Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wow, I've traveled all over the world and hotels have always frozen breast milk for me. Never tried it in the US, though!
OK I have to ask - how come you were storing frozen breast milk all over the world?
NP but I travel for work and have a baby, so... storing frozen breast milk all over the world. Not much of a mystery? Anyway, I have had hit or miss luck. Smaller hotels even in cities in Western countries have always accommodated me (e.g., multiple hotels in Strasbourg, which I've had to travel to a lot); bigger chains and, in particular, bigger chains at airport hotels almost never have. Rather than commercial grade freezers, I've had hotels stick it in the freezer part of the fridge their employees use for lunch. That's what I do at work too. I prefer freezing my milk so that I can then stick it in an insulated carry on to get through commute-flight-commute; refrigeration isn't enough for Transatlantic flights. Not sure if that was OP's intention too.
(Also, all of the people talking about bacteria are being a bit insane. The milk is in a bag. It's no more bacteria filled than the other things in the freezer -- e.g., frozen meat -- and the milk itself isn't coming into contact w/ anything at all. Also, freezers kill/temporary hold bacteria at bay. That's their purpose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wow, I've traveled all over the world and hotels have always frozen breast milk for me. Never tried it in the US, though!
OK I have to ask - how come you were storing frozen breast milk all over the world?
Anonymous wrote:Oh wow, I've traveled all over the world and hotels have always frozen breast milk for me. Never tried it in the US, though!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why freeze? BM is good for 6 days in the fridge. Will you be gone for 6 days?
NP. I typically travel for 11-13 days at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Why freeze? BM is good for 6 days in the fridge. Will you be gone for 6 days?
Anonymous wrote:No way can you put breastmilk in a restaurant freezer!!!!
In the future you tell them 1-2 days in advance you need a mini fridge with a freezer compartment for “medical reasoa and they will give you one.
Anonymous wrote:Would you want the prep cook’s seman sample on ice next to the salmon fillet you are about to order?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a good thing they wouldn’t store your bodily fluid.
+1
I always think people who refer to breastmilk as "bodily fluid" do so with a sneer and a wrinkle in their uptight noses.
FFS, she's not asking to store vaginal discharge or urine. This is FOOD FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION.
Breast milk carries many of the the same diseases as vaginal discharge or blood would. It isn’t safe for universal human consumption unless it has been screened and processed, just like blood products you would receive from a donor.
Don't worry, none of us want you to personally consume it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the best thing would to be to ask for some ice and stick it in a cooler.
This. Does the hotel have ice machines? Fill some bags with ice and put them in your cooler. If there are no ice machines, ask for ice at the restaurant.
I have never stayed at a hotel that doesn't have access to an ice machine somehow--in cheap ones, there is a vending machine and an ice machine, and in ritzier ones, you get ice via room service. And there is always an ice bucket, whether a cheap plastic one, or one for icing down your champagne.
Why did you discard it, instead of putting ice in your cooler bag?