I'm not often taken by the TV ads trying to sell miracle products, but I was intrigued when I saw an ad for Debbie Meyer's "Green Bags." These magic bags absorb the ethylene gas that is given off by rotting produce, and keeps fruits and veggies from going bad as quickly. As someone who buys a lot of produce, and then throws it away when it goes bad, I was interested. I was also drawn in by the highly technical animation of the ethylene gas coming off the produce on the infomercial (see link above to see said infomercial). So, I rushed out to BB&B, my favorite as-seen-on-TV product supplier, and put down $9.99 for 20 of my very own green bags.
After a few weeks of the bags sitting on the floor of Eric's car, I rediscovered them. The experiments then began.* Test subject number one: bunch of bananas. Result: Just like the commercial, no bag=brown bananas, bag=yellow bananas after one week. Test subject number two: mushrooms. Notoriously slimy within days of buying them, I still have the green bag ones over a week later with no slime! I'm a green bag believer. Go buy some now!
*This would make an excellent science fair project. I think I was inspired by a recent Mr. Wizard marathon at the Symms'.
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6 comments:
this is cool! I will look for them during my next pilgrimage to the 'burbs. Any further experimentation as to how many times you can re-use them?
I bought some on Saturday and just read this today. Surprisingly, they don't work if you leave them in the box on the kitchen table. Please add this data point to experimentation charts and graphs.
It's interesting that just the married women are interested in your findings....
ok, so I bought some and now Dad's bananas are happily sitting in a green bag. He didn't even ask what was up. hehe.
I'm starting the experiment too...Mom gave me some bags. Wish me luck.
I went to BB&B last night - sold out! you have started a green bag craze!
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