I've seen some discussions on bokashi, but can't think of any threads that just start with the very basics. So this is an intro.
TABLE OF CONTENTS (CLICKABLE LINKS)
Part 1: What is Bokashi
Part 2: How can bokashi help me? What does it do or not do, compared to other types of composting?
Part 3: How to make bokashi compost.
Part 4: using bokashi compost
Bokashi at work in a container
Johnnybsmokin's nice bokashi buckets for cheap
What is Bokashi?
According to Wikipedia, Bokashi is a Japanese word meaning
The meaning of concern to the gardener, of course, is bokashi composting. Composting is many things to many people. Some have a very strict definition, while others use the word more generally. I am of the general persuasion, so I define composting as putting together a composite of ingredients, usually scraps in my case, to stabilize those scraps in a state that is useful for improving soil fertility. Or in the case of bokashi compost, I can also use it to feed animals (my dogs love it) like my worm bin, which I consider a sort of pet.
Bokashi compost is a composite, or compost, that I put through acid fermentation, which is the same process that gives us yogurt , sauerkraut, and a similar product called silage, which you may have heard of. These are all acid fermentation by a group of bacteria called lactobacillus. Unlike silage, which is also fermented, bokashi uses a strong inoculant, in my case bran that has itself been soaked in a weak molasses and water mixture, fermented, then dried. Mixing the bran throughout the composed scraps allows the home user to make properly fermented bokashi compost without worrying too much about letting air into the system. Because so many of the lactobacillus bacteria are present in the mashed together food, and because they have so much to eat, they wake up and multiply like crazy, and make it impossible for anyone nasty or any decomposers to move in, even if there is quite a bit of oxygen.
Wikipedia describes various methods of bokashi composting, not just the one commonly used outside Japan, by people employing a product called "Effective Microbes", or EM.
You can make it in an uncovered pile of manure, in a bin, whatever. The inoculant you use puts the power of dominant organisms in your hands. In this thread I will just focus on the common method of making bokashi in North America. Enter the bokashi bucket
[/IMG]
Coming up next: How can bokashi help me? What does it do or not do, compared to other types of composting?
TABLE OF CONTENTS (CLICKABLE LINKS)
Part 1: What is Bokashi
Part 2: How can bokashi help me? What does it do or not do, compared to other types of composting?
Part 3: How to make bokashi compost.
Part 4: using bokashi compost
Bokashi at work in a container
Johnnybsmokin's nice bokashi buckets for cheap
What is Bokashi?
According to Wikipedia, Bokashi is a Japanese word meaning
"shading off, gradation"[1]. It may refer to:
Bokashi (printing), a printing technique
Bokashi, blurring an image as a form of censorship
Bokashi composting
The meaning of concern to the gardener, of course, is bokashi composting. Composting is many things to many people. Some have a very strict definition, while others use the word more generally. I am of the general persuasion, so I define composting as putting together a composite of ingredients, usually scraps in my case, to stabilize those scraps in a state that is useful for improving soil fertility. Or in the case of bokashi compost, I can also use it to feed animals (my dogs love it) like my worm bin, which I consider a sort of pet.
Bokashi compost is a composite, or compost, that I put through acid fermentation, which is the same process that gives us yogurt , sauerkraut, and a similar product called silage, which you may have heard of. These are all acid fermentation by a group of bacteria called lactobacillus. Unlike silage, which is also fermented, bokashi uses a strong inoculant, in my case bran that has itself been soaked in a weak molasses and water mixture, fermented, then dried. Mixing the bran throughout the composed scraps allows the home user to make properly fermented bokashi compost without worrying too much about letting air into the system. Because so many of the lactobacillus bacteria are present in the mashed together food, and because they have so much to eat, they wake up and multiply like crazy, and make it impossible for anyone nasty or any decomposers to move in, even if there is quite a bit of oxygen.
Wikipedia describes various methods of bokashi composting, not just the one commonly used outside Japan, by people employing a product called "Effective Microbes", or EM.
However, Bokashi can be made by inoculating any organic matter with a variety of hosts of beneficial bacteria/microbes. This includes manures, spent mushroom compost, mushroom spores, worm-casting tea, forest soil tea, yeast, pickles, sake, miso, natto, wine and beer. Molasses feeds the microbial cultures as they inoculate the organic matter.
You can make it in an uncovered pile of manure, in a bin, whatever. The inoculant you use puts the power of dominant organisms in your hands. In this thread I will just focus on the common method of making bokashi in North America. Enter the bokashi bucket
Coming up next: How can bokashi help me? What does it do or not do, compared to other types of composting?
Last edited: