Edible waterbottle

Problem
Plastic water bottles are not decomposing in the ocean. Packages can be recycled personally or collectively. The collective recycling is working for paper and metals. But in other areas, the collective recycling produces a supply that overwhelms demand creating landfills rather than an economy. For instance an average of 3 plastic grocery bags per person per day in the USA ends up in the ocean. Decentralized, personal recycling saves energy. Our standard of living would increase if containers were personally edible, decomposable, or re-usable. Art could be added to our lives if we could personally create containers in our kitchens.

Conceive
This video of edible water balloon may be silly in that the package itself has to withstand mold, shipping, etc. These would be the requirements:

But it illustrates the desire of our species and the magnitude of the problem. More practical are these examples:
 * 1) holds water for a week
 * 2) make in different shapes
 * 3) food or processed food ingredients
 * 4) Meets FDA specifications
 * 5) edible or environmentally friendly
 * grapes
 * Frozen yogurt carton made of brown algae polysaccharide
 * decomposable seed pods for gardens
 * gift boxes made of sand
 * containers made of agar and water that decompose after expiration date automatically

Design

 * video of an attempt
 * google book about edible films
 * video Rust-Oleum's super hydrophobic spray that contains known cancer and birth defect causing chemicals
 * patent hydrophic editable material

 File:1 box honeycomb.jpeg|1 box of honeycomb 11x11cm to make beeswax. File:Homemade_Beeswax.jpeg|Homemade Beeswax File:Bean_Starch.jpeg|Bean Starch File:Melt beeswax.jpeg|Melt homemade beeswax with 1 teaspoon of oil. File:Starch.jpeg|1st attempt .. fell apart File:Brownish film.jpeg|2nd attempt .. repelled water .. 
 * 1st Attempt:Unknown amount of beeswax, 1 tsp vegetable oil, 1 cup bean starch, 1/2 cup water to dilute, waited 1 hr, video of result
 * 2nd Attempt:All the beeswax from a 11x11cm, 1 tsp vegetable oil, 3 tbsp bean starch, no water added, dried quicker, video of result

Demo
presentations

Next Steps

 * use centrifuge to separate starches within peas
 * use different ingredients
 * search for FDA requirements