I would love to help you, but I have never had rice a roni. We would love to get to know you so please take a moment and introduce yourself. New Member Introduction
Thanks. Now I have two more questions. A bit confused.The little powder pack is nothing more than boullion (sp?) with some extra spices. I’ve have ramen that did the same thing and was fine after reconstituted. Please note that the Pasta-roni is different
Thanks. Did she use an oxygen absorber? Do you know how old they were when you ate them.For what it's worth, my wife, says she had R.A.R. packets that were not powdery, either. But I haven't died yet. Probably to much humidity.
The contents of the packets is supposed to be powdery and dry. If exposed to some heat and moisture, occasionally the powder will clump. I’ve used these “clumps” and never had a problem.Thanks. Now I have two more questions. A bit confused.
1. why is pasta roni different (I dry packed some of that too but the packets were powdery and seemed dry)
2. Are you saying you had ramen do that and you dry packed it with an oxygen absorber and it was fine for years?
Sorry. I am very new at this and don't want to mess it up.
Thanks I had heard that about salt. I wonder how long it's safe to store iodine. Will have to look that up.These R.A.R. were not set up for long term storage. Anytime I find a great price on stuff, I have a tendancy to go hog wild and stock up. She thinks the R.A.R. were in the neighborhood of 3+ years old. We live in AZ so it's not humid for very long, but it gets humid often enough. The little paclets we get in R.A.R. are just paper with a waxy or very thin plastic film on the inside. Not the best to keep the stuff inside dry. I prefer to store plain rice for long term in Mylar aluminized bags with oxygen absorbers, with or without a Nitrogen purge. I store spices in quart Mylar bags, the same way. But don't store table salt with Potassium Iodine. While plain salt (Pickling salt) does not expire, iodized salt has a shelf life of about five years because the stability of the iodized salt decreases over time with exposure, especially in the presence of moisture or metal ions. Morton says the Iodine can disipate.