City Composting in 4 Easy Steps Skip to content

Shop Sustainable Gifts

Over 1000 eco-friendly products

Find us at Funan Mall

Article: City Composting in 4 Easy Steps

City Composting in 4 Easy Steps

City Composting in 4 Easy Steps

The Urban Composter

In the last journal entry on city composting, avid gardener, Olivia Choong, detailed the different types of composting techniques that can be used to reduce food waste, and contribute to fertilising the plants in your home (or even your neighbours’!). One of the easy and foolproof techniques is the “bokashi” method that the Urban Composter system is based on. Here we share how to compost in 4 easy steps.

 

What is the Bokashi Method - How does the Urban Composter work?

The Urban Composter uses the principles of Bokashi composting – a composting method based on fermentation. Bokashi ,which translates to ‘fermented organic matter’ in Japanese, has its roots in ancient East Asia where farmers covered their food waste with soil that contained micro-organisms. These microbes fermented the waste in a non-oxygen environment, and when buried in soll, transformed the latter into a nutrient-rich substance. However, the traditional bokashi fermentation method, as Luke Gregory (founder of Urban Composter) discovered is too messy to use in a home setting, and attracts pests.

Using his industrial design training, Luke came up with the final design for the Urban Composter which had several properties for the composting system to work effectively:

  1. a good seal essential to achieve an anaerobic (no oxygen) environment for Bokashi composting and to keep the pests out

  2. an internal angled base and a tap to ensure easy and effective draining of the bokashi leachate.

  3. an effective microorganism (EM) in a citrus spray form to replace the messy bokashi powder used in the traditional method.

     

The Urban Composter - Available at  The Green Collective SG

The Urban Composter - Available at The Green Collective SG

Urban Composter - 4 Easy Steps

There’s no need to rack your brains to figure out the ratio of greens and browns, no need to monitor the temperature of the compost, no need to turn and aerate the composting pile and most of all, there’s no odour and pests to deal with in the first few weeks if done right.  In 4 steps, your kitchen scraps can be turned into compost within an average of 6-10 weeks as compared to several months using other composting methods techniques.

Step 1 - Throw waste into composter

Make sure to cut or chop your food waste into small pieces. This fermentation process also allows foods that are traditionally not accepted in other compost bins and worm farms: meat, seafood, dairy, cooked food, citrus peels, onions and garlic.

Step 2 - Apply the citrus spray “accelerator”

On a daily basis, squirt a few sprays of the accelerator which is a natural citrus-based EM solution to inoculate the fermenting process. 

Close the lid tightly to not only create an oxygen-free environment for the EM to thrive, but also the odour out and pests away.  

Step 3 - Drain away the leachate

For the science geeks out there, the process of anaerobic respiration produces lactic acid and other organic acids and water as by-products. This results in the leachate called Bokashi tea or compost juice, which has to be drained regularly (ideally on a daily basis) so as to keep the moisture content in the system in balance. The Bokashi tea is not only acidic but also holds some of the beneficial microbes from the system and thus can be either used to water plants (after dilution of 1:100) to boost the soil life or poured down the drain as a sewage cleaner. 

The food scraps should be left to complete the fermentation in 2 weeks while the liquid is drained away.

Step 4 - Bury in soil

The fermented scraps can be further broken down to make compost in 4 to 8 weeks through various methods:

  1. burying in soil if you have a garden or making your own soil factory if you live in an apartment, both of which do not require any maintenance for the duration.

  2. for apartment-dwellers would be vermicomposting which is more of a challenge as it involves worms.

Regardless of the composting methods that you use, what can be harvested at the end is exceptionally valuable compost which is not only full of nutrients but also teeming with soil life.

Bokashi scraps - soil factory

Need Some Help?

Watch our videos on how to set up the urban composter and troubleshoot at our youtube channel, or join our Composting Kampung! Alternatively, take a look at the FAQs.

Join our Composting Kampung!

We understand that there is a wealth of knowledge to composting and undeniably daunting especially for a beginner, that is why we set up a cosy community where everyone is on a learning journey together and helping each other out in the kampung spirit. Whether you are curious about composting but afraid to start or whether you have some experience with it, consider joining our Facebook Group, Composting Kampung, where we exchange information and experiences pertaining to composting and the Urban Composter.

Order Your Own Urban Composter Here

 

Read more

Turning Appetites for Fast Fashion into a Labour of Love

Turning Appetites for Fast Fashion into a Labour of Love

The Post-Museum runs the Singapore Really Really Free Market every 2 months for the past 11 years. Popping up around Singapore in different locations each time, it is a gathering place ...

Read more
Weaving Through the Pandemic

Weaving Through the Pandemic

  A discussion on Impact of COVID 19 on the artisans of Asia They make your clothes, they make our pots and pans, they are the ones who carefully weaved that treasured basket you have in your liv...

Read more