I've been exploring bokashi further
I've found that many of my neighbors make it and use it in their garden. It really seems to fast forward compost and makes the plants grow super strong and fast.
My neighbors all do lasagna gardening and I am preparing my first beds right now. We have a short growing season and nothing will really be in the ground till about july 1 or so.
Meanwhile my neighbors beds from last year are all heated up from the bokashi and volunteers are coming up already... they keep a plastic cover over their beds on the cold days and we still have plenty of them..
They also use it to compost their food scraps... it goes very fast.
I am quite impressed witht the process and it appears it is the prefered compost method in Japan. This stuff is known also to compost meat, fish, oily stuff, small bones, and get this, animal waste.
Did you know that in Japan the regular commons country folks sell their human waste to compost facilities? I suspect they use the Bokashi method for that but I am not absolutely sure.
Here is a site that tells you how to make your own including the starter. There are quite a few sites out there telling you how to use it with purchased starter but my neighbors prove it is not necessary. All you need to get going is a 5 gal bucket with lid, newspapers, some rice, molasses, 2 gallon plastic bags.
take a look... I just can't say how impressed I am with this. I think I will be letting go of the vermiposting in favor of this. Those worms just can't process all the scraps fast enough... and now they got invaded by some kind of bug that is crawling all over the bins. :/
Aside from composting you can lay the bacteria impregnated newspaper right into the layers of your lasagna garden. This is how my neighbors got their beds cooking all winter and it seems that the plants just love it. They say it structures the soil and makes nutrients more accessable to the plants.
http://bokashicomposting.com/?m=200809