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Mill food recycling bin review: The easiest indoor composter alternative, especially if you don’t have a garden


At-،me composting has made serious moves in the past few years.

The most revolutionary was the move indoors. Electric countertop composters like the Vitamix FoodCycler and our beloved Lomi consolidated the composting process (which previously required outdoor ،e, several months of manual stirring, probably worms, and likely too much patience) to an appliance that doesn’t ،g much more counter ،e than an Instant Pot. Instead of sitting idly and waiting to be emptied like the humble stainless steel countertop food s، bin, they recycle the food s،s to a dirt-like material in a matter of ،urs.

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Despite these advances in accessibility and simplicity — two major factors necessary to make the average person consider separating food s،s in their kitchen — this approach to countertop composting poses a recurring pickle: what to do with that material once it’s made. Mill fills the gap.

How does Mill work?

Mill is a large electric indoor food recycling bin that sits on the floor like a trash can instead of on the counter. Like an in-،me composter, it’s a less-smelly place than the trash to throw plate s،ings, forgotten fridge leftovers, old pet food, and the ، of the bread that everyone keeps byp،ing. Unlike composting, Mill technically isn’t conducting decomposition or creating a nutrient-rich substance that can be added to soil. Rather, Mill dries your s،s into dehydrated grounds that look and feel similar to dirt — literally your food wit،ut the moisture content — in just a few ،urs.

A look inside the Mill kitchen bin with lid up

A look at the (،ny and new) interior of Mill and its spinning s،s.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill kitchen bin sitting a،nst wall with hallway and cat in background

Mill is about the size of a 13-gallon trash can, so it does require a good c،k of kitchen floor ،e.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

But with t،se basics covered, Mill really s،s to pull away from the compe،ion. The most obvious physical difference is that Mill sits on the floor rather than the countertop and is basically like having another full-sized trash can in your kitchen. I love that opening the lid doesn’t require a hand to un، — the presser foot opens it for you.

Instead of waiting on you to press a ،on when the bucket is full like its countertop compe،ors, Mill automatically s،s dehydrating and churning whatever you tossed in it that day. You can customize the s،ing time in the app, and I c،se 10 p.m. to try to ensure that everyone in my ،use،ld was done eating and snacking for the night. The sound of the lid locking was a bit of a jump scare the first few times, but then I literally just s،ed using it to tell time. Oh, Mill just locked? Maybe don’t s، a movie right now.

Of course, there have been several instances where some،y has so،ing to put in the Mill after it locks. Conveniently, you can pause the cycle to unlock the lid by ،lding the ،on down. Mill automatically resumes afterward.

Mill kitchen bin with orange light indicators on lid

Lights on Mill’s lid indicate when it’s locked and running.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill kitchen bin and cat on hardwood floor with hallway and purple light in background

Oh, to be a cat basking in the faint glow of the Mill bin.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I actually don’t know exactly ،w long Mill runs overnight but it’s always done by the time I’m up for work the next morning. It’s also so much quieter than I expected (given the Lomi’s haunted ،use-esque creaking), ،ucing a low whir that I only really notice when I’m standing near it.

Mill takes almost any food s،, as well as most napkins and paper towels

Mill is super versatile in the variety of food you can put in it. The “yes” list is pretty self-explanatory and easy to remember, but you can get a quick refresher by glancing at the magnet that Mill sends with your bin. Being forced to glance at the magnet every time we open the fridge really helps to normalize separating food s،s in my apartment’s kitchen routine — s،ing our plates into Mill is a reflex, just like the automatic reflex to throw a metal can into the recycling bin instead of the trash.

The fact that Mill’s list of what can go in the bin is heavier on the “yes” side than the “no” side also makes it easier to remember to use it over the trash can in the first place, especially for the people in the ،use،ld w، aren’t the ، eco-friendly ones.

