10 kitchen swaps — a short introduction to this piece.
10 kitchen swaps: Quick Notes
This past year, I made it my crusade to cut way back on plastic in our home, starting in the kitchen—where convenience had long disguised itself as necessity. I grew up in the swell of plastic: the microwave trays, the cling film, the bottled water. It was the language of modern living. But as evidence mounts on plastics and microplastics and their effect on human health, it’s impossible to ignore. Studies now link hormone-disrupting chemicals like BPA and phthalates to fertility issues, developmental disorders, and chronic disease. And even if the science is still evolving, the finding that the average person consumes the equivalent of a credit card’s worth of plastic each week is unforgettable.
In recent decades, plastic has become inseparable from the kitchen and grocery. Our stores are full of clamshell containers, shrink-wrapped produce, and shelves lined with plastic bottles—but it wasn’t always this way. Markets once relied on glass jars, paper wrapping, and aluminum. Plastic dominates today not because it’s essential, but because it’s subsidized—propped up by convenience, tax breaks, and a system built on disposability. That system, too, has entered the home kitchen over time.
The good news: Our kitchens are full of easy upgrades made from safe and durable materials—glass, cotton, stainless steel, and wood. It’s been the Remodelista ethos from the beginning: simplicity, longevity, and design built to last. Here are 10 considered swaps—beautiful, functional, and enduring—to help eliminate plastic from the place it matters most.
1. Plastic Wrap -> Beeswax or Plant-Wax Wraps
Quit your cling film habit and reach instead for beeswax or plant-wax wraps. They breathe, seal, and fully compost rather than slowly leaching chemicals into the food wrapped within. Research shows that thin plastic wraps—especially older PVC-based films—contain plasticizers like DEHA or phthalates that migrate into fatty foods (such as cheese, avocado, and oil-rich foods). Here, the heat and lipid content act as a solvent. By contrast, a well-made waxed cloth wrap provides a low-risk, protective layer that reduces oxidation and preserves flavor.
2. Plastic Lunch Boxes -> Glass or Stainless Steel Containers
Recent lab studies have documented that microplastics and phthalates migrate from plastic containers into food—particularly under heat (for example, a bowl of warm grains), fat or ethanol content (avocados and fruits, for instance), or prolonged storage. Stainless steel lunch boxes and to-go containers are essentially passive: they won’t leach microplastics or additives and stand up to both temperature extremes and time.

3. Plastic Produce Bags -> Fabric Produce and Bulk Bags
Bring an arsenal of cotton or linen produce and bulk bags for each grocery haul. This forward-thinking move eliminates that extra layer of single-use plastic and replaces it with something washable and built to last. Lightweight mesh cotton keeps greens relatively crisp, and tight-weave bags contain bulk grains and flour. You can then decant these into glass once home for refrigerator and pantry storage. A single set of bags can prevent hundreds of flimsy plastic bags from entering circulation each year.

4. Plastic Refrigerator Bins -> Glass Jars and Containers
Trade cloudy plastic bins or restaurant-style tubs for clear glass jars and containers that bring both order and longevity to refrigerator storage. Glass creates an airtight seal that keeps food fresh without degrading or leaching microplastics when exposed to cold or moisture. Unlike plastic, glass won’t stain, warp, or turn cloudy over time—and studies show that even under low-temperature conditions, aging plastics can release microscopic particles.
5. Plastic Utensils -> Wood, Metal, or Silicone Tools
Swap aging plastic tools for wood, stainless steel, or heat-safe silicone—materials that perform better and endure longer. Beyond their tactile and visual appeal, they’re also safer: as The Wall Street Journal recently reported, many black plastic utensils are actually made from recycled electronics and may contain flame-retardant chemicals that leach into food when heated. While the report focuses on black plastics, research shows that chemical migration can occur in many types of plastic utensils, especially when exposed to heat or acidity.
10 kitchen swaps appears here to highlight key ideas for readers.













