Scott,you missed the point. Sell crappy pizza, serve it on greasy cardboard, seal it tightly in the box, then sh!t can it after a week. Reply
Its still one pizza box that ends up in the trash. What’s the point? I can also store the extra pizza in my regular pizza box, which also fits into my fridge. I serve pizza on *washable* and *reusable* plates too! Go me! Reply
This is something we were doing back during college in the sixties. Just never thought to patent it. Too many beers to realize the possibilities. Reply
Kristin – I was thinking the same thing. This is environmentally friendly how? It’s still a cardboard box that will wind up in a landfill. So i saved a few ounces of water not having to wash them. Big whoop. Reply
Silly me. I thought green box referred to leaving the pizza in the fridge until it grew green and fuzzy. Reply
Cool
It must not be very good pizza if that’s all they’re having.
Gary, they laughed at me with that idea in 1981. dunno.
Scott,you missed the point. Sell crappy pizza, serve it on greasy cardboard, seal it tightly in the box, then sh!t can it after a week.
But does it fit in ant average sized rubbish bin?
ant?
An!
But how ‘green’ is it to but a hot pizza into the fridge?
Its still one pizza box that ends up in the trash. What’s the point? I can also store the extra pizza in my regular pizza box, which also fits into my fridge. I serve pizza on *washable* and *reusable* plates too! Go me!
This is something we were doing back during college in the sixties. Just never thought to patent it. Too many beers to realize the possibilities.
Kristin – I was thinking the same thing. This is environmentally friendly how? It’s still a cardboard box that will wind up in a landfill.
So i saved a few ounces of water not having to wash them. Big whoop.
Silly me. I thought green box referred to leaving the pizza in the fridge until it grew green and fuzzy.