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How often to freeze frozen foods?



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 11th 03, 03:26 AM
Fish Heads
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Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?

I had been feeding frozen foods daily (brine shrimp or bloodworms). I
usually try to rinse them out pretty good. I think I'm a little happier
with my water quality now that I've switched to one meal of frozen every
other day. Will this be enough frozen foods for the fish?

I've got Rainbowfish in one tank...those guys are like sharks! I don't
think any food every hits the bottom, the weekly 20% water changes keep
everything in pretty good shape there. It's the Cherry Barbs in the 10 gal
that I'm the most concerned with on water quality.


  #2  
Old July 11th 03, 04:44 AM
NetMax
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Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"Fish Heads" wrote in message
...
I had been feeding frozen foods daily (brine shrimp or bloodworms). I
usually try to rinse them out pretty good. I think I'm a little

happier
with my water quality now that I've switched to one meal of frozen

every
other day. Will this be enough frozen foods for the fish?

I've got Rainbowfish in one tank...those guys are like sharks! I don't
think any food every hits the bottom, the weekly 20% water changes keep
everything in pretty good shape there. It's the Cherry Barbs in the 10

gal
that I'm the most concerned with on water quality.


From your subject line, I thought you were asking how often you could
re-freeze frozen foods. I had a customer this week who was microwaving
the frozen food (very bad). Once thawed, frozen food should not be
re-frozen. The longer it's in a thawed state, the more bacteria get
established (and this happens very quickly) and the food loses it's
ability to stay intact (turns to mush). Inspect your frozen foods at the
LFS for signs of re-freezing (usually a frozen liquid at the edge of the
bag). Avoid this. It may have thawed in transit (at least once) and you
don't know for how long. Good LFS will inspect and reject thawed frozen
foods, but good LFS are sometimes few & far between.

There are 2 methods I know of for feeding. If you have a mixture of
different species, especially if there is a mix of slow & fast feeders,
break a portion of the frozen food and place in a dish of lukewarm water
(like aquarium water). I use small stainless steel food/water bowls for
cats, as they conduct heat well and are easy to clean. Stir periodically
and as soon as it's all thawed, dump it all (or enough that they all get
some each time) in the tank, opposite the filter intake (or turn off the
filter during the feeding period). In chaos, everyone gets a chance to
eat. This method even favours smaller fish, as their bites are bigger
relative to their body size, and larger fish might even not bother eating
much, when fed this way.

The 2nd method used is when the fish are all fairly small and of the same
size and the same species (or similar in feeding abilities). In this
case, break a portion off and drop it in the tank. It will float and
they will pick it apart as it thaws. This works fine for some larger
fish too, like Discus. Although you have less control over where it
floats, because it dissolves slowly, there is less chance of it getting
into the filter intake. Avoid this method as soon as any of the fish are
able to swim away with the bulk of the food. Feeding rings are sometimes
useful too, ymmv.

On rainbowfish ) In a very well populated (crowded ;~) 60g, I have
about 6 species of rainbows (and a few Balas and Golden Wonder Killies).
Whatever I feed, in whatever quantity I choose, I don't think food has
ever fallen lower than 2.5". I have no bottom feeders in this tank (what
would be the point?). 2nd place goes to a tank of Buenos Aires Tetras
and 3rd place goes to the Danio tank.

NetMax


  #3  
Old July 11th 03, 10:19 AM
Toni
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Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"NetMax" wrote in message
news:3kqPa.17017
There are 2 methods I know of for feeding. If you have a mixture of
different species, especially if there is a mix of slow & fast feeders,
break a portion of the frozen food and place in a dish of lukewarm water
(like aquarium water). I use small stainless steel food/water bowls for
cats, as they conduct heat well and are easy to clean. Stir periodically
and as soon as it's all thawed, dump it all (or enough that they all get
some each time) in the tank, opposite the filter intake (or turn off the
filter during the feeding period).




NetMax- I was under the impression that I was supposed to rinse/strain all
frozen foods to remove the "waste water" that surrounds the actual food?? I
thought too much unedible schmutz went into the water if you just dumped it
in.
I'd be happy *not* to have to do this. As it is I put my piece of frozen
food in a coffee filter and let it set until it thaws a bit, or run water
over it to thaw it. Then I rinse/squeeze out the excess water and feed the
food bits with a spoon.
Is this not necessary?

--
Toni
http://www.cearbhaill.com/aquarium.htm


  #4  
Old July 11th 03, 01:39 PM
Jim Brown
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Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


NetMax wrote in message
.. .

