A time-honored tradition

MacN'Cheezus@lemmy.today to Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world – 415 points –
33

If you freeze it and eat it later that's called meal prep.

If you freeze it and forget about it and instead buy another freezer to store more frozen food, that's called hording.

Tupperware?!? In this household we wash the plastic takeout containers and reuse them for years until the become brittle and shatter.

What do you call Tupperware? I thought any plastic container for food is that. Not necessarily newly bought.

Tupperware is a brand. Calling all containers Tupperware is like calling all tissue paper Kleenex or all cotton swabs Q-Tips. Sure, many people do that, but it's not correct.

Also, Tupperware is expensive.

Kleenex is actually now the correct term according to the dictionary since it's so commonly used.

Same thing happened to Trampoline. Trampoline was the brand. The generic name is rebound tumbler.

Velcro, Hoover (in the UK), Band-Aid; there are tons of them. I'd say Tupperware is at that level, even if not officially so. I'd even argue Coke is - even if I know a palce only does Pepsi, I'm still going to ask for a Coke.

There are parts of the US where they use soda; parts that use pop; and parts that use coke. In the latter, the following conversation is normal:

Server: what kind of coke would you like?

Me: root beer.

This is quite common in some languages. In Dutch they call plaster plates gyproc, tilt windows velux, a stick of glue pritt and there are countless other examples where an item is named, if not officially at least commonly, after a brand. And of course, also kleenex.

Eh. Even genericized, tupperware is still only containers that are intended to be reused

Plastic food containers that are intended to be reused are tupperware; containers that are intended to be disposable are not

If you are still doing that, don't do it. Those takeout containers leak microplastics like crazy

Don't tupperware leak as well?

I mean, unless you use some sort of glass container or metallic, you're eating microplastics.

I've heard that they do, but for certain it must be less than re-using takeout containers.

I, myself, I've been avoiding all plastics and using strictly glass where possible

Where i from, some of us call it tupperware too, every plastic container is tupperware.

I'm too cheap to throw it out. So my role in the house is to eat all the leftovers before they go bad

A few years ago I had a roommate who just did not give a fuck about food never found enjoyment in it. All the leftovers went to him he'd vacuum up anything completely neutrally. I miss him

It's me, I'm that roommate.

Well to be honest, I do enjoy and appreciate tasty food. But I don't mind eating plain bland food (as long as it isn't disgusting). I don't really have a high bar. If it's edible, in it goes

My friends call me "the city council". Whenever we go eat at restaurants, my job is to clean out everyone's leftovers. I love it

But then you keep cooking new stuff because you don't want to touch the x-day-old food that you're not interested anymore and want something freshly cooked to eat. You'll get around to it evenshoely, for shooor

This happens every time because there is something else in the fridge that needs to be cooked so it won't spoil. Then you eat the new dish instead of the old one since you just made it and the old one goes bad....

Yeah, it's pretty much like that.

Still, most leftovers are eaten... at least in our household.

Am I the only one who thinks leftovers make the best breakfasts?

My mother once bypasses the refrigerator part and accidentally put leftovers in the cupboard over the oven. After a week or two, the smell had us thinking something crawled into the oven vent from outside and died. It took me noticing something bubbling up from between two casserole dishes to realize what happened.