Well, thanks. I'm hoping it goes down to the metal taste of the stainless. but what's the sense of having a 24oz thermos if you can't put exotic coffee made from filtered water in it? grins
On Fri, 9 Apr 2010, Trouble wrote: > Put some baking soda in it along with some warm > water. Let it set for a few days and repeat. That should get it all out. > I use that trick after leaving tea in after a > fishing trip or when I let my brother use it for work and his coffee. > > At 06:20 PM 4/9/2010, you wrote: >> >> >> Try soaking it with water and a couple tablespoons of baking soda >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: Spiro >> To: <mailto:blindhandyman%40yahoogroups.com>[email protected] >> Sent: Friday, April 09, 2010 17:58 >> Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Dan or others, >> >> Hi, >> Maybe it took too long, but I finally got my Handyman thermos Two weeks >> ago. >> Steel, double walled with a 12oz steel cup. >> I'm saving $2 a day and it can take a beating. >> I'm sure to have it with me more than just to my non-fix-it job but >> thankfully to any outside project. >> However, Dan and others, it has that very familiar Canteen smell. >> You guys must know that smell. >> I've used it now for 8 days, and that smell went away for the most part >> after 5. But is was heavily in the coffee. It's still there, and I'm >> thinking $2 a day (makes the coffee cost $33.90 a pound at D&D) is >> starting to sound good as I'm not happy with that as a taste in my fine >> etheopean coffee from home. >> Help, what gets that smell out of a canteen or steel liquids vessel? >> Thanks >> >> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] >> >> > > Tim > trouble > Verizon FIOS support tech > "Never offend people with style when you can offend them with substance." > --Sam Brown > > Blindeudora list owner. > To subscribe or info: http://www.freelists.org/webpage/blindeudora > >