"Fish Heads" wrote in message
...
I had been feeding frozen foods daily (brine shrimp or bloodworms). I
usually try to rinse them out pretty good. I think I'm a little

happier
with my water quality now that I've switched to one meal of frozen

every
other day. Will this be enough frozen foods for the fish?

I've got Rainbowfish in one tank...those guys are like sharks! I don't
think any food every hits the bottom, the weekly 20% water changes keep
everything in pretty good shape there. It's the Cherry Barbs in the 10

gal
that I'm the most concerned with on water quality.


From your subject line, I thought you were asking how often you could
re-freeze frozen foods. I had a customer this week who was microwaving
the frozen food (very bad). Once thawed, frozen food should not be
re-frozen. The longer it's in a thawed state, the more bacteria get
established (and this happens very quickly) and the food loses it's
ability to stay intact (turns to mush). Inspect your frozen foods at the
LFS for signs of re-freezing (usually a frozen liquid at the edge of the
bag). Avoid this. It may have thawed in transit (at least once) and you
don't know for how long. Good LFS will inspect and reject thawed frozen
foods, but good LFS are sometimes few & far between.

There are 2 methods I know of for feeding. If you have a mixture of
different species, especially if there is a mix of slow & fast feeders,
break a portion of the frozen food and place in a dish of lukewarm water
(like aquarium water). I use small stainless steel food/water bowls for
cats, as they conduct heat well and are easy to clean. Stir periodically
and as soon as it's all thawed, dump it all (or enough that they all get
some each time) in the tank, opposite the filter intake (or turn off the
filter during the feeding period). In chaos, everyone gets a chance to
eat. This method even favours smaller fish, as their bites are bigger
relative to their body size, and larger fish might even not bother eating
much, when fed this way.

The 2nd method used is when the fish are all fairly small and of the same
size and the same species (or similar in feeding abilities). In this
case, break a portion off and drop it in the tank. It will float and
they will pick it apart as it thaws. This works fine for some larger
fish too, like Discus. Although you have less control over where it
floats, because it dissolves slowly, there is less chance of it getting
into the filter intake. Avoid this method as soon as any of the fish are
able to swim away with the bulk of the food. Feeding rings are sometimes
useful too, ymmv.

On rainbowfish ) In a very well populated (crowded ;~) 60g, I have
about 6 species of rainbows (and a few Balas and Golden Wonder Killies).
Whatever I feed, in whatever quantity I choose, I don't think food has
ever fallen lower than 2.5". I have no bottom feeders in this tank (what
would be the point?). 2nd place goes to a tank of Buenos Aires Tetras
and 3rd place goes to the Danio tank.

NetMax


The only flaw I can find in NetMax's reply (and the reason I no longer buy
frozen brine shrimp) is that the moisture leftover when thawing the shrimp
in highly saturated with body juices. This doesn't get eaten and can be a
major source of pollution. Thaw the shrimp, yes, but gently rinse it
through a fine mesh net to eliminate much of the non edible juice.

Jim


  #5  
Old July 12th 03, 12:27 AM
NetMax
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"Jim Brown" wrote in message
.. .

NetMax wrote in message
.. .

"Fish Heads" wrote in message
...
I had been feeding frozen foods daily (brine shrimp or bloodworms).

I
usually try to rinse them out pretty good.

snip
There are 2 methods I know of for feeding. If you have a mixture of
different species, especially if there is a mix of slow & fast

feeders,
break a portion of the frozen food and place in a dish of lukewarm

water
(like aquarium water). I use small stainless steel food/water bowls

for
cats, as they conduct heat well and are easy to clean. Stir

periodically
and as soon as it's all thawed, dump it all (or enough that they all

get
some each time) in the tank, opposite the filter intake (or turn off

the
filter during the feeding period). In chaos, everyone gets a chance

to
eat. This method even favours smaller fish, as their bites are

bigger
relative to their body size, and larger fish might even not bother

eating
much, when fed this way.

The 2nd method used is when the fish are all fairly small and of the

same
size and the same species (or similar in feeding abilities). In this
case, break a portion off and drop it in the tank. It will float and
they will pick it apart as it thaws. This works fine for some larger
fish too, like Discus. Although you have less control over where it
floats, because it dissolves slowly, there is less chance of it

getting
into the filter intake. Avoid this method as soon as any of the fish

are
able to swim away with the bulk of the food. Feeding rings are

sometimes
useful too, ymmv.

snip
NetMax


The only flaw I can find in NetMax's reply (and the reason I no longer

buy
frozen brine shrimp) is that the moisture leftover when thawing the

shrimp
in highly saturated with body juices. This doesn't get eaten and can

be a
major source of pollution. Thaw the shrimp, yes, but gently rinse it
through a fine mesh net to eliminate much of the non edible juice.

