- [Ben] We are sorted. A group of mates from London, exploring the newest and
best in the world of food, whilst trying to have a
few laughs along the way. (laughs) We've got chefs, we've got normals, (beeps) and a whole world of
stuff for you to explore but everything we do starts with you. (upbeat guitar music) Hello, I'm Jamie, this is
Ben, and this is Fridge Camp. And today, we're digging in on the topic of single-use plastics
within the food industry. - Hashtag clickbyte. - And I have managed to
get hold of a few samples. I'm gonna put them to tests. Are they any good or not? - (whispers) Probably not, but maybe. (inquisitive music) - Big topic here. We've got lots of plastic
replacement products we want you to review and
give your thoughts on. You might notice that you
actually had two cloches. The first revealing the item. It will not be made of plastic. The second will reveal what the plastic has been substituted with, and what the product is made out of, and we'd like you to guess. See if you can work it out. Would you like to lift
the cloche on your right? - (laughs) - Good job there. - It's a massive plastic glove. - It's a plastic glove. - [Mike] Is it? - [Ben] Usually, single-use plastic used in food service
industry, perhaps at home, if you don't wanna get spice or chili or beetroot over things, and within the medical industry as well, but we're looking at kitchens. It's created by a company called "Vegware" and they make bio-plastics. - Well, as it's well-known,
using plastic gloves is less hygienic than using hands. - Sorry, what? How? - 'Cause people tend to
wash their hands less when they're using gloves,
'cause they don't realize that they've got sticky
stuff on their hands. It's just on the gloves. - Interesting! - Usually, I like my
gloves a little tighter. - What I can say is it's very
tight on my middle finger. I didn't realize I had
such a big middle finger. (laughs) - It's 'cause it's one you exercise most. (laughs) - It acts a lot like plastic. - I mean in all honesty,
that looks and feels like a plastic glove. - I'm gonna take a stab,
considering you've told me what the company's called, that
it's made out of vegetables. - Lift the cloche. - [Ben] That is representative
of the ingredients in it. So, sugarcane, corn starch
and other vegetable matter to produce bio-plastics
that are compostable. - Okay. - [Mike] What I like about it is all the heads of the spring
onions that you don't use would go onto a compost heap. Well, they'd just taken the compost heap, and turn them into gloves, which then, after you've used them,
can go on the compost heap. - Yeah, that's nice, isn't it? Nice circle. (clinks) - That was quite dangerous. - So, it's compostable P.L.A.
material, polylactic acid, different from most
thermal plastic polymers, and it is derived from
renewable resources, rather than non-renewable
petroleum reserves. So, it is bio-plastic. - It hasn't dissolved. - My hand is nice and clean. - It does do what it claims to do, right? - It does, yes, it does
do what it claims to do. - [Ben] Same company, Vegware,
also make those compostable steel from bio-plastic, vegetable matter, and they're very sturdy hot-and-cold use. - That's more impressive, because I hate, I hate wooden cutlery. - Sometimes eating off
wood isn't the nicest. - No.
- It does impart flavor. - Yeah, you're right,
these feel really sturdy. Does it cost twenty pounds per glove? - So, I've got a box here of
powdered blue vinyl gloves, about three P a glove. - Three pence per glove, okay. - The ones you're holding there
are 103 pounds for a case. You get 2400, which makes
them four pence per glove. A penny more or 30% more, 33% more? - Yeah.
- Everything's relative. - I'm sure people would work
within their budget, surely, one penny extra. - To an industrial
scale, this is something that's actually really cool to know about. (relaxing guitar music) - Straw, oh! - [Jamie] Can I work out
if they're chopsticks or straws, or both? (gasps) Now, that is an invention. - Chop-straws! - [Ben] Two different straws,
two different materials. If it helps you, I've
got you a gin and tonic, and a smoothie, if you want
to give any of them a go. - Excellent. This one seems bamboo-y. - It's not bamboo. - I think I know what this is. Is this a pasta straw? - You don't know what that is. - This one is a little
more papery, I don't know. I just find drinking out of that weird. It looks really organic. - The two you have in front of you are both compostable, and biodegradable. So, yeah, we know that
plastic straws are the enemy. We know there's lots of
other versions that perhaps include glass or metal or
bamboo, that are reusable, but there's the problem of
having to clean them each time. These are single-use. - I've not been in a bar that served plastic straw for a while. - What are you being served instead then? - Paper. - [Mike] Okay. (vomits) - [Mike] Metal? - Paper's awful, yeah,
couple of metal one. - Tried metal straws. - [Mike] Don't like them, I-- - I don't know, you get
a very metallic taste. - Yeah, and nails a ting of your teeth. - Yeah, it's not good. - Metal straws are a nightmare
because you can't tell if they're actually clean on the inside, so they're causing health
and safety problems, 'cause they're not hygienic, 'cause although they might've had a little brush up the (whistles), they're not necessarily entirely clean. (laughs) - A brush up the (whistles) (laughs) That was an unnecessary (whistles) (laughs) You didn't need to
(whistles) there at all. - [Ben] An awful lot of apples
are juiced for apple juice, and once you've got rid of the juice for apple juice or cider,
you're left with stuff. And that stuff can be turned into that. - They also say that that is edible. It softens over time, but that you can still use it as a straw, but that it should taste
sour and sweet, like apple. - The other one, the paler one you see is made from avocado stones. The company that make
them, based in Mexico, use 15 tons of avocado stones a day, that is otherwise agricultural waste. - That's decent. - I've always wondered what you could do with avocado stones. - And to be fair, these new
companies are very secretive about their methods for obvious reasons. However, they talk about the
positives of what they do use, not necessarily how they do
it, but it is compostable. Do you think the organic nature of it is a positive selling point? - I think the avocado one is more so because it just feels
more like a plastic straw. It's like the solution to the problem, rather than like the interim of paper. - You know what? The biggest difference
that you could make. Teaching people how to drink from a glass. - Does beg the question. (laughs) What do we even need straws? - Do we?
