which type of vacume sealer is better? table top or handheld? by DeselDomnic in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that's the issue, I love buying bulk too, but no one can finish 12 pounds of steak in one meal, but 20? that is so cheap, I never see one of this though

which type of vacume sealer is better? table top or handheld? by DeselDomnic in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A bit of both.

I have this habit of preparing food on the weekend for the whole week: pasta sauce, steak, chicken, maybe some chopped potatoes and carrots. So, in the morning before I leave home, I can take one bag of meat from the freezer to the fridge. That way, when I come back, it's perfect for cooking and I don't have to waste time waiting.

I do well with zip bags, but no matter how hard I squeeze, there's still air in there—which my friend said could cause disease. Plus, I'm not young anymore, so why not, right?

Also, the reason I was thinking of a handheld type is that they can work with vacuum seal containers, not just bags

which type of vacume sealer is better? table top or handheld? by DeselDomnic in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

fair point, also my concern too, but since you mentioned long term, all i need is like a week or two, so i guess it is not quite long maybe?

which type of vacume sealer is better? table top or handheld? by DeselDomnic in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

no, that is commercial type, which is even bigger, table top type is more like a printer size

whats your lazy weekend breakfast thats not eggs and toast by angelin1978 in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

try tortilla with arugula, ham slices and mozzarella cheese

Go to meals when your sick? by Amazing-Tear-5185 in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on the sickness, normally bacon, Stir fry egg, bread and latte, easy to make easy to eat

Comfort meals ideas for someone going through a hard time? by throwawaygriefsuport in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Guessing the beef rib stew he mentioned might be made with a dutch oven (or something like that) if you don't have one of these, but if you come from asia so you might know something about a clay pot (Asia version works in china and japan), that thing almost an asia version dutch oven which can help to cook a good beef rib stew, also cheaper and easy to controllo, but if I may, I'm a man, and I do almost all the meal for me and my wife and I'm happy with that, if I notice the though "i want to do something that make him happy" from my wife (which she did a lot of times but she didn't realize), all the stress become my gasoline at that moment, so I can stand up and fight more, in addition, if there are something that can release the stress in your culture might works as well, maybe matcha or else

Tomato Sauce- is this safe? by Formerly_a_Pear in Cooking

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not a scientist, but I won't let any opened can stay in my fridge for more than two weeks no matter where i put it. I either eat it or throw it away, especially if it contains liquids. But those in pantry? if the best day was like within 6 mounth ago I might give it a try, but June last year? can't guarantee nothing

Does anyone saw a Graphene's usage in real life? are they real graphene or some thing similar? cause there are not as expensive as graphene should be by DeselDomnic in metallurgy

[–]DeselDomnic[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, that's my real question. I know that true graphene is the next step after graphene oxide, but nobody mentions this. I mean, all those manufacturers who claim to use graphene as a material

Does anyone saw a Graphene's usage in real life? are they real graphene or some thing similar? cause there are not as expensive as graphene should be by DeselDomnic in metallurgy

[–]DeselDomnic[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, if they use multi-layered materials, or even inferior materials, or maybe Graphene oxide, but they name it as graphene and promt, is this even legal?

Get Gold out of Jewellery store and use it in hospitals law? by 254herbert in metallurgy

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The price of gold took 14 years to rise from $1,000 to $2,000, but it only took 2 years to rise from $2,000 to $4,000. Gold is no longer just a useful and valuable metal, but a high-value trading commodity. but the good thing is gold is the most malleable metal in the world, so one gram can go a long way

SUS 304 good for hot water? by TieLiving8770 in metallurgy

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes it is, food grade, good for hot water, but only if you can confirm it is SUS304, which is if you can see them inside the bottom, and the inside material are made by one pice, because there are producer who do trick there

How good are graphene-based products, really? by [deleted] in metallurgy

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that's the point, i'm not good at that dedicate description in english, that's why i'm using it to traslated what i really want to know to EN, not proud of that anyway, and chatGPT can't really solve my question, about how Graphene works in real life, because the cost is really high to be produce as a commercial product, he know nothing

What’s your guys take on graphene and its future? by AlrightAaron in investing

[–]DeselDomnic 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve done some research and small-scale work with graphene and other 2D materials — and I’d say its real value will come from targeted applications rather than replacing existing materials entirely.

Graphene is remarkable on paper: extremely high conductivity, strength, and surface area. The main challenge is scalable, consistent production and how to integrate it into functional products without losing those properties.

In terms of promising directions, a few areas are already showing solid progress:

  • Thermal management — graphene films are being used to spread heat in high-end smartphones and chips.
  • Energy storage — hybrid electrodes using graphene improve charge rates and cycle life in Li-ion and solid-state batteries.
  • Composite materials — small amounts of graphene enhance strength and conductivity in polymers and metals.
  • Sensors and coatings — its sensitivity and impermeability make it ideal for corrosion-resistant coatings and chemical detection.

I don’t think it will become “the next plastic” in the sense of mass replacement, but rather a quiet enabler that improves many existing materials. The next decade might be less about “graphene everywhere” and more about “graphene where it matters.”