Kombucha is being used to create edible packaging
ga(‘send’, ‘event’, ‘Uncategorized’, ‘article’, ‘article-industry-impression’, {nonInteraction: true});
Kombucha has become a popular drink. The fermented tea is believed to bring health benefits, and now it could be used to reduce packaging waste with a ‘growing pack’.
Roza Janusz has developed a modified version of the kombucha process. Making kombucha involves using a yeast starter to drive bacterial fermentation. This yeast starter is known as a ‘scoby’. Janusz’s process, which takes two weeks, creates large thin layers of these scobies. The scoby is completely edible. Once removed from the growth tanks, the scoby can dry out and is flexible enough to wrap around other objects.
Janusz has shown that the scoby layer can successfully replace plastic packaging in food products. Furthermore, the packaging could even cook with the contents inside, adding an extra ingredient to pre-prepared meals. The slight acidity of the scoby helps preserve it over a long period — Janusz claims that her first prototype scoby is still edible six months after she made it.
The process is easy to replicate almost anywhere, requiring little more than shallow tubs and the basic ingredients. Because of this, farmers and other fresh food distributors could make their own scoby packaging on-site. Users could also make it at home, as the scoby grows at room temperature and doesn’t require any light or much attention.
Janusz developed her growing packaging as part of her studies as a design student. Janusz is seeking commercial partners to trial her system.
Takeaway: While this is the first time we’ve seen kombucha in use in such a way, Janusz’s project follows the same lines as other innovations we’ve seen recently. There’s an edible seaweed straw that could replace plastic straws in bars and restaurants, and a project that uses food waste to create edible food packaging. Clearly, there’s a lot biology can offer when it comes to packaging. How else could we make packaging processes more sustainable?
Website: www.growingpack.com
Contact: [email protected]
Source: New feed 1