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Thread: One time use food bag/pouch?

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    N. Okanagan
    Posts
    14,182

    Re: One time use food bag/pouch?

    Have used freezer bags with no troubles
    For those or MH meals we made up holders out of that foil bubble wrap used for duct insulation , easy to set aside while glassing and keeps things hot.........or cold


    first saw the idea where a guide had tupperware type boxes and drink bottles wrapping in it, these stacked together in a neat kit to save space
    Never say whoa in the middle of a mud hole

  2. #12
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Losing something, somewhere!
    Posts
    2,356

    Re: One time use food bag/pouch?

    Zip Zag. Google it.

    Way thicker than zip locks.

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Aldergrove, BC
    Posts
    4,466

    Re: One time use food bag/pouch?

    thanks for all the advice guys!

    One of my favorite meals at the end of the day a big serving of mac and cheese with some pepperoni or salami cut up into it .... and i just hate doing dishes, even if i have my quad nearby and can carry more gear.

    While mountain house doesn't give me stomach problems that stuff is just loaded in sodium and the taste is off putting half-way through. I basically have one, then i'm sick of it for a while after.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Penticton
    Posts
    1,526

    Re: One time use food bag/pouch?

    I buy the tins as well and use zip locs. I always bring one MH bag for my first night's dinner and then put the zip locs inside it for extra stability when pouring boiling water and eating out of.
    WSSBC Monarch Silver Member
    WSF Summit Life Member
    RMGA Life Member


    The mountains are calling and I must go - John Muir

  5. #15
    Join Date
    Oct 2015
    Posts
    327

    Re: One time use food bag/pouch?

    Was just thinking about this the other day... I'd like to try mylar bags in the foodsaver, using scrap pieces of the dimpled side of regular vac bags to enable the machine to draw the air out:
    http://adviceandbeans.com/2011/04/fo...nd-mylar-bags/

    Might be completely unnecessary, I think that the regular bags are probably safe to hold boiling water, as people regularly use them for sous vide.

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