I never realized those 4 litre bags really contained 3 separate pouches.
 Very interesting.

Can the size of them be manipulated as to resolve any refrigerator space
concerns?

Also, I hear the gallon jugs that are used here are of an inferior grade
plastic.  Possibly when the industry replaces them they'll adopt a litre
standard.  Anybody have any info on this?

Bernard

On Tue, 24 Oct 2006 13:16:11 -0400 (EDT), "Stephen Gallagher"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> 
> --- "Paul Trusten, R.Ph." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> 
> > John, or any of our Canadian participants,
> > 
> > Do any of you have a picture of this 4-liter jug
> > that you could post to the list, and also its
> > approximate dimensions?
> 
> Four litre jugs for milk are not common in Southern or
> Eastern Ontario.  Milk is sold in 2L, 1L, 500 mL, and
> 250 mL cartons.  Four litres of milk are sold in
> plastic bags (one large bag containing three
> individually sealed bags).  An individual bag, holding
> about 1.33 L of milk sits inside a small open topped
> jug.  
> 
> I've never seen a 4 L jug of milk in Ontario, not that
> I'm saying that it doesn't exist.
> 
> Stephen 
> 
-- 
  Bernard Rachtmann
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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