To decant or not to decant, that is the question
March 26, 2024 by DarcieVisit any home organization website, and you will see tips on how to maximize your existing cabinets and shelves by placing your dry goods into neat and tidy clear containers, ideally of the same size and shape. Most of these containers are plastic, so you are basically taking your groceries out of one plastic container and putting them into another for aesthetics and to standardize the size. Is it worth the effort to do this? Eater’s Jaya Saxena shares her emphatic reply: no, it isn’t.
While it might make your kitchen or pantry look like it belongs in a magazine, Saxena says that it’s wasteful because so much plastic (up to 95 percent), ends up in a landfill or incinerated. Even if you use glass containers, you are probably still buying the products in a plastic one that would probably work just as well for storage, even if it doesn’t look as pretty.
Saxena also has thoughts about the reasons influencers give for decanting groceries into their neat little containers. While she begrudgingly allows that the practice makes sense for items like flour and other grains that often don’t come in resealable containers, for the most part she thinks the justifications don’t hold up to scrutiny. “Ensuring that each can in your fridge is fitted into a plastic can dispenser next to your orchid and jar of four carrots is not an exercise in sustainable living or efficient design,” says Saxena. The real reason, obviously, is that it looks nice, not that it’s saving room or keeping things fresher.
I consider myself a half-ass decanter. I have blue vintage canning jars that house various beans, flours, and powders like cornstarch because they don’t come in resealable containers. (Okay, okay, the jars look nice too.) Three Cambro-style containers hold large quantities of flour and sugar. And I have my spices in matching glass jars to make my drawers neat and tidy, so I don’t have to dig through 20 jars to find what I need. But I leave everything else in its original bag, box, or jar. As Saxena says, it takes a lot of time to take everything out of its packaging and put it in another container. While it might look a little nicer to have cereals in matching clear containers, at the end of the day it’s still just shredded wheat and Rice Krispies. And I’m not taking pasta out of the box to put it in a jar, the boxes stack just fine. Where do you land on the decanter spectrum?
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