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How to Use Compost in Your Vegetable Garden: Timing, Amounts, and the Compost Tea Question

By Ku · Updated March 2026 · 8 min read Every post on this site so far has been about making compost. Coffee grounds. Eggshells. Banana peels. All the ways to turn kitchen scraps into something useful. This one's different. This is the “now what?” post. You've got a finished pile. Or a worm bin full of castings. Or a bokashi bucket ready to bury. Great. Where does it actually go, how much, and when? Turns out those questions matter more than most people think. I got the timing wrong my first season — planted the same day I dug compost in. My seedlings looked rough for two weeks. Not catastrophic, but not great either. That mistake is easy to avoid once you know the rule. There's also the question of compost tea, which I resisted writing about for a while because the internet is so aggressively wrong about it in both directions. More on that below. What compost actually does (the short version): A 2025 EPA report found that compost can hold up to ...

No Yard, No Problem: Every Way to Compost From an Apartment in 2026

By Ku · Updated March 2026 · 9 min read The average American generates about 4.9 pounds of waste per day — and roughly a third of that is organic material that could be composted instead of landfilled. If you live in an apartment, that number is the same as everyone else's. The food scraps are the same. The coffee grounds are the same. The banana peels are the same. What's different is that composting guides almost always assume you have a backyard. Most of them open with advice about where to put your pile, how big to make it, what to plant near it. If you live in a seventh-floor walkup in Chicago or a studio apartment in Brooklyn, those guides aren't written for you. This one is. There are now more options for apartment composting than at any point in history — from countertop methods that fit under your sink to free city pickup programs that require zero effort beyond separating your scraps. The challenge isn't finding a method. It's finding the on...

Bokashi Composting: The Method That Handles Meat, Dairy, and Cooked Food — No Pile Required

By Ku · Updated March 2026 · 8 min read There's one question that comes up every time I talk about composting: "What about meat and dairy? Can those go in?" The honest answer for regular composting is no — meat, fish, dairy, and cooked food create odor, attract pests, and can introduce pathogens into a backyard pile. I've recommended against them in every composting post on this site. But that answer changes completely with bokashi. Bokashi is the one composting method that handles everything — including the foods that other methods can't touch. Meat scraps, fish bones, leftover pasta, cheese, yogurt, cooked vegetables. All of it goes in, all of it gets processed, and the whole thing happens in a sealed bucket on your kitchen counter with almost no odor and no pest risk. According to a 2025 guide from the North Carolina Cooperative Extension , bokashi is "a simple, odor-free way to compost nearly all kitchen waste — including meat and dairy — r...

Worm Composting for Beginners: How 1,000 Red Wigglers Replaced My Fertilizer Bill

By Ku · Updated March 2026 · 9 min read I'll be honest: the idea of keeping a box of worms in my house was not immediately appealing. When a friend suggested it, I nodded politely and changed the subject. That was two years ago. Today I have a 10-gallon worm bin in my basement, roughly 1,000 red wigglers happily processing my kitchen scraps, and a steady supply of what gardeners call "black gold" — vermicompost that I use on everything from my tomato beds to my houseplants. My fertilizer spending last season: essentially zero. Here's what changed my mind: worm composting isn't gross. It doesn't smell. It doesn't require a yard. And the end product — worm castings — is genuinely superior to most fertilizers you can buy. The University of Illinois Extension notes that worm castings contain 5 to 11 times more plant-available nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium than typical commercial potting soil. This is the guide I wish I'd had before I ...

Compost Not Breaking Down? Run Through This Checklist Before You Give Up

By Ku · Updated March 2026 · 8 min read Six weeks after building my first compost pile, I went outside expecting to find something resembling dark, crumbly soil. What I found instead was a slightly smaller version of the same pile I'd started with. Same leaves. Same vegetable scraps, now a little drier. Nothing had really happened. I was ready to conclude that composting just didn't work in my yard. Then I actually read what the Oregon State University Extension had to say about it, and the problem became obvious within about two minutes: my pile was too small, too dry, and almost entirely brown material with almost no nitrogen source. I had essentially built a very neat pile of slowly drying leaves. Here's the thing about a compost pile that isn't working: it is always breaking down . Everything organic decomposes eventually. What you're actually dealing with is a pile that's breaking down too slowly — weeks or months behind where it...