Jim


Regarding rinsing the frozen brine shrimp, did I never convey to you just
how lazy I am? ;~) I'll admit that when I thaw a big chunk of shrimp
(about 4oz), I sometimes let it settle to the bottom of my melting bowl,
and then I pour off a portion of the water (now somewhat juicy) before
dropping it into the tanks. The amount of contamination varys by
manufacturer, and if it's ever been re-frozen, it's much worst. At home,
I drop the frozen block of shrimp into my powerfilters. I have some
plastic Hornwort hanging in the filter's output and the frozen shrimp
gets caught up in the plant while is slowly dissolves. The plant was
there to prevent overcurious fish from swimming upstream into the filter
and then jumping out. The amount of contamination does not bother me.
The tanks are large (nothing smaller than a 60g), I usually have a range
of mouths to feed, and what is indigestible is converted into something
else by my filters. I would be more concerned with smaller tanks though,
so it's a good point to consider rinsing.

I'm still convinced that frozen shrimp is one of the best foods though.
It has a lot of fibre which is missing from their usual diet, it's animal
but they fed off of algae, so it's got vegetation in it, and coming from
a marine environment, it's not likely to have freshwater contagions to
worry about. There are probably better processed foods (ie: community
delight), but I'm from the old school still ;o)

NetMax


  #6  
Old July 12th 03, 12:31 AM
NetMax
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"Stan" wrote in message
...
A point of interest.
These days, modern refridgerators are frost free. They accomplish this

feat
by heating up the freezer compartment to melt away the frost and

draining
this water to a pan underneath where the heat causes it to evaporate.

Ever
notice that those frozen flats of bloodworms, brineshrimp, ...etc

little
bubbles tend to get smaller with more air space after a while..... Its
melts and refreezes many many times. But, it depends on your fridges
defrost cycle times and how long (or much) frozen food you keep......

snip

Are you certain? I know next to nothing about a defrost cycle, but I'd
have thought that the air was being heavily de-humidified causing the
frost to melt into the air, to be collected in a drip pan somewhere.
Even if there was a cyclical thaw, wouldn't it be brief enough to only
cause frost to melt, and not the contents of the packages?

NetMax


  #7  
Old July 12th 03, 01:08 AM
NetMax
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"Toni" wrote in message
rthlink.net...

"NetMax" wrote in message
news:3kqPa.17017
There are 2 methods I know of for feeding. If you have a mixture of
different species, especially if there is a mix of slow & fast

feeders,
break a portion of the frozen food and place in a dish of lukewarm

water
(like aquarium water). I use small stainless steel food/water bowls

for
cats, as they conduct heat well and are easy to clean. Stir

periodically
and as soon as it's all thawed, dump it all (or enough that they all

get
some each time) in the tank, opposite the filter intake (or turn off

the
filter during the feeding period).




NetMax- I was under the impression that I was supposed to rinse/strain

all
frozen foods to remove the "waste water" that surrounds the actual

food?? I
thought too much unedible schmutz went into the water if you just

dumped it
in.
I'd be happy *not* to have to do this. As it is I put my piece of

frozen
food in a coffee filter and let it set until it thaws a bit, or run

water
over it to thaw it. Then I rinse/squeeze out the excess water and feed

the
food bits with a spoon.
Is this not necessary?

--
Toni


Most good answers in the aquarium trade start with "it depends" ;~),
followed by a bunch of questions, and then the answer is still heavily
rooted in personal experience and opinion.

That 'schmutz' has a lot of indigestable organic pollution. If your tank
was small, or marginally filtered, or there was a reason for extra
cleansiness (ie: discus fry tank, breeding tank, hospital tank, still
cycling etc), then a quick rinse in a shrimp net (or a coffee filter as
you use) is IMHO a very good idea. If you feed frozen foods
infrequently, or the tank is large with a moderate bio-load (so you have
active & stable bacterial levels established), or you are overfiltered
(which you should always be), then use your discretion. I will sometimes
pour off the excess water from my shrimp melting container. As a general
rule of thumb (which I am making up right now), whatever cloudiness it
leaves behind should be gone within 20 minutes, or else you shouldn't be
doing it. Does that sound about right?

