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Zero-Waste Bulk Shopping

2014-04-20 16.19.51

Today, after going to the farmer’s market, I went shopping at Rainbow Grocery, or what I like to call Bulk Mecca. Rainbow Grocery has awesome bulk aisles. You can get everything there, including:

This is only SOME of the flour available!
Black Teas
Herbal Teas

And that’s just some of the dry stuff. Rainbow sells “wet” foods too like:

You can even buy bulk cat food or personal care products like lotions, soaps and shampoos. I wash my hair with baking soda and follow with a cider vinegar rinse, but my teenagers won’t go for it. Kids.

Now before I went to the store, I had to prepare (which was not a big deal). First, I gathered a pile of my cloth produce/bulk bags. I made some of these a few years ago from old sheets my neighbor wanted to get rid of. I also took a bunch of clean glass jars. You can weigh these on scales at the store, or “tare” them, and then write the weight on the jar. The cashier will deduct the weight of the jar from your purchase. If you buy something like tea at $30 a pound, you really don’t want to pay for the weight of a one-pound jar. My cashier dutifully entered all the tares for my many jars.

I bought lots of staples today, almost 100 percent waste-free (I used twist ties on my bags to close them and mark the bin codes).

Here’s what I bought:

I even liked my cashier! He didn’t say much at first, and then halfway through ringing me up, he asked “What is your favorite word?” I didn’t have to think long about that. “Defenestrate,” I said. “That’s my favorite word too!” he said. I told him I also liked sesquipedalian. He added up thirteen bags and jars, plus my two big shopping bags, and took five cents off my bill for each one—75 cents total.

Here’s a magazine headline I noticed while waiting in line at the cash registers. I don’t think any plastic is safe. Even if eating food packaged in plastic were safe, the garbage is a disaster (plastic doesn’t get recycled much, the oceans are a mess, marine animals and seabirds are dying from ingesting it…I could go on and on). Buying food in bulk with your own containers helps cut down on plastic (and other waste) and you eat healthier food too (real food doesn’t come in plastic).

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