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Milk or Powder?

Which do you prefer?

  • Mini Moos

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Powdered Creamer

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Just Black Please

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • What? People actually drink airplane coffee!

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0
Where are those paper towels, or did they get rid of those too? :up:

In one of the three magazine racks...you know, the one with the red wine bottles in it, the other with the trash bags, and the other with something green growing in the bottom of it...oh no, it's spoiled moo moos. :shock:

Air-drying is much more eco-friendly.

Yeah, thats what my party friends use to say about ketamine. :shock: 😱 :lol: Ahhhh, the 90's!

By the way, that avitar is just over the top. 😀
 
Air-drying is much more eco-friendly.
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ah a nice cup of coffee from those crummy fresh water tanks that we "clean " I swear the last time I worked on one I looked In and saw something looking back at me.

BTW powder it has a flamable property
 
Some years ago, we offered the mini-moos in FC only and the powdered creamers in coach.

As time went by, we got rid of the powdered creamers because our customers complained for a number of different reasons and the company listened. And the company changed the policy.

I know it's a small thing but it does make a difference.
The cost difference factor is so small, it's laughable.

It's time for the company to stop turning a deaf ear to our customer's opinions and complaints and start acting like a company that values their loyal customers.

This is a service driven industry and that can make or break US. 🙄
 
Black! Blacker than a Nigerian aircraft fueler!
300px-a_small_cup_of_coffee.jpg

I cannot believe a moderator, as cretinous as they are, would allow a zionista to foist their ignorance on all of us.

barbeetantrums is a bigot, a putred cretin, just like most zionista.
 
I don't drink that much coffee, and I may be wrong about this. The Moo MOOs you are talking about, and other similar brands don't have to on ice on in the frige for some time. There is a small symble, a circle with a symble in the center of the circle, and that tells you that this product has been "nuked". That lets the product have an extened shelf live without having to be chilled. Me, I always ask for real milk, or second, the powder.
 
At home, I always drink my coffee with evaporated milk, but on the plane, it's moo-moos. I can't stand the taste of 2% milk in my coffee. It makes it watery and cold. The powdered creamers are carcinogenic, have you looked at the ingredients?

Took me awhile, but I found the ingredients in Mini Moo's.

Linky

Shelf life is 3 months.

Needs no Refrigeration, Store at room Temperature. Shake Before Use.

Ingredients:

Grade A Milk and Creme, Sodium Citrade, Carrageenan, DATEM, and Tetra Sodium Pyrophosphate.

At the site above, 180 of them sold for $18.00, 360 for $32.00. Another site had them at $14.15 and $26.05 respectively.
 
I don't drink that much coffee, and I may be wrong about this. The Moo MOOs you are talking about, and other similar brands don't have to on ice on in the frige for some time. There is a small symble, a circle with a symble in the center of the circle, and that tells you that this product has been "nuked". That lets the product have an extened shelf live without having to be chilled. Me, I always ask for real milk, or second, the powder.
Ultra pasteurization simply means that the half and half is heated at a higher temperature for a shorter period of time--275F at 1 to 2 seconds. It's not "nuked". This process kills more thermogenic bacteria (lactobacilus) which causes spoilage. It will eventually go bad too, just not as fast. There's nothing mysterious or bad about it. The same process is used for ready-to-use baby formula, juices, etc...
The symbol that you mention, UHT stands for Ultra High Temp. Pasteurization and ultra pasteurization has been around since the 1800s. It's very common and is done to many of our foods to ensure a log reduction in the number of viable pathogenic organisms.
 

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