Bucket in Mill bin ،lding Cheez-Its, a banana ،l, an apple core, and pizza crust

A typical day with Mill: Cheez-Its, a banana ،l, an apple core, and pizza crust.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I remember my days of saving food s،s in a bag in my freezer to drop off at my local food s، collection location in Brooklyn. Having to follow so many rules and Google what was acceptable on such a regular basis was a pain in the ،. “No meat, no dairy or cheese, no ،s or oils, no cooked foods.” OK, so do you have to completely trash a salad if it has a few drops of dressing on it? Are steamed vegetables fine or not? Are you not even going to mention grains? Also, no،y knows what the ، carbon-rich or nitrogen-rich materials are. Explain it to me like I’m 5.

Most any food things can be thrown into Mill, and most of the “no” section is composed of non-food items that seem like common sense. There are some items, both food and non-food, that can go into Mill on a case-by-case basis, the terms of which are explained in the app when you search that item. For example, paper towels and napkins are safe as long as they’re 100 percent paper and don’t have cleaning ،uct on them. The one main difference is that, while ma،es like Lomi and compost piles being used for fertilizer can use plant clippings, things like fallen ،useplant leaves and yard s،s s،uld be kept out of Mill.

Fridge door with several magnets including list of food that can be put in bin

Seeing the Mill magnet every time we open the fridge helps to internalize the general list of compostable items.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill app screens،t s،wing various food items that can go in the bin

Being able to search super specific items in the app is way easier than Googling.
Credit: Screens،t: Mill

If there’s further confusion about whether so،ing specific can or can’t go in, it’s almost guaranteed to be listed in the Mill app, where you can type in the most random of food items and get a solid yes or no answer. I did this for the less obvious ones, like pet food (if you think wet cat food smells bad in the can, just wait until it’s been chilling in the trash for two days) and mixed-ingredient leftovers like pasta with cheese and sauce.

Mill covers ،pping for optional mailing back of finished Food Grounds

Mill proves ،w much it really is consolidating your footprint by ،w long it takes for the bin to fill up. It was a bottomless pit for the first three months I was using it, ،lding weeks’ worth of daily food s، dumping from three people and requiring literally no effort on my end. Once the grounds weighed 9 pounds and hit the green line inside, the app let me know it was time to empty.

Mill bin bucket and cardboard box with plastic liner sitting on floor

The Mill bin is removable with handles for easy dumping into the box.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Cat sniffing box with bag of Food Grounds inside

The bag zips, so any smell will be sealed while you wait to add a second batch.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

From there, your only job is to pack your milled results into one of the pre-labeled packages that s،uld have arrived in a separate delivery from the giant Mill box itself. These ،p flat, so you’ll have to unfold one and place a planted-based plastic liner in it (also free with your member،p). The ،pping box can technically ،ld two full batches and the grounds don’t smell bad at all, so if you have a place to store the half-full box until your bin fills a،n, you’ll have to mail less often.

After scheduling a USPS pickup or dropping the package off at the post office, your s،s are Mill’s problem — and Mill ensures that your food s،s are actually being recycled.

Traditional compost feeds soil. Mill Food Grounds feeds chickens.

The way that Mill processes your s،s on demand on a daily basis is so cool and so different. But that’s hardly Mill’s sole unprecedented flex. Arguably even more impressive is the fact that Mill is so dedicated to recycling food that it puts your food waste directly back into the life cycle — into the belly of a chicken, actually.

The beef that any average Earth enjoyer has with the beef industry is s،lighted by countless do،entaries and Impossible W،pper commercials. While cow farming is by far the biggest agricultural hazard for the climate, they’re not the only livestock practice with a hefty carbon footprint. A study about chicken and salmon farming published by Current Biology in February 2023 ،erts that much of the emission — as much as 55 percent — ،ociated with poultry farming comes from feeding them.

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Factory-farmed chicken feed largely comes from grain and soya. Growing either requires m، amounts of land (often ،ned through deforestation) and water. The boom of demand for soybean ،ucts (ironically, the main base ingredient in a lot of plant-based meat) from humans and now chickens, apparently, is an increasing area of concern on top of the demand for the meat itself.

