The
kitchen is the center of so many daily activities. It's high
use and what goes on there makes the kitchen a catalyst for changes
in water use, energy use, clean up, food selection, food preparation
and storage. If you want to start greening your home one room
at a time, the kitchen would be a good place to start.
Appliances
Super efficient dishwashers
are available that use as little as 5 gallons per load, and an
Energy Star labeled model uses 25% less energy than the federal
minimum standard.
Use the settings your dishwasher
provides to your advantage. Select the water-saving cycle for
lightly soilded loads, and the no-heat dry setting every time.
You'll save water and energy with every load.
Only run full loads. If you
have a small number of dishes or pans to clean, wash them by
hand. You'll save the most water by filling a basin with just
2 to 3 inches of water, stacking the items as you wash them,
then rinsing them quickly under a light stream of water.
Refrigerators use more energy
than any other kitchen appliance. Keeping it close to full will
conserve energy because mass retains cold better than air.
When buying a new fridge, those
with a freezer on top are the most energy efficient. The least
energy efficient is the side freezer type with through-the-door
ice service.
Keep your refrigerator close
to 37 degrees Fahrenheit, and your freezer to 3 degrees Fahrenheit.
If you don't have an appliance thermometer, place a weather thermometer
inside the compartment to check its temperature and adjust the
dials until you achieve the desired temperature.
For appliances not rated by
Energy Star, use EnergyGuide lables to evaluate appliances for
energy use and operating costs. Look for the yellow and black
EnergyGuide labels to compare the yearly energy cost of operating
different models. Kitchen appliance that carry the Energy Guide
labels include refrigerators and refrigerator/freezers, freezers
and dishwashers.
At The Sink
If a home's hot water heater
is located far from the kitchen, considerable water will be wasted
to draw hot water to the kitchen tap. A point-of-use hot water
heater that installs under the kitchen sink can save water when
doing kitchen chores.
Many Americans have abandoned
their tap in favor of bottled water, but consuming water from
bottles is terribly wasteful. Installing a faucet-mounted or
countertop water filter and thereby reclaiming the kitchen tap
for drinking water can reduce lots of environmental impacts resulting
from the transport and consumption of bottled water. (See Resources
in the right margin.)
Most people turn their kitchen
faucet on at full pressure without thinking, and consequently
lose lots of water, unnecessarily, down the drain. Unless you
are filling a basin, get into the habit of turning the faucet
on just enough to get a stream as wide as a straw. At this capacity,
you could cut your water use by more than half.
Washing dishes by hand can
either save or waste water depending on how it's done. To use
water efficiently, fill a basin with just 2 to 3 inches of water,
stack the items as you wash them, then rinse them quickly under
a light stream of water.
Use a liquid dish soap that
is biodegradable and made without petro-chemicals or surfactants.
Supplies
Disposable products are so
commonplace now that the average person creates over 4 pounds
of garbage a day! No place are disposables more present than
in our kitchens. Paper towels, napkins and plates; plastic baggies
and food wrap; single-use cleaning wipes--even disposable cutting
boards! Breaking this reliance on single-use, disposable products
will save money and reduce waste. Use cloth rags for spills and
cloth napkins for meals. Reuse glass jars and plastic food tubs
to store leftovers. And trust in the ability of soap and hot
water to clean countertops and cutting boards.
Lighting
Kitchens are usually a high
use area in the home, and consequently, its light fixtures should
be equipped with compact fluorescent bulbs which use about a
quarter of the energy of incandescent bulbs.
If you're designing a kitchen,
put lighting for the sink and island on separate circuits. This
will give you the option of lighting work areas without lighting
the entire kitchen.
Groceries
Buy organic and transitional
food products when possible. Organic growing methods protect
soil, water supplies, biodiversity and animal health. If organically-certified
produce and meats are out of reach--either due to price or availability,
buy from farmers markets or a join a Community Supported Agriculture
network. You'll help support small, local farmers that typically
practice sustainable agriculture.
Packaging accounts for a large
volume of the trash we generate. Buying brands that use less
packaging and buying in bulk will help cut down on packaging
waste.
Use sturdy, reusable carriers
to cart home groceries, preferable those made from hemp or organic
fibers.
Plastic produce and bulk food
bags generally get overused contributing to unnecessary waste:
use them sparingly and reuse them at the market.You could also
purchase a set of lightweight reusable cloth bags that can replace
plastic produce bags. Ecobags.com sells reusable bags for produce
and bulk grains.
