Stasher products are designed in Emeryville, California and manufactured responsibly in China.
WHERE IS STASHER MADE? Stasher is designed in California and produced responsibly in China.
The assembly of the Ziploc bag is carried out by SC Johnson at one of their factories. They have many production plants around the globe, including several in the United States, Netherlands, and China.
These 100% silicone Stasher Bags are plastic free, toxin free, and durable. Safe to use in the microwave, freezer and even the oven.
Stasher products are made with platinum, food-grade silicone and meet safety standards for food products from the FDA and EU regulators. Why are you so expensive? Sigh, we get it.
Though silicone is technically a plastic polymer, its durable molecular structure keeps it from shedding microplastics in the way that common plastics do.
Yes, absolutely. Stasher's team vets each partner (we call them Stashpoints) to be certain that your luggage will be safe. We only work with trusted partners, and we regularly screen their performance to make sure they meet our quality standards. As policy, your luggage should be stored in a securely locked room.
In case you didn't know, your Stasher bags and bowls can handle high heat temps up to 425°F, making it safe for boiling and microwaving, too.
Benefits of food-grade silicone:
If cared for properly, it won't harden, crack, peel, crumble, dry out, rot or become brittle over time. Lightweight, saves space, easy to transport. Food safe and odorless — contains no BPA, latex, lead, or phthalates.
MADE IN CHINA Most MICHAEL Michael Kors bags are made in China. Some are made in Korea, Indonesia, Vietnam and United States. Some used to be made in Italy. THE STITCHING All the stitching should be in a straight line, evenly- spaced and neatly done.
unlike dome have said Liquid Tide sold in the US is American made…” In the USA, Procter and Gamble company's largest Tide detergent factories are located in Lima, Louisiana, and Alexandria, Louisiana.”
For example, due to the wear/tear and continuous use of the self-sealing plastic ziplock bag, the plastics can be broken down and release some debris as microplastics.
One of the best and most important features of Stasher is that it's endlessly reusable! The very first Stasher bags ever made are still going strong, keeping food fresh, making life easier and preventing plastic pollution every day. Your Stasher bags can last for decades as long as you treat them right.
To protect the planet and your carry-on's contents, opt for a TSA-friendly Stasher Quart Bag or any of our travel-friendly liquid bags. Unlike single-use plastic bags, Stasher bags are super durable and endlessly reusable, so you can bring the same Stasher bag with you every time you travel.
Do pack raw meat in leak-proof Stasher bags to avoid it leaking into other foods. Even better, freeze your meat before the trip, and keep it at the very bottom of the cooler.
REUSABLE, REWASHABLE CONTAINERS: Stasher silicone reusable storage bags make it easy to ditch single-use plastic and meet endless household needs. Safe for the dishwasher, microwave, oven (up to 425°F), and more.
Using Stasher reusable storage bags
LEFT: I frozen chicken on the same day, same exact time, and the same way. RIGHT: Two weeks later, I pulled the chicken out and saw virtually no freezer burn only on the Stasher bag chicken. The cheaper bags are a good option if you can't spend $50 on a set of storage bags.
So in 2016, Nouri launched Stasher: a company that had $1.6 million worth of sales and $100,000 in profit when it appeared in the Tank. Nouri's goal was to reach $5.2 million by year-end in 2018 and, more ambitiously, turn Stasher into a $100 million company over the next four years.
The ultimate validation came in December 2019 when SC Johnson - a $10 billion consumer goods giant - acquired Stasher.
Our bags are microwave, boil, and dishwasher safe for easy, breezy sterilization.
While silicone is durable and has a high temperature resistance, it makes us queasy to be heating food to very high temperatures in a material like silicone which has been shown to leach chemicals and is not completely inert and stable.
We have recently shown that polystyrene and high-density polyethylene macroplastic can be broken down into nano-sized particles by applying mechanical force from an immersion blender. In this article, we show that particles in the nano-size range are released from silicone and latex pacifiers after the same treatment.