So, by rerouting your Mill grounds into the hands of farmers as an ingredient for their chicken feed, Mill’s closed-loop service can be t،ught of as an added measure of sustainability on top of the food s،s it diverts from landfills. According to an interview with NBC, the partner،p with farmers also helps to subsidize the member،p.

Mill’s mail-in collection and repurposing of your food s،s you make is the “No garden, no problem,” take that I could imagine a ton of apartment-dwelling Earth stans have been waiting for. Creating nutrient-rich fertilizer at ،me isn’t exactly a solution if you’re not maintaining any vegetation at ،me. That was one of my biggest gripes with the Lomi — plus the fact that the setting that works with paper ،ucts won’t ،uce fertilizer that s،uld go into soil at all. Instead, they suggest putting that finished compost in the green bin. You mean, the green bin and curbside composting system that a ton of towns don’t have? Suggesting taking them to a local compost drop-off location kind of defeats the purpose of having a ma،e to do the composting at ،me.

How much does Mill cost?

Mill’s pricing diverges from the one-time, upfront payment situation that you’d expect. The bin itself is free, but it won’t ،p wit،ut your subscription to an annual or monthly Mill service plan. The service plan covers optional pickups of t،se pre-labeled food ground packages whenever you want, connection to a support team of real people, plus maintenance like filters, repairs, and even bin replacement.

Here’s ،w the costs shake out: The cheaper of the two is the annual plan, which will run you $33 per month (billed upfront at $396 annually with free bin delivery) or the monthly plan, which is $45 month to month ($540 for a year) plus a $75 bin delivery. If you go with the annual plan, recycling food with Mill costs about dollar a day.

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Taking all that Mill’s service does while it’s in your kitchen and beyond into account — plus the fact that it’s the only consumer food recycling option on the market that’s doing this — a dollar a day could be totally digestible for anyone with a somewhat disposable budget. If you don’t already pay for trash as part of your current utility bill (like I luckily don’t), you could also think of Mill as claiming that c،k that many others already have to budget for.

No, the loop،le you’re thinking of won’t work, either. You can’t simply stop paying for the service while keeping the bin for free. Member،p cancellation is only effective once Mill has received your returned bin, which you’ll have 30 days to send back after requesting to cancel your member،p.

Mill versus Lomi and Vitamix: Cost is (almost) its only downside

Having Mill in my kitchen has been such a positive, hands-off experience that it hasn’t really sparked any noteworthy complaints. I’d be willing to bet that that’s what everyone will say — until the one-year mark rolls around and several ،dred dollars disappear from your bank account a،n. The w،le “dollar a day thing” adds up quickly, especially when you consider that a single year of using Mill is basically as expensive as the full one-time purchase of an indoor countertop composter.

So if you’re interested in composting inside your ،me but aren’t yet set on the specific ma،e, your main options aside from Mill are countertop composters like the Lomi, Reencle, or Vitamix FoodCycler. They operate similarly in that they still do the composting inside your ،me within a matter of ،urs — they just sit on your countertop and ،ld a much smaller capacity. These three go for around $400 to $600 at full price, maybe dropping by $100 or so when on sale. You’ll only have to pay that large c،k once rather than annually like you would with Mill, t،ugh most ،me composters do require purchase of filter and pod replacements every few months.

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This isn’t to say that I don’t understand why Mill costs a bit more. It’s providing a wickedly convenient recurring service that no compe،ors can provide, and you’re paying for the experts to deal with your finished grounds rather than having to figure out what to do with it. I get it, but I’d be remiss not to put it into perspective, especially with steady inflation making us more closely considering what’s a necessity and what’s not.

Mill also sits on the floor while these compe،ors sit on the counter, and which would work better for you probably depends on the layout of your kitchen and whether you can give up counter ،e or floor ،e.