I don't handle my tanks with kid gloves. I do observe all the basics,
and after the fish, plants and tank are stable & healthy (3 months?), I'm
much more relaxed and carefree about their operation. My tanks are
generally not smaller than 60g (which makes them easier to balance and
stay balanced), and I do not overfeed. Another way to think about this
organic pollution is to decide what effect a dead and rotting fish would
have in your aquarium. The shrimp 'juice' might represent one or two
small Neon Tetra's worth of organic matter. Most of my tank set-ups
would absorb the decay of a dozen Neon Tetras without a ripple. Perhaps
a gruesome method to put a different perspective on your question, but
anyone who has fished a skeleton out would have an idea of their tank's
ability to harmlessly process decay, (and in an aquarium, there is always
something in decay).

NetMax

http://www.cearbhaill.com/aquarium.htm




  #8  
Old July 12th 03, 06:45 AM
NetMax
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?

Big time, but I never rinse/strain my frozen foods, ever, honest.

I just have to remember to explain why, what works for me, works for me.

NetMax

"Buckaroo" wrote in message
...
Spinning, huh Max.

Most good answers in the aquarium trade start with "it depends" ;~),
followed by a bunch of questions, and then the answer is still

heavily
rooted in personal experience and opinion.





  #9  
Old July 12th 03, 04:21 PM
Stan
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?


"NetMax" wrote in message
.. .

"Stan" wrote in message
...
A point of interest.
These days, modern refridgerators are frost free. They accomplish

this
feat
by heating up the freezer compartment to melt away the frost and

draining
this water to a pan underneath where the heat causes it to

evaporate.
Ever
notice that those frozen flats of bloodworms, brineshrimp, ...etc

little
bubbles tend to get smaller with more air space after a while.....

Its
melts and refreezes many many times. But, it depends on your

fridges
defrost cycle times and how long (or much) frozen food you

keep......
snip

Are you certain? I know next to nothing about a defrost cycle, but

I'd
have thought that the air was being heavily de-humidified causing the
frost to melt into the air, to be collected in a drip pan somewhere.


Up here in Minnesota, the humidity drops to almost zilch and yet all the
snow remains.


Even if there was a cyclical thaw, wouldn't it be brief enough to only
cause frost to melt, and not the contents of the packages?


Apparently its long enough over time to melt my shrimp and bloodworm
bubbles. You should see what it does to those cheap ice pops that come
in those plastic tubes. After a month or so there is a couple inches of
air in the little freeze pop and the pop is a hard as a rock chunk of
ice.

You know, I have gotten really spoiled on these frost free fridges. I
have one of those little cheap college kid fridges to keep my fish food
stuff in, and its little freezer has a glazier growing off of it. I
defrosted it once and man......what a mess. I just keep flake and
blackworms in it. I have it turned all the way down so it doesn't
freeze my worms.....anymore. Now it just drips cold condensation off
the freezer compartment into a worm keeper under it.

NetMax




  #10  
Old July 14th 03, 11:45 PM
Earl D Fitzgerald
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default How often to freeze frozen foods?

I know this one...

Most refrig/freezers have a defrost timer. The timer controls the
operation of the compressor pump and the defrost heater inside the condesor
core. The timer will turn off the compressor and active the heater coils.
The coils melt the ice on the condesor core until it reachs a temp high
enough to activate a high temp cut out. The cycle is normal 10-15 minutes
long before returning a cooling cycle.

If this defrost cycle is melting your frozen foods your freeze is not set
cold enough to begin with...


Fishboy


"NetMax" wrote in message
.. .

"Stan" wrote in message
...
A point of interest.
These days, modern refridgerators are frost free. They accomplish this

feat
by heating up the freezer compartment to melt away the frost and

draining
this water to a pan underneath where the heat causes it to evaporate.

Ever
notice that those frozen flats of bloodworms, brineshrimp, ...etc

little
bubbles tend to get smaller with more air space after a while..... Its
melts and refreezes many many times. But, it depends on your fridges
defrost cycle times and how long (or much) frozen food you keep......

snip

Are you certain? I know next to nothing about a defrost cycle, but I'd
have thought that the air was being heavily de-humidified causing the
frost to melt into the air, to be collected in a drip pan somewhere.
Even if there was a cyclical thaw, wouldn't it be brief enough to only
cause frost to melt, and not the contents of the packages?

NetMax




 




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