- There's a few people who need them 'cause they have medical,
life-changing conditions, that mean a straw is necessary. - [Mike] Absolutely. - Maybe we should all just stop sucking, and start sipping. - Do you really care? - Yeah. Yeah, I would care enough
to buy avocado stone straws over plastic straws, even
though it's gonna cost a little bit more cash. - [Ben] Apple fiber straws. They're currently selling a
box of 500 for about 39 quid, which makes them eight pence a straw. - Okay. - [Ben] Avocado stone
straws, eight pound 99 for a box of 150, that makes
them six pence a straw. - It's a pass for me. (upbeat drumming) - [Mike] Go for it, mate. (lips smacking) - [Jamie] What is that? I have absolutely no idea. - It's something to keep things fresh. - [Mike] How did you know that? - 'Cause it says "Keep
it fresh, keep it fresh, "keep it fresh". - [Ben] What do you
think it's made out of? - Something, and then bees wax. It's an alternative to cling film. - Oh, it's clammy. - [Ben] Just out of interest, how often do you stroke cling film? - Quite often, 'cause
you have to stroke it when you put it on things. So, yeah, actually, most days. (laughs) - That's the finger being used. - That's why your middle finger's so big! (laughs) - [Ben] It's called among
other things a "bread wrap". So, it's perfect for wrapping
up bread to keep it fresh, rather than cling film. Instruction for use. The warmth from your hand will begin to soften the
material and help to seal it in, cling it in. - It was more satisfying
than I expected it, like it sticks to itself a little bit. Yeah, actually for wrapping
bread, it seems quite good. What else would you wrap? - Whoever cling-film the bottom of a bowl? - [James] What are you doing? - I can't put it on the
other side of the bowl, 'cause it'll give away what it's made of. Lasagna sheets. (laughs) - It works, yeah. - [Ben] You had a good guess at bees wax. It is made from 100% organic cotton, the kind of the resin
and the stickiness comes from pine resin, sumac wax, sunflower wax, rice bran wax and other things. It is soy- and palm oil-free
and is a vegan bread wrap. One other thing to consider,
don't use it to wrap hot food. And if you're washing it,
wash it in cold, soapy water, not hot, soapy water. - I like the idea of this, actually. I like the idea of replacing cling film with something that's reusable. - Doesn't feel to me like a multi-use
alternative to cling film, where you're gonna use
it on different things at different points. - Salads at a family barbecue, you might have five on a table. - Yeah. - You'd need five--
- Need five wraps. - How much do you reckon the wrap is, J? - Oh! - A fiver? - Five pounds. - J, that food wrap is 16 pounds. - Whoa! Okay. - That's a lot. That's a lot of cling film. At sorted it would cost
like hundreds of pounds to kit your kitchen out with this. - So, is that the barrier in,
and therefore, is this a "No"? - I would just like one that doesn't have nice writing
on it, and that isn't vegan, and that's five pounds. - I like these products
that are compostable, and throw-away-able with
your other food waste. I like that because people
are inherently lazy, and that's something that these companies have aimed to solve. (brass music) - Go ahead, buddy! - Po po! Oh! Is it a washing up brush? - It's a scouring pad. - [Ben] Many of your washing
up materials are plastic, obviously you want something that's durable in hot, soapy water, that isn't gonna dissolve,
and needs to be long-lasting. That is an alternative. What do you think? - It seems all right! - If it's not plastic, what is it? - The tail of a beaver. - I think the handle's
definitely made of wood. - Not lasagna? - Not lasagna sheets, (laughs) - It's got some metal in it. - It's hard bristles. - I have no idea what the bristles are. I feel like I should know-- - You mean like that's a
shoe brush or something? - Yeah, I didn't wanna say shoe brush, 'cause it makes me sound posh, but it reminds me of shoe brushes outside of a country house. Damn it! - To scrape your wellies
before you go in kind of thing? - Yeah, exactly, yeah. - I think it's a twig. (laughs) - Bamboo! (laughs) And that's grass, isn't it? (laughs) Well, lift the cloche. This is an Australian brand, EcoCoconut, and it's made ethically in Sri Lanka from sustainable farmed coconut fiber, and then, wrapped around
stainless steel wire, importantly, removes leftover residue including the stubborn ones. Non-scratch, no plastic or
toxic chemicals, sustainable, naturally anti-bacterial and toxin-free, biodegradable, stroke, recyclable. Basically, they have won a
number of sustainability awards for their work. - It's come all the way from Australia? I sound like a real prick
