Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Ziplock Bags Vs Foodsaver Sealer


JacobsMom

Recommended Posts

JacobsMom Contributor

For those of you who have a food sealer....Do you think they work better than Ziplock bags? I have been looking at one and as of right now I have been putting all of Jacob's foods to freeze in ziplock freezer bags....Of course he is 3 so he doesnt care :D

Thanks!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



rma451 Newbie
For those of you who have a food sealer....Do you think they work better than Ziplock bags?  I have been looking at one and as of right now I have been putting all of Jacob's foods to freeze in ziplock freezer bags....Of course he is 3 so he doesnt care :D 

Thanks!

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

hello,

I have used both for foods.

I like the zip lock if I am doing my foods for quick meals during week.

what I use the vac and seal for is freezing for long term , like right now Im putting up pumpkin for the winter, I buy and precook mash and measure then put in bags to partly freeze then seal once I know wont make a mess to seal.

these last for months and all winter I have fresh pumpkin for breads pies and pudding ,

also do zuccini , blueberries strawberries, raspberries, and various other in season foods.

Its great in march to pull out blueberries or zuccini and use to bake . still tasting like it did in season.

hope this helps.

rosie

NY state, USA

  • 2 weeks later...
lpellegr Collaborator

Just as another point of view, I have been using the vacuum sealer and find the bag doesn't always stay sealed over long periods in the freezer (like a month or two). I have been double sealing them to try to avoid that. The vacuum on the model I have is strong enough to crush some of the items I've tried to freeze, like homemade hamburger buns and shortbread cookies! For items like the buns you can freeze them long enough to be hard before you apply the vacuum, but the cookies were a goner - they looked great until I opened the sealed bag, then they collapsed into crumbs. The vacuum sealer and bags also cost a lot more, so you might want to plan to reuse bags - leave enough room to reseal them, and wash and dry them for later uses. I think I heard that Consumer Reports or somebody did a comparison and found the cost not worth it unless you reuse the bags.

rma451 Newbie
Just as another point of view, I have been using the vacuum sealer and find the bag doesn't always stay sealed over long periods in the freezer (like a month or two).  I have been double sealing them to try to avoid that.  The vacuum on the model I have is strong enough to crush some of the items I've tried to freeze, like homemade hamburger buns and shortbread cookies!  For items like the buns you can freeze them long enough to be hard before you apply the vacuum, but the cookies were a goner - they looked great until I opened the sealed bag, then they collapsed into crumbs.  The vacuum sealer and bags also cost a lot more, so you might want to plan to reuse bags - leave enough room to reseal them, and wash and dry them for later uses.  I think I heard that Consumer Reports or somebody did a comparison and found the cost not worth it unless you reuse the bags.

<{POST_SNAPBACK}>

hi,

I found when my old sealer went I was having problems as you stated, coming unsealed, bought new machine , after awhile the thin wire that melts and seals the bags wears out in spots so doesnt give a complete seal. '

one way to prevent this from happening is not doing a large amount of foods at once, so that it gets so hot.

I never seal our cookies in the vac because like you have found because our flours are so much more " fragile" they do become crumbs

and for cost the zip locks are great for short term freezing, like cookies, flours, nuts you are eating on and off , .ect.

what I like the seal and vac for is long term freezing, that is where they become cost effective, as food doesnt taste like freezer burn.

I do seasonal foods, pumpkins for winter, apple sauce for year, berries, peaches , plums, bananas when cheap for breads during winter, zuccini grated and ready to use in dishes and breads for winter months when muschy in stores.

I love my seal and vac but like you said some foods do not hold up and they can be expensive for foods we will be using within a short time.

