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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Default Anyone familiar with "Seal-a-Meal" or "Food Saver"?

    Hello rawbies. I would like to buy one of these to vacuum seal & then freeze my own garden greens. Is anyone out there familiar with either of these two products and what is your experience with them? Many thanks for any help.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    622

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by islesgirl View Post
    Hello rawbies. I would like to buy one of these to vacuum seal & then freeze my own garden greens. Is anyone out there familiar with either of these two products and what is your experience with them? Many thanks for any help.
    I bought a Seal a Meal many, many years ago and I LOVED IT! I don't have one now but the funny thing is yesterday I was thinking about getting another one. I don't know what happened to the one I had but...it was great. On Sunday evenings I would prepare my meals for the week and freeze them. When I would get home from work, I just grabbed them out of the freezer and heated them up. All of the meals tasted like they were prepared fresh that day! I haven't tried it with raw foods. Let us know how that goes. Good luck!

    I recommend it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Springville, NY
    Posts
    185

    Smile

    I love my Food Saver. It's great especially at this time of year...I use it alot for freezing fruits and vegetables. For instance, I wash blueberries and let them dry. Then I spread them out on a cookie sheet and freeze them. (This way they don't get all squashed together.) Once they're frozen, I pop them into a Food Saver bag and vacuum seal them. Then back in the freezer they go. I use them in my smoothies all winter...saves a ton of money. With them vacuum sealed, there's no "freezer burn" to worry about. I do this with berries, cherries, melons, tomatoes, corn, oranges, apples, etc., etc., etc. Works for me!! Happy vacuum sealing!!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Default Opted for the "Food Saver"

    GoingtoRaw, thank you so much for taking time from your busy life to give me your experience with Seal-a-Meal. I'm glad you have found it so useful. But I opted for the "Food Saver" today, as it was reduced by $50 and was actually cheaper than the "Seal-a-Meal" If I don't like it I have 90 days in which to return it.

    buffalogal I appreciate your listing all the foods you freeze by sealing them first with your "Food Saver" which I just bought as stated above. I hope it isn't too difficult to learn how to operate. I am feeling so overwhelmed these days with trying to "uncook" as well as get everything else done around my home. Yesterday I sure could have used this machine as I had tons of greens from my garden to wash, bag, suck the air out of as best I could with a straw, and then freeze. Now I have my "Food Saver" for my next batch of greens which should be ready in a week or two. Thanks so much, both of you rawbies, and have a great day.

    Sue.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    622

    Default

    [QUOTE=islesgirl;439467]GoingtoRaw, thank you so much for taking time from your busy life to give me your experience with Seal-a-Meal. I'm glad you have found it so useful. But I opted for the "Food Saver" today, as it was reduced by $50 and was actually cheaper than the "Seal-a-Meal" If I don't like it I have 90 days in which to return it.

    Islegirl, I will be looking for the most economical machine believe me. When I bought the Seal-a-Meal that was wayyyyy back in the early '80's (don't mean to date myself-almost makes me want to cry), but that was a long time ago. I am not loyal to any machine - I just wanted you to know you can feel comfortable with the food savers. They are great time savers too!;)

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Morris Co, NJ
    Posts
    289

    Default Seal-a-Meal rave & What NOT to freeze questions

    I LOVE it! Everything in my freezer is vacuum packed! I'll be out of town for a few days, so am cleaning up my perishables (read - cut, freeze, vac pack) that will not go into smoothies in the next couple days. Also, I keep my nuts, cacao powder, nibs, almond flour, in the freezer packaged this way. I just cut off a corner, shake out what I need, then seal it back up. I have also used this for pesto when I had 5# of fresh basil to play with. The seal just does not let any weird flavor in, not to mention freezer burn free food!

    Any recommendations on what should NOT be frozen?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    136

    Default

    We have a Food Saver and one thing I've found is that it's hard to seal really wet or juicy food because the liquid gets sucked up into the seal area and leaves gaps that don't seal.

