Campus Ideaz

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Brew & Chew- “Savor your drink, enjoy the bite.”

Imagine sipping your evening chai from a cup that you can actually eat! Every day, millions of plastic and paper cups are used once and then thrown away — ending up in overflowing garbage bins or littering the streets. Even paper cups aren’t as eco-friendly as they seem, since they are coated with plastic and can’t be easily recycled. This is where my idea steps in:

Edible Tea Cups — a delicious, zero-waste solution to single-use cup pollution.


These cups would be made from a crispy, biscuit-like mixture with a thin layer of chocolate or sugar glaze that keeps them strong enough to hold hot tea or coffee. Once you finish your drink, you simply munch on the cup like a cookie — turning your tea break into a snack time! Even if someone doesn’t eat the cup, it will naturally decompose, leaving no harmful waste behind.


This idea is perfect for tea stalls, cafés, and restaurants that want to stand out with something sustainable and fun. Customers would love the experience of choosing a flavor — chocolate, vanilla, coffee, or even spicy masala — and getting a snack along with their drink. It’s practical, eco-friendly, and adds a playful twist to a daily habit.


I feel strongly about this idea because I often see streets littered with cups near tea shops, which not only looks messy but harms the environment. Edible cups solve two problems at once: waste and convenience.

Plus, who wouldn’t enjoy a warm cup of chai followed by a sweet crunchy treat?
In the future, this concept could expand into edible coffee mugs, soup bowls, or even dessert cups — making our food experience more sustainable and exciting

Votes: 30
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Comments

  • I really love how your edible tea cups combine sustainability with a fun, tasty experience—offering flavors makes it even more appealing! One thing to consider is making sure the cups stay sturdy long enough to hold hot tea without getting soggy. Otherwise, it’s a fantastic, zero-waste idea with great potential!
  • This is a creative and practical solution to single-use cup waste, combining sustainability with a fun consumer experience. The flavor options and snack aspect make it engaging, and it clearly addresses an environmental problem. To strengthen the idea further, consider testing the cup’s durability with hot beverages, assessing production costs, and exploring scalability for cafés and tea stalls. Overall, it’s an innovative concept with strong potential for both environmental impact and market appeal.
  • This is such a creative and practical approach to tackling single-use cup waste! I love how it combines sustainability with a delightful customer experience. One suggestion could be exploring partnerships with local tea stalls and cafes for pilot testing—this would help assess durability, cost-effectiveness, and customer acceptance while building early traction for the concept.
  • This is truly an amazing, creative, and practical idea. It solves waste, delights customers
  • Great idea!! Fun and smart way of reducing paper and plastic cups, along with making sustainability engaging for everyone.
  • This is a wonderfully creative and impactful idea that directly tackles a massive environmental problem. The concept of an edible tea cup is brilliant because it not only eliminates waste but also enhances the user experience, transforming a simple act of drinking tea into a fun and delicious treat. You've clearly identified a persistent issue and proposed a scalable, consumer-friendly solution that could genuinely change habits.
  • Great idea!! Fun and smart way of reducing paper and plastic cups along with making sustainability engaging for everyone
  • It's a brilliant idea, but cost of production would be a major snag to this idea. It is viable in high end cafes, but when we come down to street level the scalability is an issue as it is in these small tea/coffee shops where the majority of single use cups are used.
  • It tackles the very real problem of single-use waste from a completely new angle. The concept is not only eco-friendly but also offers a unique, engaging experience for the customer. I can easily see this becoming a trend for cafes and tea shops looking to differentiate themselves.
  • This is such a cool idea! I love the concept of zero waste.
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