Cooking for Compost at Thanksgiving

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“Cooking for Compost?” Sounds like what happens when no one likes what I make for dinner.

Maybe a better description is  “No Waste Recipes.” Whatever the name, they’ll help you have a more sustainable Thanksgiving feast. Prepare holiday dishes from fresh ingredients, without single-use packaging, where food waste can be used in other food or composted.

This should be easy as pie in Seattle, where nearly all food scraps can go in the food and yard waste bin (the main exception being collected fats and oils.)

So, tell us!  What is your favorite no-waste Thanksgiving recipe?

Submit it in Comments below. Extra credit for Seattle-grown ingredients.

Here are some waste-free recipes to inspire you:  Cooking for Compost at Thanksgiving

And – by taking action toward a no-waste Thanksgiving, you will be helping Wallingford’s  garbage and recycling route earn points toward cash rewards from the Waste Management Think Green Recycling Challenge.

This year the Challenge will award $40,000 to the neighborhood that reduces landfill-bound garbage tonnage the most as compared to a year ago (contest time period is October 1 – March 31.) The $40,000 grand prize will go to a local non-profit selected by the winning route. This year the Friday North Recycling Challenge (Wallingford’s garbage/recycling pick up day) is sponsored by the Wallingford Community Council.

New with this year’s Challenge is the outreach rewards. A total of $10,000 will be awarded to the neighborhood route(s) that participate in at least one outreach event per month during the six month contest period. In case more than one route takes part in one event each month, each of those routes will receive $1,000.

So – just for sharing a waste-free recipe, you will help Wallingford earn $1,000! Get out those recipe cards and web links.

For monthly waste-saving tips and more info on the contest and contest standings see  Think Green Recycling Challenge as well as Wallyhood’s own Thanksgiving Recycling Checklist.


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barbbsea

Barb has lived in south Wallingford since 1992. She's a lady with a lopper as volunteer lead of the Burke-Gilman Trail Urban Orchard Stewards, a group that cares for public fruit trees along the Burke-Gilman Trail between Eastern and where Pacific becomes N 34th. In February 2020 Barb founded the current Friends of Meridian Playground which cares for the fruit trees and grounds of the park and holds weekly volunteer work parties on Wednesday noonish. Friday mornings she joins the Tilth Alliance volunteers to manage the care of the fruit trees at the Good Shepherd learning garden. Barb worked for nonprofit City Fruit for 9 years and still partners with them to teach neighbors to grow good fruit locally. Barb is also accumulating records and photos about the Good Shepherd property for eventual publication online.

This Post Has 3 Comments

  1. Marnie

    Don’t forget the people who couldn’t afford a Thanksgiving dinner. Be part of the solution and share the unopened packaged foods or fresh produce with a food pantry near you. Find a local one on http://www.AmpleHarvest.org. They offer a database of nearly 5,500 pantries you can donate your extra produce to. Power to the goodness in people’s hearts!

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