and friends to give me their glass jars from purchased sauce to use for storing pantry ingredients and sold all my tupperware at my recent garage sale. (You’re correct, Tupperware never wears out!) I too use a towel over my dough as my mother did that. As always, I so enjoy reading and learning from your posts.
You sold your tupperware! We use pieces of ours that are decades old to store cookies, to catch drips in sinks and sometimes to transport food. With tupperware, we can at least wash it and use it again, sterilize it with bleach if need be. Let us know how you do without plastic wrap — I suspect waxed paper and tea towels can stand in for most uses, but I don’t know about storing sticky cookie dough, for example. I hope you soon have your kitchen and new home to rights.
Interesting information Sharyn. I admit I could do better and your blog keeps me mindful. Thanks
Thanks, Lorna. There is so much disposable plastic in the world that you have to make a real effort to avoid it. The manufacturers want you to use it — they’ll sell it to you, give it to you, hook you on it, package everything in it. It is work to say no to plastic, but as more people do it or share alternatives it may become easier.
This is an amazing piece…and so very true. While we can’t avoid plastic at all costs (the convenience is too great); we can make an effort to be aware of where we use it and how often we do. Reusing plastic ziplocs was common at our place, especially if something dry had been stored in it. And glass containers with lids are easy to find. Thanks for addressing this…
Thank you, Peri. I wish we could avoid plastic. The world lived without it until after World War Two. As it is, we can do our best to use less of it.
[…] Is it necessary? I read a great post by a blogging friend Sharyn over at The Kale Chronicles, A Word About Plastic where she discussed the use of plastic in the kitchen and pointed us in the direction of another […]