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If You Care Tall Kitchen Bags Certified Compostable - 13 Gallon -- 12 Bags


If You Care Tall Kitchen Bags Certified Compostable - 13 Gallon
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If You Care Tall Kitchen Bags Certified Compostable - 13 Gallon -- 12 Bags

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If You Care Tall Kitchen Bags Certified Compostable - 13 Gallon Description

  • Certified Home Compostable
  • Made from 100% GMO-Free Potato Starch
  • No Polyethylene or Plastic

Why Use If You Care Certified Compostable Bags?

Approximately 80 million tons of waste (U.S. EPA figures) which goes to landfill annually is material which under the right conditions, can be turned into compost, including food scraps, yard trimmings and non-recyclable paper. In a landfill environment, this organic material (food scraps, etc.) releases methane gas - a greenhouse gas - contributing to global warming. Diverting food scraps and yard trimmings from landfill to compost facilities - either municipal or commercial in areas where they are available - contributes significantly to preserving our planet and resources.

 

If You Care 100% Certified Compostable Tall Kitchen Bags are made from potato starch from non-GMO starch potatoes, blended with a certified, fully compostable polymer. No plasticizers are added.

 

What Makes Potato Starch Strong? Starch is a mixture of a linear (amylose) and a branched (amylopectin) polymer of glucose. Potato starch has a higher percentage of amylopectin than either corn or wheat starch. The structural integrity of starch is due to amylopectin, so this helps make If You Care Certified Compostable Bags stronger than bags made from corn starch.

 

Any Other Reasons for Potato Starch?

The potato starch used to make If You Care Certified Compostable Bags comes from starch potatoes, which are not grown for food but only for starch production. These potatoes are too high in starch to be good for food. Therefore, there is no diversion from food supplies. To product the same amount of starch from these potatoes as from corn requires 40% less land. These potatoes require no irrigation, and need only normal rainfall. Corn requires much more water.

 

If You Care Certified Compostable Bags are made from 100% GMO free potato starch and a fully compostable polymer. These bags are completely polyethylene free and plasticizer free.

Product Attributes

  • Potato starch from non-GMO “starch potatoes” – grown for starch, not for food
  • Blended with certified fully compostable polymer
  • No plasticizers. Plasticizers migrate, which deteriorates mechanical properties of bags.
  • Package from 100% recycled board processed chlorine-free (PCF)
  • No polyethylene. 100% certified compostable
  • Potato starch from potatoes grown for starch only – no diversion from food supply
  • Potato starch uses less water than starch from corn. No irrigation necessary, only natural rainfall.
  • 40% less land is used to produce same quantity of starch from potatoes as from corn
  • Use for compostable waste
  • Bags are certified compostable by the Biodegradable Products Institute (BPI)
  • Bags along with waste can be composted in municipal or commercial compost facilities
  • Cardboard box should be recycled


Directions

 

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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3 Clever Ways to Teach Kids About Food Waste

Food waste is one of the most serious ecological problems we have. 1.3 billion tons of edible food is thrown away every year. This food waste is creating 3 billion tons of carbon and makes up the majority of our landfills. By the way, it also amounts to $640 a year in money waste, per family. And, c’mon, it’s wasted food! It doesn’t take a Mensa member to know that’s bad.

3 Ways to Get Kids to Waste Less Food

You can do your part by working as a family to reduce your own food waste. I know it can be hard when you have little ones who don’t want to clean their plate, but the old mentality of “cleaning your plate” regardless of your hunger level is definitely not the answer. Here are three tips for helping your kids learn about food waste.

1. Teach them about portions

Our idea of portion size has become completely distorted in the past few decades. A really easy way to prevent having to throw away the food on your kid’s plate is to give them less to start with. In our house, we serve small portions and go back for seconds if need be. This not only helps with reducing food waste but helps us keep our hunger cues in check – that’s a win/win. We also save and eat leftovers, which is great because I really don’t like cooking, and it gives me a night off. If you have a problem eating leftovers, try cutting your recipe size in half and see how you do. Guilt sucks, so let’s take that out of the equation and only make what you’ll eat.

2. Involve them in shopping for groceries

How many times have you bought a vegetable or fruit that your kids loved and devoured the previous week only to find they have no intention of putting one more piece of that food in their mouth ever again? Yeah, that’s what I thought. If you can’t take them with you, or won’t, take five minutes to chat with them about what sounds good before you hit the store. Our bodies crave different foods based on our physical and nutritional needs, it’s not just them being stubborn eaters. Listen, give feedback and come up with a shopping list together.

3. Create a compost container together

Kids like projects, that’s why teachers are still doing that California Mission project 30 years after I was in elementary school. There are many starter kits available online that are simple and easy to use. Set up a separate trash can in the kitchen for food waste, line it with a compostable trash bag, and it all goes into the compost bin together. In that one simple change you’re reducing what you send to the landfills (where food rarely sees enough oxygen to decompose) and reducing your carbon footprint. High five!

Editor’s note: For more tips and tricks for reducing food waste (and creative ways to use fruit and veg that are "on the edge"), check out our Zero Hunger, Zero Waste initiative.

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