MY PLASTIC DETOX

7 REASONS I'LL NEVER COOK WITH ANYTHING BUT ACACIA

I went down the microplastics rabbit hole last year and it changed how I see everything in my kitchen. I tried BPA-free plastic, silicone, bamboo, two "natural" wooden sets from Amazon. Every one had something hidden.

 

Then a friend told me about acacia wood. Here's what I wish someone told me a year ago 👇

 

Note: Read this BEFORE you spend another dollar on utensils.
Jessica M. ✔ Verified
2 Year Plastic Detox Journey

1. Nothing added

Every product I tried had something added. BPA-free plastic still had BPS. Silicone leached siloxanes. Bamboo held with formaldehyde glue. Amazon wood coated in industrial lacquer.

 

Acacia is naturally dense and naturally oily. It doesn't need coatings. It doesn't need chemicals. It's just... wood. And that's what I was actually looking for this whole time.

 

👉 Check this set here

2. They actually proved it

I don't trust labels anymore. After a year of every "safe" claim being a lie, I trust proof.

 

Woodsen got their utensils independently tested. Third-party lab. FDA food contact standards.
 

👉 Check this set here

3. Antibacterial

This was my biggest hesitation — won't wood hold onto bacteria? Turns out acacia has natural oils that repel bacteria. Most woods don't do that. That's why they use acacia on boats — it just doesn't let things grow on it.


👉 Check this set here

4. It doesn't break down

I've had cheap wooden spoons crack within months. They splinter, they warp, they get that weird smell.

 

Acacia is what they build boats out of. It handles water and heat without breaking down. I've had my set for 11 months, cook almost every day — they look the same as day one. And if anything ever happens, lifetime warranty. They replace it.


👉 Check this set here

Up to 50% Off — This Week Only

Every day you cook with plastic utensils, more microplastics end up in your food.

Shop the Acacia Set

Batch #2 — 72% Sold

✅ Lifetime warranty 🚚 Free Shipping

5. Not the stuff from Amazon

Good luck finding real acacia on Amazon. Most "acacia" utensils on there are coated in shellac and chemicals — at that point you're not even cooking with wood anymore.

 

Woodsen uses real, uncoated Acacia. Hand-carved, small batches. The first time I picked one up I could tell it was a completely different thing.

 

👉 Check this set here

6. What 15,000+ families are saying

This is the part that convinced me I wasn't crazy for caring about this.

 

"I finally cook without that feeling in my stomach. I didn't even realize how much it was weighing on me until it was gone." — Sarah K.

 

"I was so skeptical after getting burned by 'BPA-free' stuff. 8 months in and these are perfect. Only thing I've bought for my kitchen that I don't regret." — Amanda T.

 

"My husband thought I was overboard. Then he held one. Now he won't let me use anything else." — Michelle R.

 

"Threw out every plastic utensil the day these arrived. My kitchen feels clean for the first time."  — Danielle P.

 

👉 Check this set here

7. Six sets. Over $200. One winner.

I spent over $200 on utensils that all went in the trash:

BPA-free sets: $48. Still had chemicals. Silicone set: $56. Leaches above 300°F. Bamboo set: $39. Formaldehyde glue. Wooden sets from Amazon: $68. Coated in lacquer.

 

My friend originally paid $199 for her Woodsen set. Real Acacia, hand-carved, no coatings, lifetime warranty. She said it was worth every penny.

 

Right now it's on sale for $99 with the same lifetime warranty because it's a small batch and once it's gone it's gone.

Up to 50% Off — This Week Only

Every day you cook with plastic utensils, more microplastics end up in your food.

Shop the Acacia Set

Batch #2 — 72% Sold

✅ Lifetime warranty 🚚 Free Shipping

Woodsen · Designed in Florida

Individual results may vary. Woodsen utensils are made from 100% natural acacia wood and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any medical condition. Testimonials reflect individual customer experiences and may not be typical. Always consult a healthcare provider if you have concerns about chemical exposure or dietary safety.