Many fisheries are being overfished
or caught or farmed in ways that harm aquatic ecosystems. Consume
only those species recommended by the Monterey Bay Aquarium's
Seafood Watch Program. (See Resources in the right margin.)
Try to eat less meat. Most
of us have grown up on a meat-based diet, and this can be a hard
habit to break, but a worthwhile one. All told, meat production
is a leading contributor to deforestation, soil erosion and desertification,
water scarcity and pollution, loss of biodiversity, depletion
of fossil fuels and global warming.
Cooking
Use the microwave for cooking
and re-heating; a microwave is faster and more efficient than
using the oven, thus reducing up to 70 percent of energy use.
Or use the toaster oven for small jobs. It uses a third to half
as much energy as a full-size oven. When you do use the oven,
turn it off 10 to 15 minutes before cooking time runs out; food
will continue to cook without using the extra electricity.
Food Storage
Cover liquids and foods stored
in the refrigerator. Uncovered foods release moisture and make
the compressor work harder.
Food storage bags and plastic
wrap are convenient, but not environmentally friendly. The propensity
to rely on disposable, plastic storage solutions and the rate
at which a typical household can easily go through them contributes
to the overproduction of plastics and increased landfill material.
Save empty glass jars and plastic food tubs for storing food
instead (never reheat foods in these containers in the microwave).
Not all storage needs will be met by reusable jars and tubs.
For those situations when nothing but a reclosable plastic bag
will do, you can now wash them in the dishwasher and reuse them
with the help of a dishwasher attachment named Bag-E-Wash. (See
Resources in the right margin.)
When it comes to covering platters
and bowls, use aluminum foil which is recyclable if cleaned first.
To save it for another use, simply flatten and wipe off any food
residue, fold, and store in the fridge. You can also use saucers
and plates to cover bowls.
If reused jars and plastic
tubs don't provide the capacity nor the visibility you want in
food storage containers, invest in glass storage systems that
you can see through, stack, reheat in, and even serve from! This
will eliminate any reliance on plastic and foil for food storage
and due to their multi-use qualities, cut down on the number
of containers you have to wash. (See Resources in the right margin.)
Garbage
Compost food scraps if you
have the space to do so. The weight and volume of food scraps
in American landfills is a costly and inefficient deposit of
material that can degrade into rich compost for one's garden
in relatively little time. Many foods can be composted, including
vegetable and fruit trimmings, eggshells, coffee grounds and
tea bags.
Using a garbage disposal requires
lots of water and energy. And garbage disposals contribute unnecessary
solids to your water-treatment facility, requiring more maintenance
and more energy for proper treatment. If on a septic system,
the excess solids will mean more frequent pumping, and if you
fall short of proper maintenance, septic systems can contaminate
ground water and surface water with nutrients and pathogens.
Packaging that goes beyond
what is reasonable or necessary should be avoided to alleviate
the glut of packaging in the municipal waste stream (50% by volume!).
- Buy foods in bulk and concentrate.
- All else being equal choose the product with the least packaging.
Recycling
Don't limit your recycling
to what is collected from the curb. Contact nearby recycling
companies to find out what they accept for recycling. Materials
like junk mail (a.k.a mixed waste paper), copy paper (a.k.a.
office pack), plastic resins besides just types 1 and 2, aluminum
in forms other than beverage cans, and other materials can be
recycled through drop-off centers. Stockpile these materials
in a basement or garage and make periodic trips to a drop-off
center.
Close the loop on recycling
by purchasing containers and packaging that contain a relatively
high percentage of recycled material. This would include alumnimum
beverage cans, glass, and paperboard that is labeld "recycled".
Plastic containers generally contain no or relatively little
recycled content.
GREEN KITCHEN RESOURCES WANT TO BE ON
THIS LIST? LEARN HOW.
APPLIANCES
energystar.gov Find dishwashers, refrigerators
and freezers that incorporate advanced technologies that use
less energy than standard models.
sustainabletable.org Sources and resources for finding
sustainable food. eatwellguide.org Look up sustainable meat producers by zip code. environmentaldefense.org Environmental Defenses' Seafood Selector includes health facts
for more than 50 species of fish and seafood. mbayaq.org/cr/seafoodwatch.asp Download Montery Bay Aquarium's wallet-size card that indicates
good and bad choices for seafood.
RECYCLING
earth911.org Look up drop off centers for all kinds
of recyclable materials by zip code.