For those who use Pack-It lunch totes for your children's school lunches, what do you do to clean them? (For those who don't have them or know of them, they are lunch totes that have a non-removable, freezable lining which eliminates the need for extra ice packs). I have found them to work well in terms of keeping lunches cold, but for elementary school kids, they just seem to get so dirty and gross-looking after a fairly short time.
When my son comes home from school, I take the Pack-It and clean the interior with mild detergent and let it dry. I wipe down the exterior as well, but looking at this thing, it just seems gross, and it's not all that old. I know lunch boxes and totes get dumped in the communal lunch bucket at the start of the school day and end up on the playground during lunch recess, so maybe there's not much more I can do. Was just hoping to not have to buy new ones every few months and am also wondering if this product can really be cleaned thoroughly enough for food storage purposes.
Anyone have any other methods or tricks I might be missing? Thanks!
Added: Has anyone submerged these and just let them soak in sudsy water? Am wondering if this would present problems rinsing. If anyone has tried this with success, I'd appreciate hearing!
This is what they reccommend on the website: Care and Cleaning - Q: What is the best way to clean my PackIt? A: Hand wash with mild soap and warm water. Allow to air dry completely with flap open before freezing to prevent frost from forming on cooler. Do not use bleach. Please note that PackIts are not washing machine, dryer, dishwasher, or microwave safe.
We don’t have a PackIt but just a regular soft lunch box and this is what I do pretty much daily. I actually do it in the tub and let it hang dry in there, works great!
I don’t know this product, but I clean and deodorize pretty much everything with baking soda. I make a paste of it with a little water and use a plastic scriber or “Dobie” style pad to clean my white sink, or I mix it in water and soak things (loads of sweaty laundry, for example). I clean toilets & tubs with it, I deodorize the washer with it, I do the trash can with it, and so on. I think you could dip it in a solution of baking soda and water, let it sit, then gently scrub the outside as needed, rinse and dry.
My daughter uses that type of lunch bag, but without the ice pack. I throw them in the wash or swish them around in the kitchen sink with laundry detergent. I rinse them and hang them over a hook outside to dry.
You should be able to do the same. I wash my dump her hockey gear in the washer and hang it out to dry too.
we didn’t have those particular lunch boxes back in my kids’ school days, but i well remember the grody corners and seams. i scrubbed 'em with dishwashing soap, air dried them, hit them with bleach water or wipes occasionally, and replaced them often.
khairete
suz
Thanks for the responses, everyone. I’m going to use the baking soda paste to clean the inside and also to scrub the exterior stains. They’ll probably get a little more soaked than with my usual cleanings, but since we’ve got an extra day this weekend, that should be plenty of time to let them dry completely and then get them back in the freezer before they’re needed Tuesday morning. Thanks so much!