Dinnerware Made from Fallen Leaves
Plasticware are out. It’s about time for all natural, chemical-free, and 100% compostable dinnerware! Each piece adds an one-of-the-kind and stylish touch to your table. These eco-friendly dinnerware all start with collecting fallen leaves from plantations but without ever cutting down any trees. Normally, these leaves would be burned. Instead, they are brought to the factory, sprayed with high pressure water, steamed and UV sterilized, then finally they are turned into beautiful dinnerware.
According to the manufacturer, they recapture over 80% of the water they use. No chemicals, lacquers, glues, bonding agents or anything toxic are ever used. The entire process uses only a fraction of the energy used in recycling.
At the Natural Products Expo East that drew more than 26,000 industry attendees and featured more than 2,100 exhibitors, VerTerra’s stylish, versatile and compostable dinnerware stood out from the crowd, winning the Natural Products Expo East’s 2008 Best New Green/Environmentally-friendly Product Award.
Not a surprise. The VerTerra Dinnerware are:
- All natural, chemical and bleach free
- Non-toxic
- No plastics or waxes
- 100% compostable
- Made of 100% renewable plant material
- Biodegrades naturally in 2 months
- Microwave, oven and refrigerator-safe
- Reusable
“At VerTerra, we are truly thrilled to be recognized by the thousands of natural products store owners and managers who voted us best new eco-product, and we can’t wait to share the news about our dinnerware with the countless Americans eager for new, all natural products,” said Michael Dwork, VerTerra’s CEO and Founder. [VerTerra]

Critique of Michael Dwork, founder of Verterra
By Richard – Murwillumbah, Australia.
I am an occasional reader of Time magazine and stumbled upon a business article by Jeremy Caplan on Verterra Dinnerware in the October 13, 2008 edition (Australian) of Time (page 52). Also at: http://www.time.com/time/speci.....40,00.html
Jeremy Caplan’s article is careful not to over-state or claim. However, it strongly implies that Michael Dwork had an “idea” in southern India in 2006, that Mr Dwork developed his idea with “engineer friends”, “crossed Asia to find plants for his plates”, “through Laos, Thailand and Cambodia”, “testing dozens”, “in search of the perfect leaf” and so on. Before settling on a palm leaf in southern India – wow.
I think it should be known that plates and bowls steam-pressed from the leaf-base (sheath) of the Areca (the so called ‘betel nut’) palm (Areca catechu) have been manufactured in southern India since long before 2006.
Indeed, in 2006, steam-pressed Areca palm plates and bowls were already in Indian city stores and on display at trade expos in southern India, and have been imported into Australia with the name of Eco-Vision Bioplate since 2005 or earlier. Areca plates have also been imported into Germany, Switzerland and United Kingdom since or before 2003.
Jeremy Caplan’s article includes a photo of Mr Dwork leaning on a small palm tree. I can say, with reasonable certainty, that this small palm is of the species Areca catechu, the common, plantation, Areca palm.
It seems Mr Dwork copied a well established product (material and method) and imported Areca plates into the US market – which is hardly an “entrepreneurial gamble” and is definitely not an original idea.
Mr Dwork was a member of the ‘entrepreneurship class’ at Columbia School of Business. Mr Dwork went on, with ‘his idea’, to become the 2007 winner of the A. Lorne Weil Outrageous Business Plan Competition, and received $100,000 in seed funding from the Eugene M. Lang Entrepreneurial Initiative Fund – which is remarkable considering the Lang Fund’s emphasis for originality.
What is outrageous is Michael Dwork appearing to grab the credit and failing to acknowledge Indian ingenuity, Indian producers and Indian exporters who have manufactured quality steam-pressed Areca plates identical to the Verterra product, and who have done so for years before Michael Dwork arrived in 2006.
For a history of the Areca plate visit:
http://www.ecovision.com.au
http://www.eco-vision.in/companyprofile.htm
This limited critique has been sent to the following:
Michael Dwork michael@verterra.com
Jeremy Caplan via Time
Time magazine
Columbia School of Business
United States Patent and Trademark Office
The New York Times
New York Post
And others.
Richard
Murwillumbah
Australia.
30th October 2008.
Richard did not rate this post.Very interesting information, Richard. Thanks for the comment.
Ken did not rate this post.I have never heard of pressed dishes before. Does one use them once and recycle them when you are finished?
Charge Controller did not rate this post.WOW! Who would have thought you could make dinner ware out from leaves. I mean awesome. Great information. Thanks a bunch. Rick L.
Rick Lanese did not rate this post.Critique of Michael Dwork and Verterra – continuation.
The overdeveloped salesmanship practiced by Michael Dwork and Verterra includes the assertion that shipping palm leaf sheaths from India to New York is okay because rural people would otherwise only burn the sheaths. This claim by Verterra is deceptive.
Although palm leaves may sometimes be burnt for mosquito control, it is arrogant for Mr Dwork to infer that Indian farmers are not aware of the benefits of putting organic material into the soil (composting/mulch).
Also, in rural India cooking is usually over a fire, and dried palm sheaths are an excellent fuel for the domestic fireplace. Removing Areca palm sheaths from rural areas may have unforeseen impacts, as other sources of cooking fuel need to be collected from the forest or fields.
Verterra are proud to own extensive production facilities in India, which is, no doubt, the optimum for New York based Verterra’s balance sheet.
Although Verterra’s facilities provide employment, its wider value for rural development is questionable, and may even be detrimental for rural self-esteem, as the villager labours for the foreign company that stole ‘their’ product.
Other producers of Areca plates include village cooperatives, the greater benefit for rural development would be obvious.
If your concern is to support rural development in India, please consider Areca products from village manufacture.
I like to have Areca palm containers for display in the home. However, from the environmental perspective, the promotion of any single-use dishware is not appropriate – unless intended for areas with serious water shortages.
In Australia, artists make delightful baskets and sculptures from the leaf sheaths of the Bangalow palm Archontophoenix cunninghamiana, which is also an Arecaceae Palmae.
Richard – Murwillumbah, Australia.
Yes, I am a frequent visitor to India, and I do not have any financial interest in any business associated with Areca products.
14th November 2008.
Richard did not rate this post.I have been contacted by Mr Michael Dwork. He disputes my critiques, I believe my comments to be valid, readers may choose to disregard my previous posts, and should make their own inquires.
Richard – Murwillumbah, Australia.
Richard did not rate this post.These kind of dishwares are used since many years in India and are relatively cheap also. S They are kind of use and throw dishwares which can be washed and reused only thing is they will look saggy once drained in water.
Annie Bankss
Annie Bankss did not rate this post.Save Our Planet
All in all a very good product so good that i myself sell these plates in Europe through http://www.thewholeleafco.com. One problem I do have about Michael Dwork and his company is that he didnt come up with this idea on his own. These products have been used in India for generations, my parents had them for their wedding, and so did their parents, its not something new.
peter george did not rate this post.