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It’s Monday night, and you just got home.
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You’re too exhausted to actually cook a decent meal, so you reach into the freezer
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and pull out a frozen dinner from the back.
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Your stomach rumbles.
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You open the box and pull out your lasagna and. Noooo!
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Freezer burn.
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Everything’s covered in a thick layer of stale-smelling ice crystals, and you know
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your dinner is ruined.
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It’s a common thing. Any food you leave in the freezer too long is eventually going
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to end up about as appealing as a dead Tauntaun.
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Why, you ask?
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Because it’s drying up.
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See, there are frozen water molecules in your steak, or ice cream, or bag of corn.
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And over time, in the dry air of your freezer, some of those molecules tend to sublimate
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-- in other words, they go directly from solid ice to water vapor.
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You may have noticed this happening to ice cubes, too -- it’s why they slowly shrink
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in their trays when you could’ve sworn you filled them up all the way.
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The molecules will often then re-freeze somewhere else, like on the package or as part of the
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gigantic frost wall that’s threatening to slowly take over your entire freezer.
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But either way, your food isn’t getting its moisture back -- it ends up dehydrated
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and discolored, not to mention puckered and gray and generally unappetizing.
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You can help delay freezer burn by double-wrapping foods and sealing them in air-tight containers
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to reduce their exposure to air, but if you leave your food in the freezer long enough, eventually
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sublimation is going to ruin your dinner plans.
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The good news -- if you can call it that -- is that frozen foods don’t decay, so while freezer-burned
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food might look and smell terrible, it's probably still safe to eat, technically.
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