Bokashi Composting: The Step By Step Beginner's Guide

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Bokashi fermenting and composting method
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The Rook

Use Up Your Kitchen Scraps With This Unique Method

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Bokashi composting isn’t new, but you may not have heard of it. First, it is pronounced bo-ka-shee. Second, we think you will be intrigued by this faster method of reducing food waste and creating nutrient-rich compost with minimal odor.

What is Bokashi Composting?

“Bokashi composting” isn’t technically traditional composting because it ferments organic material instead of composting. This uses an “anaerobic” method, which means without any oxygen. It is a different process than normal aerobic composting. 

Kitchen scraps, including meat, citrus, dairy, and cooked food, can be added to the bokashi composter in layers with a required material called “bran.” Bokashi bran isn’t the bran you were forced to eat as a kid. It mixes bacteria and yeast, breaks down food with little odor, has a faster turnover time, and takes up very little space. You can’t do bokashi without the bran. 

Bokashi composting is a great solution for folks who can’t have a regular compost pile or system due to space or other restrictions. It is faster than all but the most intensive regular composting methods and can significantly reduce food waste going into landfills. 

Of note, while you could probably try to bokashi other materials, its main purpose is for kitchen scraps.

Male handing pressing down food scraps in a bokashi composter.
Bokashi fermenting and composting method. Credit: The Rook

Bokashi vs. Regular Composting

The beginning and end results are the same as those of normal composting with which we are familiar. However, while we avoid meat, dairy, cooked food, and citrus in regular composting, those are fair game with bokashi composting. 

While hot composting takes a few months, and cold composting can take over a year, bokashi composting is often finished in about 4 to 6 weeks. However, cold composting, aka tossing it all on a pile and maybe hitting it with the hose now and then during dry weather, is as easy as it gets. Hot composting by turning the pile, tracking greens and browns, adding airflow, and monitoring temperature is for compost fanatics. Bokashi is kind of right down the middle. 

The downside to bokashi composting is that equipment is required, and a consumable product, the bran, must be purchased or generated DIY. It isn’t free. And, as you’ll see below, the bokashi product still needs to be buried to finish decomposing. It doesn’t come out of the bin as ready-to-use compost. 

Harvesting bokashi fertilizer for the garden
Harvesting bokashi fertilizer for the garden. Credit: Ida Wastensson

Benefits of Bokashi Composting

Bokashi composting is excellent for reducing food waste that goes to landfills and creating fast compost for the garden. While more involved than regular pile-and-forget-it composting, it is also fairly simple, and you’ll quickly get in the habit.

In my opinion, one of the two best benefits of the bokashi system is the ability to compost cooked food and meat products–which I can’t ordinarily do because of critters in my area. Large furry ones that look just like black bears and smaller raccoon-like animals that act just like raccoons, only more clever.

The second excellent benefit is the ability for folks who don’t have a regular compost pile to compost their kitchen waste. People renting a home, living in an apartment, or even living in an RV life can compost and create nourishing soil amendments for themselves, their gardening friends, and their houseplants, or even give to trees as they go down the road.

How to Bokashi Compost (Step-by-Step)

You’ll need a suitable bucket or tub and some bran to start your bokashi composting journey. While you can DIY a bucket with a spigot, strainer plate, and airtight lid, you may wish to buy a complete kit for your first attempt to minimize potential issues while learning. Many people use a two-bin system, and the second bin could certainly be a DIY creation once you are familiar with the process. 

The same idea applies to the “bran.” Start with a commercially prepared product you know has the right ingredients, and then graduate to making your inoculant once you’ve had some success and generated some enthusiasm. 

  1. Collect food scraps, including meat, veggies, dairy, and cooked food. If you ate it, could eat it, or should have eaten it, but it got away from you in the fridge, you can put it in the bokashi composter. **Do not put in used grease, oil or anything already rotten beyond recognition. “Compostable” plastic bags are also a no-go.**
  2. Chop up the scraps into 1-2” pieces.
  3. Add a thin layer of bran to the bottom of the bin, then add the food scraps you collected and smash them down. Remember, this system doesn’t need oxygen and should be airtight. Toss another tablespoon or two of bran on top.
  4. Keep layering the bin with bran and kitchen scraps until it is full, like building a layer cake. Remember to smash it down a bit to get the air out. It’s okay if this takes a week or two.
  5. Seal up the airtight lid and set it in a warm spot.
  6. Drain the liquid from the bottom using the spigot for a couple of days. The collected liquid can be diluted at about 100:1 for use as a plant fertilizer or disposed of.
  7. In about two weeks, the liquid to be drained should slow to a trickle, and the bin should have a faint pickled or fermented odor. It’s time to take it outside. 

Dig a hole in your garden or your compost pile and empty the bin’s contents into the hole. They’ll still look recognizable, but they are now predigested and ready for the soil microbes to do their work. Bury the bokashi product and wait about 2-3 weeks. Check on it again if you like, and you’ll see it has become a regular compost that is ready to nourish the soil.

A pit dug in the garden with the food scraps dumped into the center.
Pit was dug in the garden which was filled with bin’s contents. Credit: Yizhachok

Common Problems

Although the method is simple, it isn’t foolproof. If your bokashi setup isn’t working quite right, check these problems. 

  • If nothing is happening in the bucket, it may be too cold. The bacteria hard at work do well at room temperature. Setting the bin on the back deck in Pennsylvania in December won’t work. 
  • Stinky bokashi buckets usually have one of two issues: the lid isn’t sealing and allows air inside, or the bin is filled with only one kind of scrap, say two gallons of old spaghetti. Mix it up, make a layer cake with scrap and bran, avoid excess liquid, and keep the lid on tight.
  • Not enough or too much moisture can also cause issues. It shouldn’t be kitchen scrap soup, but it shouldn’t be a desert, either. Like a typical compost pile, it should be moist like a wet sponge, maybe a bit wetter.  

Another great, and quick way to compost is to make a wormery! 

Bokashi composting is a bit of a cure-all for kitchen waste, but it might not be for everyone. Depending on your household size, you likely will need to graduate to a two-bin system, so one bin is filled while the other is fermenting. The opportunity to compost meat scraps and cooked food can be a boon for those looking to reduce their waste stream, and your garden will surely love it. 

About The Author

Andy Wilcox

Andy Wilcox is a flower farmer and master gardener with a passion for soil health, small producers, forestry, and horticulture. Read More from Andy Wilcox