I do like doing my stocks though as I find they get that freezer taste so quickly if just zip lock them only.

good luck

rosie

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      128,311
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    SWilson
    Newest Member
    SWilson
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.1k
    • Total Posts
      70.8k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @Cathijean90! I went 13 years from the first laboratory evidence of celiac disease onset before I was diagnosed. But there were symptoms of celiac disease many years before that like a lot of gas. The first laboratory evidence was a rejected Red Cross blood donation because of elevated liver enzymes. They assume you have hepatitis if your liver enzymes are elevated. But I was checked for all varieties of hepatitis and that wasn't it. Liver enzymes continued to slowly creep up for another 13 years and my PCP tested me for a lot of stuff and it was all negative. He ran out of ideas. By that time, iron stores were dropping as was albumin and total protein. Finally, I took it upon myself to schedule an appointment with a GI doc and the first thing he did was test me for celiac disease. I was positive of course. After three months of gluten free eating the liver enzymes were back in normal range. That was back in about 1992. Your story and mine are more typical than not. I think the average time to diagnosis from the onset of symptoms and initial investigation into causes for symptom is about 10 years. Things are improving as there is more general awareness in the medical community about celiac disease than there used to be years ago. The risk of small bowel lymphoma in the celiac population is 4x that of the general population. That's the bad news is.  The good news is, it's still pretty rare as a whole. Yes, absolutely! You can expect substantial healing even after all these years if you begin to observe a strict gluten free diet. Take heart! But I have one question. What exactly did the paperwork from 15 years ago say about your having celiac disease? Was it a test result? Was it an official diagnosis? Can you share the specifics please? If you have any celiac blood antibody test results could you post them, along with the reference ranges for each test? Did you have an endoscopy/biopsy to confirm the blood test results?
    • Cathijean90
      I’ve just learned that I had been diagnosed with celiac and didn’t even know. I found it on paperwork from 15 years ago. No idea how this was missed by every doctor I’ve seen after the fact. I’m sitting here in tears because I have really awful symptoms that have been pushed off for years onto other medical conditions. My teeth are now ruined from vomiting, I have horrible rashes on my hands, I’ve lost a lot of weight, I’m always in pain, I haven’t had a period in about 8-9 months. I’m so scared. I have children and I saw it can cause cancer, infertility, heart and liver problems😭 I’ve been in my room crying for the last 20minutes praying. This going untreated for so long has me feeling like I’m ruined and it’s going to take me away from my babies. I found this site googling and I don’t know really what has me posting this besides wanting to hear from others that went a long time with symptoms but still didn’t know to quit gluten. I’m quitting today, I won’t touch gluten ever again and I’m making an appointment somewhere to get checked for everything that could be damaged. Is this an automatic sentence for cancer and heart/liver damage after all these symptoms and years? Is there still a good chance that quitting gluten and being proactive from here on out that I’ll be okay? That I could still heal myself and possibly have more children? Has anyone had it left untreated for this amount of time and not had cancer, heart, fertility issues or liver problems that couldn’t be fixed? I’m sure I sound insane but my anxiety is through the roof. I don’t wanna die 😭 I don’t want something taking me from my babies. I’d gladly take anyone’s advice or hear your story of how long you had it before being diagnosed and if you’re still okay? 
    • trents
      Genetic testing cannot be used to diagnose celiac disease but it can be used to rule it out and also to establish the potential to develop celiac disease. About 40% of the general population has the genetic potential to develop celiac disease but only about 1% actually develop it. To develop celiac disease when you have the genetic potential also requires some kind of trigger to turn the latent genes "on", as it were. The trigger can be a lot of things and is the big mystery component of the celiac disease puzzle at this point in time with regard to the state of our knowledge.  Your IGA serum score would seem to indicate you are not IGA deficient and your tTG-IGA score looks to be in the normal range but in the future please include the reference ranges for negative vs. positive because different labs used different reference ranges. There is no industry standard.
    • Scott Adams
      Since nearly 40% of the population have the genes for celiac disease, but only ~1% end up getting it, a genetic test will only tell you that it is possible that you could one day get celiac disease, it would not be able to tell whether you currently have it or not.
    • KDeL
      so much to it.  the genetic testing will help if i don’t have it right? If theres no gene found then I definitely don’t have celiac?  I guess genetic testing, plus ruling out h.pylori, plus gluten challenge will be a good way to confirm yes or no for celiac. 
×
×
  • Create New...