I have a wooden spoon in my kitchen. It's maybe fifteen years old? Twenty? I honestly can't remember. It's worn smooth in all the right places. The handle fits my hand like it was made for me. It's been through every curry, every soup, every burnt caramel disaster I've ever made. And it's still here. Still stirring. Still perfect.
I also have a plastic spatula that I bought three years ago. It's got a melted edge. A weird stain I can't explain. And I'm pretty sure it's slowly degrading into microplastics that are ending up in my food and my body. Great.
So why do we treat the plastic one like it's replaceable and the wooden one like it's forever?
Here's the thing about wood.
It doesn't scratch your pots. It doesn't melt. It doesn't leach weird chemicals into your dinner when it gets too hot. It's naturally antimicrobial... which sounds like a fancy term but basically means bacteria die on it instead of partying on it like they do on plastic. And when it finally, eventually, after decades of loyal service, reaches the end of its life? It goes back to the earth. No landfill. No ocean. Just dirt.
But we treat it like garbage.
We let it sit in water overnight. We throw it in the dishwasher like it's invincible. We don't oil it, and then we're shocked when it cracks. And instead of fixing it, we toss it and buy another cheap one.
The wood isn't the problem here.
I used to be the worst at this.
I'd cook something. Leave the spoon in the sink. Let it soak. Come back the next morning to find it looking pale and sad and splintered. And I'd think, "well, guess I need a new one."
But then I started reading about how to actually care for wood. And it changed everything.
I wash my spoons by hand now. Warm water, soap, a quick scrub. That's it. No soaking. No dishwasher. I dry them immediately. And once a month, I rub a little oil into them... just mineral oil. Takes two minutes. I do it while I'm waiting for the kettle to boil. It's not a chore. It's actually kind of satisfying.
And my spoons stopped cracking. Stopped drying out. Started looking like they did when I first bought them. It felt like magic, but it wasn't magic. It was just basic care.
The bigger picture.
I'm not saying a wooden spoon is going to save the planet by itself. But here's what I am saying: the most sustainable thing you can do is use what you already have for as long as you possibly can.
Every plastic utensil you never buy is a win. Every wooden spoon you don't throw away is a win. Every time you oil instead of replace, you're making a choice that says "I'm in this for the long haul."
You don't need a new kitchen. You don't need to be a zero-waste guru. You just need to look at what's already in your drawer and give it a little bit of love.
So here's my challenge to you.
Go look at your wooden utensils. If they're dry or cracked, don't throw them out. Sand them lightly. Oil them. See what happens. If they're in good shape, great! Keep them that way.
If you're buying new, choose wood. Choose something that will last. Something you can hand down to your kids or your friends or your future self.
And if you've got plastic utensils that are falling apart? Let them go. But don't replace them with more plastic. Replace them with wood. And then take care of them.
Because a well-loved wooden spoon is a beautiful thing.
It holds history. It holds meals. It holds the memory of every stir, every taste, every disaster that turned into dinner.
That's not just a utensil. That's a companion.
And it deserves better than the sink.
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