    Anyone else experience this? Have a solution? Otherwise, I love the Food Saver.
    Coonlie
    John 3:16

    "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, Whom you have received from God?" 1 Corinthians 6:19

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Upstate New York
    Posts
    411

    Default

    I asked for one for Christmas after I read this recipe for raw sushi using the food sealer:
    http://veganmenu.blogspot.com/2008/0...day-sushi.html

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Morris Co, NJ
    Posts
    289

    Default

    The Seal-a-Meal has a "moist" switch that keeps it from sucking out the liquid. Maybe check the owner's manual to see if something like that is hidden :)

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
    Posts
    3,601

    Default

    Hi Coonlie ~ I have the answer for Food Saving your wet items. Place them in the FS bag, but don't seal it yet. Lay the bag flat in the freezer until frozen solid (I generally do this overnight) and then seal away - it works perfectly!

    I also like to flash freeze items such as bing cherries or banans that would typically get smashed during the vacuum process. I flash freeze (laying them out on a tray overnight in the freezer) and then put in a bag and seal.

    We've had our FS for about 7 years and it's one of thos appliances that has truly paid for itself and then some - and that I would replace tomorrow if it konked out.

    I just froze 3 avocadoes yesterday. I scooped out the avocado, 1 at a time, mashed it with a little lemon juice, placed it in a container, froze overnight, popped it out of the container and FS'd. I do the same with pineapple and mangoes for my smoothies. I process all the pineapple in my food processor (same with mango) and divide it up into containers, freeze, pop out and then FS. I do this with baby coconuts as well.

    I do it with fresh herbs, citrus zest - I even freeze oranges (halved) if we're not going to eat them all before they go bad and FS them all.

    I used to belong to the Yahoo group on Food Savers - lol.

    Yep - love our FOOD SAVER! *Ü*
    Last edited by DebB; 12-21-2008 at 10:54 AM.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Morris Co, NJ
    Posts
    289

    Default

    Deb,

    have you frozen apples?? Have half a bag that I need to do something with before Tuesday...

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
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    Default

    I have frozen apples (we used to have our own trees), but to be honest - not since going raw. I used to freeze them to bake into pies and desserts.

    I haven't made a dehydrated apple dessert recipe yet, so I'm unsure if once frozen they'd be okay for this? I assume, "yes" - but I don't know.

    What I would think would be great is to make up the apples into raw apple sauce and freeze that.

    I hope others chime in who have successfully used frozen apples in raw dishes.

    Me? If I needed to use them up, I would just go ahead and freeze them and see. That's what I did with the herbs and they're great in dehydrated dishes, whereas normally they would have been compost. *Ü*

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Posts
    2,148
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    Default

    I haven't read all replies but I do have a food saver, I don't know about the seal a meal but the food saver allows you to vacuum seal:
    -Plastic bags
    -Standard and Wide Mouth Mason jars (one of my most regular uses as they are reusable and not made of plastic)
    -Plastic canisters and containers made by the same company as the machine
    -Glass bottles like wine bottles (with optional bottle adapters)
    -Universal lids allow you to vaccum seal any container like cans (not that we'd use canned food) or non standard glass jars regardless of it's opening as long as the container can withstand the pressure of a vacuum

    If you plan on using it with bags make sure to get a model that has a manual seal control button, some cheaper models will just suck until there's nothing that can be sucked out anymore and then seal the bag, I had bought one of these cheaper models first and returned it because when I tried to seal zucchini pasta it squished it and sucked all the water out of the zucchini, dehydrating it in seconds. With the new one I got I can press the "Seal" button when I want so as soon as it's done getting the air out I can press the button before it starts suckign the water out of the food. But I most often use mason jars to vacuum seal with it and since the jar doesn't change shape it doesn't extract water even under full vacuum pressure.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Illinois
    Posts
    136

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by LotsaRaw View Post
    The Seal-a-Meal has a "moist" switch that keeps it from sucking out the liquid. Maybe check the owner's manual to see if something like that is hidden :)

    Great idea! Who would have thought to read the owner's manual!

    And Deb, thanks for the great tips! I end up just freezing soft and/or juicy foods without FS'ing them, but your idea to quick freeze, then FS is great! I'll use mine more now!

    Thanks!
    Coonlie
    John 3:16

    "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, Whom you have received from God?" 1 Corinthians 6:19

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Beautiful Washington State
    Posts
    3,601

    Default

    You're sure welcome Coonlie ~ gotta love this Food Saver! It's one of my favorite, most used appliances. *Ü*

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