RE: Minimalist Travelling | Staying in Hotels During the Pandemic
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Hello @shanibeer,
This is an interesting blog๐
I bought a tiny travelling fridge, which I can also use in the car. It's big enough to fit four beers, or a pint of milk, a yoghurt and a thin pack of cheese or salami slices in my case. It fits perfectly into the base of my suitcase, along with the little case that has its power cables. I also pack a folded zip up insulated bag which holds most of my food supplies while I'm away.
This definitely caught my eyes, and I'm heading to Amazon to see what there is, even if I won't buy one. That is just amazing.
There is a #KISS topic coming up in a few weeks that will cover this area, I hope you'll find one of the options appealing to write about too:)
Awesome post๐
Hello @millycf1976,
I was so pleased with myself this time round! I have had much more messy experiences as I was learning the best way to do things. I believe I bought the smallest fridge there is, I did think about a bigger one, but I'm not sure it would fit into the case which is what makes this arrangement so amazing.
Mmm, I have a few more tricks and tips for a later post ๐.
Thank you for the feedback ๐.
The travel fridge perked my interest too. Could be useful for our boat life. We have a fridge onboard but with the lack of solar in the winter we switched it off and found we could manage using cold areas on the boat ( beers on the stern deck easily reached through the cat flap ๐) but a little travel fridge might be an interesting addition as we ran the engine for a few hours a day in winter to charge batteries and for hot water so this has me thinking. How long does it retain its coolness for when switched off, unplugged?
I've set the fridge up in the kitchen to run an experiment overnight. I'll make a note of what time I turn it off and then check the internal temperature in the morning - probably about eight hours. If you tell me how long you have the engine off, I'll try that as well. I think it's quite efficient, the insulation is good. You can also keep things warm. I haven't tried that yet, but that might be useful for me in the winter, too :D.
What do you want to keep it in it? I've just checked, it will hold a 500g tub of spread, a pint of milk and a 350g pack of cheese (or 150g tub of yoghurt). It's not tall enough to hold two pints of milk ... unless they were in a jug.