What is Bokashi?

Bokashi is a Japanese way to recycle food waste. It uses special "good bacteria" to turn scraps into healthy fertilizer for your garden. You can use it inside your home because it has no bad smell.

How Does Bokashi Work?

3 simple steps to get started

Add food scraps
1

Add Food Scraps

Place any fruit, vegetable, or food leftovers into the bucket.

Sprinkle Bokashi bran
2

Sprinkle Bokashi Bran

Add a layer of Bokashi mix on top to kickstart fermentation.

Seal and ferment
3

Seal & Let It Ferment

Close the lid tightly and leave it for 2 weeks to ferment.

💡 The result? Rich natural compost that feeds your soil and reduces household waste by up to 90%.


Why Bokashi Over Traditional Methods?

Faster, cleaner, and easier than regular composting

VS

Traditional Methods

Produces odors
Slow process
Needs large space
Complex & messy

Benefits of Using Bokashi

Good for you, good for the planet

Safe & Easy

Simple system anyone can use at home, no experience needed.

No Odors

Ferments cleanly inside a sealed bucket, zero bad smells.

Natural Compost

Creates rich, organic fertilizer that nourishes your plants.

Less Waste

Reduces household food waste by up to 90% over time.

Start Today with Bokashi!

Choose the right product for your needs

Is Bokashi right for you?

If you are looking for an easy, clean, and effective way to get rid of food waste at home, then the Bokashi system is the perfect choice for you.

✔️ Suitable for families

✔️ Safe for children and pets

✔️ Ideal for apartments and houses

FAQs

What exactly is bokashi composting?

Bokashi is a Japanese fermentation method the word itself means "fermented organic matter." Rather than breaking food down through decomposition like traditional composting, bokashi pickles your kitchen scraps inside an airtight bucket using beneficial microorganisms embedded in a bran mixture. The result is a nutrient-dense pre-compost ready to enrich your soil.

How is it different from regular composting?

Traditional composting is aerobic it needs air, takes months, and can smell. Bokashi is anaerobic, taking as little as 2 weeks in the bucket plus 2 weeks buried in soil. It requires no turning, produces minimal odour, fits in a kitchen cupboard, and crucially can handle foods that would ruin a regular compost heap, like meat, fish, and dairy.

Can I really put meat and dairy in the bokashi bin?

Yes, this is one of bokashi's biggest advantages. Virtually all food waste is welcome: cooked and raw meat, fish, cheese, eggs, fruit and vegetable scraps, bread, pasta, coffee grounds, tea bags, and small bones. The high-acidity fermentation environment safely neutralises pathogens that would cause problems in an outdoor heap.

What should I keep out of the bin?

Avoid liquids (water, juice, oil, milk), as they can overwhelm the fermentation process. Skip large bones, plastic, paper, ash, and animal waste. Also hold back any food with blue or black mould these aggressive moulds can disrupt the beneficial microbes. White mould, however, is perfectly fine and actually a sign things are working well.

How do I know if my bin is fermenting properly?

Healthy fermentation has a few telltale signs: a tangy, vinegar-like or pickle smell (not a rotten one), white fluffy mould on the surface of the food, and liquid collecting at the bottom of the bucket. If you're getting a foul, putrid smell, the most likely culprits are an unsealed lid letting oxygen in, or not enough bran being added.

Where's the best place to keep my bokashi bin?

Indoors is ideal - under the kitchen counter or next to the bin is perfect. The fermentation microorganisms work best around 20°C, so avoid direct sunlight and cold spots. Keep two bins on rotation: one filling up while the other completes its fermentation cycle.

What is bokashi tea and what do I do with it?

Bokashi tea (also called bokashi juice or liquid gold) is the nutrient-rich liquid that drains from your bin during fermentation. Drain it every few days via the spigot. Diluted at around 1:100 with water, it makes an exceptional liquid fertiliser for houseplants and garden beds. Undiluted, you can pour it down drains the beneficial microbes help break down pipe residue.

What happens after the fermentation period is done?

Once your bin has fermented for 2 weeks, the food waste though still recognisable will be thoroughly pickled. Bury it in a shallow trench in your garden, add it to a compost heap, or use a soil factory. Within 2 more weeks the microbes will integrate into the soil food web and the pre-compost will be fully transformed. Keep fresh plant roots away from the burial site during this final phase, as it's still quite acidic.