when I say things like that. It is part of the bigger conversation, 'cause you find yourself
in this murky, murky world of actually like, from
a lifelong perspective, how much more eco-friendly is that? - But if you've got a startup, and you're approaching the
problem from that perspective, you're not gonna bother
trying to innovate, and sometimes we need the
mavericks to innovate something, yeah, they just happen to be in Australia, but if this is brilliant and it works, and it solves the problem,
then it will get replicated all over the world. How much? - Genuinely, I think it should, like, if it was a fiver, it'd
probably be quite good? - Seven dollars, that's
not far off a fiver. - [James] Oh, it's a fiver. I would never have known about it, unless you put it in front of me though, like I wouldn't actively
search out an alternative to what I'm used to because I didn't really see
a problem with it until now. - Isn't it interesting how plastic straws become a conversation, which you might go to a
bar once or twice a week, and use plastic straws, but the plastic that you probably use once
or twice in your sink, - Go unnoticed. - people don't necessarily consider? - [Mike] So, when it comes to it, what are you not willing to compromise on, with a plastic replacement? - I haven't found that I'm
not willing to compromise on anything, 'cause I
don't really have a choice, like if I go to a bar, and
they serve paper straws, it's that, or no straw, so
it's not what I'm willing to compromise on, it's like, what I have to compromise on there. - Functionality. Everything has been about
making things better. The hardest is now trying to tell people. That thing that you really love
that's made your life better and easier, and more luxurious and things, we're gonna take that away from you. - I'm willing to compromise in costs, within reason. - For me, products like this, you have to take a step forward, and if you start digging into everything, you're gonna find some pitfalls. However, we need to act and do something. And if you can educate
yourself to the point where you're able to make a decision, which could just be
"I'm no longer gonna buy "a plastic washer-upper,
I'm gonna buy one of these." And if enough people act and do something, no matter how small, there
are seven billion people in the world, that will make a difference. - Yeah. - And if whilst that's
happening, all the protests, and awareness is being raised,
so that the policy makers are making a difference,
you meet in the middle, and then you actually start
to make a big difference. We are the ones that make
the policy makers listen. - Because we essentially
vote them into power, and we buy their products. And if we all start kicking off, they're gonna have to change something. And I feel like that's what we're on the cusp of at
the moment, which is exciting, and that's why as a group of
mates, and with our channel, we should be talking about these things. - Give the video a like, if you enjoy watching
us test these products, and we wanna know your opinions, 'cause this is a massive topic. - We felt that we've
covered a lot of ground, but comment down below,
which of these plastics should we be prioritizing elimination of, or what will or won't you be prepared to compromise on, or do you even care? Comment down below. - Not only that, but we also got proper
stuck into this topic on our podcast, "Feast Your Ears", you can get all the details for that, and how to join the
sorted club downstairs. - But one thing you don't
have to go away for, is "Dadjoke of the week". (giggles) I love the fact that
you're giggling already. You haven't even told me yet. - Went for curry with
a friend the other day, he kept choking every time
he had a bite of rice, turns out he's basmatic. (chuckles) Thank you very much. (laughs) Have a good weekend, everyone, good-bye! - [Mike] As we mentioned, we
don't just make topic quality YouTube videos. - [Jamie] No! - [Mike] We've built the sorted club, where we use the best things we've learnt to create stuff that's
hopefully interesting and useful to other food lovers. Check it out if you're interested. Thank you for watching, and
we'll see you in a few days. (upbeat music) (beeps) - Are we going to be
missing out on the avocados that could be grown that
aren't now being planted? - So, your argument is-- (laughs) - What you're saying-- - If we made straws out of the stones, we're gonna run out of
avocados, and therefore, run out of stones? - That is the same argument to say that every time you eat an apple, do you send the seeds
back to be replanted? (laughs) Farting idiot! - [Mike] This is why
- (laughs) - We have a normal and a chef.