Mike
drinks iced tea year-round, and I have used a Mr. Coffee Iced Tea Maker for
more than 20 years. One of my sons teases me that it’s the most useless
appliance ever. However, it works for me because within ten minutes I have iced
tea brewed to Mike’s liking. So, when I saw a brand new in the box iced tea
maker at the rummage sale a couple of years ago, I bought it. All the parts were
there, still wrapped in their original plastic bags. And as a bonus, this was
the deluxe edition with TWO pitchers! I figured if nothing else, I could eventually
replace my old unit with this one. We stored it at the farmhouse, and as we
moved in after remodel, it resurfaced.
I
decided that rather than store it longer, I should use it, but when I opened
the box, the stench was horrific! Oh yes! It was mouse smell all right, only in
was REALLY bad. Obviously, mice had congregated in that box, but why?
I
was a little freaked and wished that I wasn’t working alone. Ever so
cautiously, I began to remove one of the pitchers from its plastic bag. Then I
removed the lid, and the smell exploded. Putrid! But wait! The pitcher was
filled with something. What have the mice done now? Investigating further, inside
the pitcher was a large plastic Ziploc bag filled with dried onions. And under
that was another large bag filled with mustard powder. Naturally, I immediately
carried these bags to the garbage. The mice might be exonerated in this case,
but it was still weird.
Honestly,
that iced tea maker had never been used, so what was the scenario that put
dried onions and mustard powder in Ziploc bags inside that pitcher? Perhaps mom
and dad visited their daughter for Christmas and received the useless iced tea
maker as a gift. Before they left for home, daughter said, “Mom, I have dried onions
and mustard powder. Wouldn’t you like to take some home with you?”
“Oh,
yes, that would be great!” said mom. And as dad packed the car for the trip
home, he put the two Ziploc bags inside one of the pitchers in the Iced Tea
Maker box. Once they were home, the box was stashed in the basement, both the
maker and its contents forever forgotten. Twenty years later, when their
children arrived to move them from the condo to the facility, the boxed iced tea
maker was donated to a local P.E.O. chapter for their rummage sale.
Or
something like that.
Do
you know how long it takes me to use up a jar of onion flakes? Forever! And
mustard powder? I used to have some.
Incidentally,
the coupons included with the unit expired in 1996.
3 comments:
Will you have to throw out the tea maker? Onions smell can really permeate.
Following suggested treatments, I filled the pitcher with water, added a tablespoon of baking soda, and let it sit overnight. I think it really helped, but maybe not 100%. I could re-treat with soda, but I might just set it out on a sunny day -- if we ever have one again. Bleach and vinegar solutions were also mentioned. And it's no big deal. It's basically something I came by, but I hope I don't have to toss it.
It was better after the baking soda treatment, but the odor lingered, so next I poured in a vinegar treatment and let it sit 24 hours. I can't detect any aroma. We'll see if it comes back.
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