Design studio Forest and Whale has created Reuse, a container for takeaways made from wheat husks.

The Singapore-based studio, founded by Gustavo Maggio and Wendy Chua, created the container in an attempt to help cut down on the usage of single-use plastic.

Gif of edible salad bowl

The studio’s Reuse container is made from wheat husks.

“The wheat husk is ground into smaller pellets and then, with the addition of a small amount of natural binder and water, pressed within two metal moulds at high temperature,” Maggio told.

“This gives shape to the final container, which is then ready to use.”

Edible salad container

The resulting container can be used to hold any food but is most suitable for salad, as it can’t withstand moisture for too long.

“It can hold a salad with dressing for a couple of hours, but it will slowly start softening and losing rigidity,” Maggio said. “The ideal use is for takeaways, where you eat within two to three hours.”

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The Reuse container is meant to be used only once and can be eaten after it’s been emptied, though Maggio says it’s not the tastiest.

“The closest reference I can think of in terms of taste is bran sticks, but it is not particularly tasty to be honest,” he said.

Edible salad container

The bowl was designed with four small precut lines that enable the user to tear off pieces of the container to use as a tool to eat with.

“The design of this salad bowl came from observing and analysing eating rituals and trying to find the ideal use for this material,” Maggio said.

“In many cultures, salads are accompanied by a slice of bread or breadstick that acts as a tool to help eating and also gives a contrasting texture to the salad ingredient.”

Multiple salad containers made from wheat husks

If the user doesn’t choose to eat the container, it can be placed in a regular composting bin where it will decompose in about 30 days.

The lid for the container is made from polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA), a bacteria-based composite with properties similar to plastic.

“This is not edible, but it can also be composted in regular compost bins, where it will decompose in less than six weeks. It will fully biodegrade in nature and if it were to go into the ocean, it would decompose within three months without leaving microplastic behind”, the studio said.

Forest and Whale is currently prototyping the Reuse container and hopes to bring it to the market this year.

SEE ALSO: VISITORS SHARE THEIR IMPRESSIONS OF VENICE ARCHITECTURE BIENNALE

And you? What do you think about Forest and Whale new container? Leave a comment below!

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