Since childhood, I played all of my day in the dirt and mud, and had a thing with burying various organic matter (old notebooks, roadkill, veggies) deep in the ground, and digging them up after 1-2 months to see how they look like after decomposing.
Making compost is very delightful to me,
So much that having a compost making facility is one of my dream jobs.
Too bad I don't have enough space anymore to play around the dirt as I did when I was a kid; Isn't apartment life boring and bad?
Anyway, the need is the mother of innovation they say.
We can discuss about various composting methods here, trying to make them more efficient, or bring totally new methods into existence out of nowhere.
I like to turn kitchen scraps into compost in the shortest time possible, and I'm not afraid of even the craziest ideas.
One way I was thinking about recently, was dissolving the scraps (well, the soluble parts of them) in strong sulphuric acid, and then neutralizing the acid by adding a calcium containing base, draining the resulting mix, and then letting it to rot in the bin.
Would this make it shorter to turn into compost?
This way most of the material is turned into a pulp, which then is dried and shattered to get a powdery mix, thus greatly increasing the surface area in the shortest amount of time.
And all that acid/base reaction will produce a lot of Calcium sulphate, which is the good old gypsum, and has nothing to do to plants but goodness.
Sulphuric acid is cheap like dirt where I live, and a good source of a calcium base is egg shells (which is 99% Calcium carbonate).
BTW, today I ground lots of +10 years old legumes and grains into a fine powder using a coffee grinder, and mixed them with finished compost and let them sit to turn into more compost.
There's heaps of bread leftovers and scraps here, thrown away in large amounts, and cheap like DIRT (literally).
I can grind them as well and make compost out of them if my current experiment using grains and legumes powder composting turns to be a success.
If a single tiny seed can provide the seedling with anything it needs to grow for awhile, then it's packed with all necessary nutrients, and thus composting them alone gives a balanced nutrient-rich soil?