I have this lunch box that is huge but works really well for me. I made a mistake a few weeks ago by leaving rotten food in it over the weekend and the stench is unbearable.

This lunch box has a removable interior made of some kind of plastic so I removed it and soaked it in warm water and dish soap for 48 hours in the sink and then I scrubbed the interior with a sponge.

When I got done, it still smelled like rotten food! I also cleaned the lid which isn’t removable but made of the same material. But just used the sponge on it.

Sticking my head inside is where I smell it most, so I think it’s the removable tub.

I also tried teabags as I heard of something like this with smelly shoes, but now my lunch box smells like feet lol.

So I’m at a loss. I love this box and don’t want to trash it. It was hard finding one like it.

Anything else I can try?

Edit: thanks for the suggestions! I forgot to mention that I did put some vinegar and baking soda in last night and kept the lid closed. I’ll leave it this way until tomorrow night and see.

Thanks for the suggestions!

  • Wolf Link 🐺
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    201 year ago

    Have you tried vinegar and baking soda? Those are basically the default at-home stench-and-stain removers any household should have.

    • @Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      391 year ago

      Vinegar or baking soda individually will help. Mixed together they will immediately react to form slightly salty water and CO2- neither of which will help.

  • beaubbe
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    571 year ago

    Dunk it in vinegar overnight. It will kill bacterias, and the smell of vinegar itself will go away pretty quickly.

      • @eltrain123@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        Same same. I had a thermos I accidentally left hot cocoa (made with milk) in for about 6 months when it fell behind my car seat. I thought I was going to have to throw it out because it smelled so horribly rancid. I booked some water and flushed it out and used white vinegar for a few overnight soaks and it got the smell out. Like a brand new thermos…

    • QubaXR
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      21 year ago

      Whenever I’m in doubt about cleaning, I try sprinkling a good amount of baking soda and then pouring copious amounts of vinegar, then letting it do its thing. It’s an inexpensive experiment to try and could solve your problem.

      • @Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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        61 year ago

        Baking soda works, vinegar works. When you mix them together it’s just salty water. It does nothing.

        • QubaXR
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          11 year ago

          Doesn’t the bubbly reaction do anything? It sure looks impressive.

          • @Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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            31 year ago

            Yeah. The acid in the vinegar is what gives it cleaning power. The base in the baking soda gives it cleaning power. They each will clean different things. When you mix them you get an acid base reaction which makes water, co2, and a salt. None of those have good cleaning properties in that situation.

            • QubaXR
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              11 year ago

              Wow, thanks! I guess there’s always a chance to learn something new!

  • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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    71 year ago

    Make a paste out of baking soda and dish soap and scrub it thoroughly, then rinse with hydrogen peroxide and again with lots of hot water.

  • QuinceDaPence
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    1 year ago

    I’d start with washing and letting it sit in the sun a couple of days. If that doesn’t work I’d go nuclear with an ozone generator just be easy with it or it will turn the food smell into an off-gasing plastic smell, and don’t use it in an occupied space. Idealy stick it in a tote outside or something like that.

    • @Void_Sloth@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      This is my go to for things that I can easily move around. It works well and minimizes use of chemical cleaning agents.

  • @Mothra@mander.xyz
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    31 year ago

    Once I had a non stick frying pan catch the smell of laundry detergent pods and the stuff wouldn’t go away, ruining my breakfast. Vinegar didn’t work. So I cooked oats and oil until burning it almost. That removed the smell. I know it’s different with a plastic container as you can’t put it on the stove, but I would try storing and reheating some very oily porridge in that container. Sometimes what detergents and acids can’t remove, oils wipe awat easily. But, do try the vinegar first.

      • @Mothra@mander.xyz
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        31 year ago

        If the item is brand new but it’s been sitting unused for years too? Or is this a thing related to use? How can I know the pan I just bought hasn’t been stocked for more than six months?

        • Here’s a more detailed explanation:

          As a human being, I tend to eat everyday.

          Sure I have my diet days and take-out days.

          But as a general rule of thumb if you use up the pan about 3 to 4 days of the week, then you need to change it every 6 months.

        • @SolOrion@sh.itjust.works
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          21 year ago

          From my understanding it’s about use. The non-stick coating will start to flake off, and you don’t want to eat the stuff.

          Using metal utensils on non-stick pans is a terrible idea for this exact reason as well- they’re really hard on the coating.

  • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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    91 year ago

    The problem is we are very very sensitive to rotten food.

    Water and soap will do very little to remove any of that if that’s bound itself to the plastic.

    You could use a high pH solution to try to tear up any organics. An extended soak in week hydrogen peroxide or a soak in a light lye solution might get the job done.

    Ozone, sunlight, retrobrite, barkeeper’s friend, vinegar they’re all trying to do the same thing destroy those organics left on the plastic. But in some cases that stuff just binds and there’s not that much you can do about it.

  • FiveMacs
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    111 year ago

    make Indian food and leave it in there until it rots.

  • Cut a white onion in half and toss it in the lunchbox and close it. Put it in a plastic bag and tie it up and place it outside in the sun for 24-48hrs. I do this when I forget to dump/clean a protein shake out of my blender bottle and it ends up smelling like Satan’s asshole. It’s the only method I’ve found that pulls the stink out of the plastic reliably.

    I’m assuming the reason this works is a combination of the onion and UV rays hitting a see through plastic bottle. YMMV with a closed lunchbox. Might need to keep it open in a bag facing the sun instead if closed doesn’t work.