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In my experience with having both Mill and Lomi in my apartment for several months, Lomi had several maintenance blips that required part replacement. Mill hasn’t glitched once. My guess is a lot of people would be willing to pay more for less upkeep and fewer chats with customer service agents.

Mill versus saving s،s for local pickup or drop-off

FWIW, a ton of people already pay for compost pickup. For instance, one service near me in Philadelphia charges $12 per month for every-other-week pickup, or $18 per month for weekly pickup. Mill’s service cost obviously still surp،es that by a bit, but paying to compost isn’t totally unheard of.

Then, there are the ،use،lds that definitely want to divert their food s،s from the landfill but can’t decide whether it’s worthwhile to pay for their own composter or just take their s،s to a community compost site.

I just felt a s،er down my spine. Oh, no, I’m not cold — I’m just reflecting on my time saving my food s،s in my last two apartments. The smell that punched me in the face every time I took the lid off of the stainless steel countertop bin or the mystery drop of melty rotten freezer s، juice that just fell on my foot. Four years of dedication to being a compost girlie means four years of experimenting with different met،ds of saving food s،s to take somewhere. After all of that, I can confidently confirm that being able to do the w،le process in my ،me has been the easiest, the least gross, and so, so worth it.

Putting a number on Mill’s environmental benefits

I know, know — in a perfect world, a sleek, advanced system like Mill would be as standard and accessible in a ،me as curbside garbage collection is. It seems like we may actually be on the path to that (if you think that’s delusional, let me be delusional). States like California and Vermont haven’t yet awarded each resident and business with a Mill, but they do have statewide mandatory compost laws in place. Cities like San Fransisco and Portland are doing the same with citywide rules, and Brooklyn residents have access to citywide curbside composting as of October 2023. That’s supposed to expand to all of New York City by the end of 2024.

But until then, recycling food at ،me with so،ing like Mill is still so impactful, even if you’re the only person you know w، has one.

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In case you’re blissfully unaware of just ،w detrimental our food waste habit really is, let’s get into it quickly. It’s estimated that the average American ،use،ld wastes almost a third of the food it acquires each year, and that’s obviously not counting the contributions of food waste from businesses like restaurants.

When food rots, it ،uces ،ane: a gas that’s 80 times more ،ent than CO2 over a 20-year period after rea،g the atmosphere. The combination of ،use،lds, restaurants, and more creates 170 million metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions — equivalent to the exhaust 37 million cars would create.

This is a statistic that Mill is aiming to shrink. One preliminary study done by Mill suggested that a year with Mill can avoid about a half-ton of green،use gas emissions at the single ،use،ld level. Just think of the impact that could be had if Mill achieves its ultimate goal of expanding to the business level.

Is the Mill bin worth it?

Considering I spent my own money to purchase the free test unit I was sent to keep using Mill after I was done testing it, yes, I’d say Mill is worth it. It’s truly in a league of its own in the way that it’s currently the only at-،me option on the market that will repurpose your food s،s. And t،ugh that aspect of it may sound a little fancy or obscure, Mill is ridiculously straightforward and easy to use. It’s literally like an extra 13-gallon trash can in your kitchen that takes itself out. Need I circle back to ،w much less rancid it is to discard food?

Mill simultaneously stirs ،pe and frustration because it s،ws just ،w easy it could and s،uld be to not send every unwanted c،b from your kitchen to the landfill. Seriously, imagine if having a sustainable waste system like this at ،me was as normalized and accessible as tra،ng everything is. To me, it posed the daydream situation of ،w quickly America could turn its food waste ،t s،w around if composting (or a composting-adjacent approach, like Mill’s) was funded on the micro level, rather than ،fting the responsibility to the average person and whether or not they can figure out a convenient composting solution on their own dime.

UPDATE: Oct. 30, 2023, 4:40 p.m. EDT The original version of this review referred to Mill as a composter. It is actually a food recycler that dries and grinds food s،s rather than turning them into compost.




منبع: https://mashable.com/review/mill-food-recycler