pebblerocker: A worried orange dragon, holding an umbrella, gazes at the sky. (Default)
pebblerocker ([personal profile] pebblerocker) wrote2019-01-21 09:19 pm
Entry tags:

rustle rustle

Do any of you know of any portable snacks that can be eaten quietly?

I've started my studies with a little 3-day preparatory course, and... doing brain stuff is very tiring? Physical work I can do all day, but sitting and listening and thinking is difficult to switch into. By morning tea time I was convinced we'd skipped our first break and gone straight through to lunch. Snacking more often might help, but I don't want to bother the others with rustly muesli bar wrappings or bags of nuts.

The woman next to me ate an apple today, amazingly quietly. I like apples, but for me to eat one half that quietly would consume all my attention.
sallymn: (food 7)

[personal profile] sallymn 2019-01-21 09:26 am (UTC)(link)
Banana?
sallymn: (food 7)

[personal profile] sallymn 2019-01-22 10:06 am (UTC)(link)
And it comes in its own neat natural carry case :)
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-21 12:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Resealable plastic bags (like these) don't rustle. I'd suggest taking a pint-sized one of those and filling it with pieces of dried fruit, sunflower seeds, and the like, and filling it up before you leave home. That way, you can also buy in bulk, which is cheaper, and produces less trash.

When I was in high school, a bag of this sort of trail mix was always in my lunchbox, and a half-pint bag would last about a week... Plus, dried apple slices don't crunch, and they don't make your hands sticky.

In high school, my gorp mix was: raisins, dried apples (sometimes dried apricots) sunflower seeds, cashews, almonds, and carob chips (<-- they make a lousy substitute for chocolate, but if you're not expecting chocolate, they're rather good)
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-21 05:47 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm glad my suggestion was (potentially) helpful.

vilakins: (lark)

[personal profile] vilakins 2019-01-21 10:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Zippy bags are great for that! I used to take one to cinemas to put any bought sweets into as those cellophane bags are so bloody noisy.* (I don't buy sweets now.)

* Damned woman next to me in Peter Jackson's They Shall Never Grow Old annoyed the hell out of me with a bag of crisps.
capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)

[personal profile] capri0mni 2019-01-22 12:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Kinda makes you wonder why cinemas don't commission zippy-bagged wrapped snacks from their suppliers as a matter of course.

... unless they want people to hear others opening their snacks, and realize they want want a snack, too. After all, its the food and drink where movie theaters make most of their money. :-/
vilakins: Vila with stars superimposed (Default)

[personal profile] vilakins 2019-01-22 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Huh, something happened to my comment; can't see it anywhere. I can't be bothered reproducing it, but basically soft thin bread-bag-type plastic would work well.
vilakins: The word chocolate in many different languages (chocolate)

Re: It turned up in my email just fine!

[personal profile] vilakins 2019-01-23 09:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! Weird. At first I thought it was hidden in a collapsed thread somewhere, or I commented somewhere else in error.
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[personal profile] hunningham 2019-01-21 01:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Yoghurt? Satsumas or any of the easy-peel oranges. Dried fruit won't crunch in the same way nuts do, so raisins, dates, dried apricots might work for you. Take museli bars out of their wrapping and wrap them in cling film. That's all I can think of.