Yes, it’s hard to make it airtight around the edges, where the plastic wrap is easy to seal. I think that would overcome any differences in actual permeability.
I thought this was answered by QtM in post 3 above – aluminum foil above a certain thickness will be more impermeable (to air – much more impermeable to visible light…).
“Impermeable” sounds like a binary term rather than something that has degrees, so I’m wondering if asking whether something is “more impermeable” is an inaccurate turn of phrase, like saying “more invincible” or “more dead.”
But “permeability” seems measurable, in that the more permeable something is, the more stuff it lets through.
Scoop the remaining cat food into a small tupperware. Best seal, least waste. You may wish to have 2 or 3 containers exclusively for this, so there is always one available when the others are in the dishwasher.
Heh, sorry - I usually try to avoid posting in ‘pet’ threads, for this reason. But clearly the answer to your question is: they don’t, they couldn’t open the tupperware .
The cat food is dead, but the maggots and bacteria in spoiled cat food will be both alive and dead until you open the lid. Depending on the bacteria, you may be dead too if you eat it.
Re: reusable lids. Be sure to get the proper size for your particular cans. I’ve bought “universal” silicone lids that don’t fit or properly seal any of my cans.
IME, this varies depending on the brand; and maybe even on the batch; but probably not by whether they claim to be “universal”.
After a couple of sets that were fractionally too small to get on the cans, I took to buying the ones that are out on display in groceries and pet stores – after trying them out on the cans in the store. (Without opening the cans first, of course; but there’s no need to, they’ll fit the same either way.) When I found some that did work, I bought several packs, and should now be set for quite a long time.
Sorry that I didn’t warn about that before @Lucas_Jackson apparently ordered them online! Hope you’ll be lucky and they’ll work.
If you ordered the ones pictured earlier in the thread, they look a lot like one I have that actually does fit both the 12 oz and 5.3 oz cans (standard can sizes equivalent to the ones for canned vegetables and tuna). Nothing I’ve found fits the teensy kitten food cans.
If you have trouble with a silicone lid at first, try setting it on the can and kind of wiggling it to get it sealed. I have one type of lid that I didn’t think fit at first, but with a little gentle encouragement, it was fine. The silicone lids really contain the smell well.
El cheapo, but effective, way to store cat food in the can: plastic wrap sealed with a rubber band. You can reuse the plastic wrap many times, assuming you frequently empty the can and then start another. With the rubber band, you don’t have to worry about the seal of the plastic wrap.