With my new smaller lunch bag, I do not have the room for the 4oz Glad reusable/disposable containers I used to pack mixed nuts in. I pack one ounce of mixed raw almonds and raw pumpkin seeds every workday. It was such a waste to use a ziplock bag even if I was reusing them. Then while measuring out ground cloves for an oat spice cake it hit me that the small spice container might be just the right size. So the next time I had an empty one I put it on the scale, and sure enough there is just a little room left over. The only thing that would make it better is if they switched to a type 1 or 2 plastic so I could recycle them.
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2011-10-26
Review: Thermos Thermax Sportsman Series 16oz Food Jar
A note about the included spoon: First it unfolds like an old carpenters rule. I am right handed and it worked fine, but a left handed person will find it near impossible to use. The hinges are one way and while used right handed they will stay open, but used left handed the spoon will fold back up. When I bought the food jar the spoon's rivets were pretty tight, but I can see them loosening up over time. The rivets are a hollow style and should be tightenable with a ballpein hammer and maybe a large blunt center punch if care is used.
I have not tried to use the jar yet to store cold food in hot weather, but given the freezer performance I would feel certain it should perform adequately. The jar is simple, clean and fairly light considering it's all stainless except for the plug and cap liner. I have given thought to going backpacking and the insulated jar should work for "cooking" dehydrated meals. My thought being to heat water in a kettle at breakfast, put the dry food in the jar, add the appropriate amount of water, stir briefly and cap. Walk a couple hours and have a hot lunch without needing to break out the stove. I also suppose if it was sufficiently cold, the jar's dimensions are small enough to be tucked into a large wool sock which I am sure would decrease thermal exchange.
So for my part I give this product a thumbs up. The silicone seal looks replaceable, the price point isn't bad, and with the exception of a non-ambidextrous spoon, which a serious hiker is going to be carrying a lighter titanium or anodized aluminum utensil set anyway, looks like it will out last a lot of other gear.
2011-10-17
Review: General Electric centrifugal juicer model 169201
Any websearch on this machine will turn up results and reviews. So, skipping what is otherwise easily googled, here's the skinny.
It is inexpensive so far as juicers go, so take that into consideration. It is noisy, almost as bad as a blender. It vibrates, but doesn't walk across the counter. It can be mitigated by checking the extractor basket runout. It's only held in place with ball detents and can be removed and replaced without tools. See which of the three directions it mounts and mark the bottom with paint once you find the least wobble. Next the spout is too stubby and splashes your juice all over the place. As seen in the pic, I have a one quart Gladlock jar under the spout, with a towel quarterfolded under it. Lastly it ejects some pulp in the juice. The fresher your vegetables the more juice and the less pulp you get. In addition, if you load the chute up and push the plunger down, you'll bog the motor down and get less juice and more pulp. Chop things up and run handfuls at a time, just lifting the plunger up and letting it fall.
My review? Good availabilty and price for almost acceptable quality. Very good starter machine for someone wanting to give juicing a try. It's smaller than a lot of premium machines so there's less wasted counter and/or cabinet space. RTFM for best results, and keep an old toothbrush handy.
Review: Plantronics M100
Back from unscheduled Hiatus
- Still living in a friend's basement, excellent opportunity to *not* continue in the rampant consumerism society seems to endorse
- I have put back together my camp gear, and made improvements there; it is also my permanent "Bug Out" kit as well as what I pack when I hit a SCA event, it has been field tested, everything can be transported in Blur, and when in camp I miss little of "civilization"
- I have acquired cheaper daily transportation, Blur gets almost 32mpg, a vast improvement over ZAST's 13.5mpg
- Two shelving units of stuff that is no longer needed in my leaner lifestyle have been liquidated, 21 cubic feet there alone, plus both my my largest storage totes (122qt), two 40qt, and two 36qt totes and two 2.1cf fliptop storage boxes for a total of about 38.5 cubic feet or enough stuff to fill to the brim a regular pickup truck bed. Note, that this was all fairly worthwhile stuff I actually wanted to keep and didn't yardsale
- Cell phone upgrade to a smartphone which almost completely replaces the laptop, replaces the digital camera and can replace the aircard
- After a year with the mini-fridge I am not missing the "normal" full size refrigerators
- After a year with the little convection oven I am not missing having a toaster nor do I desire a full size oven, though being wheat free helps in the not baking anymore department, I can still do full size meatloaves and why does one person need to bake a 20# turkey for Thanksgiving?
- A $20 Altec system with subwoofer has replaced my massive Aiwa boombox, the entire system packs down into the space of one speaker of the old Aiwa and runs off a 9v wall wart which can be replaced by a 12v converter