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New coffee jar has that plastic seal inside of it to keep the coffee fresh:

However, to this day I never found a way to remove it without leaving some of it stuck to the rim of the jar:

See what I mean? It's ugly, and sometimes small pieces fall into the coffee itself which is highly annoying.

Any hacks to remove that seal in its whole?

So far I've usually tried:

  1. Pealing off the seal with my hand. Result: what you see in the second image above.
  2. Using scissors or knife: more elegant, less chance of pieces falling to the coffee but it would still always leave something behind.
Alex
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5 Answers5

2

Removing the seal you show has become a personal challenge for me too.

I experimented with all different techniques; but, I was late to the game. Before I found a workable solution someone else discovered that you could peel off the seal like the lid on a canned ham. Then, the problem became how to best grip the edge of the seal to do this.

Enter the perfect Hack: Seal Removal Pliers

medical 'Kelly' straight hemostats

The needle-nose tips of these pliers have mating jaws that will grip any seal edge firmly, and the locking ratchet-bars on the handgrips maintain the pressure until the user unlocks them. Once locked onto the seal, the pliers are used much like a key is used on a canned ham. You just rotate it across the neck of the container; the seal wraps around the jaw pliers as you do it. When you unlock the pliers, the seal slides off.

`* Up to this point some of you might be thinking that these tools are called hemostats, not pliers. Actually, they could also be called fishing pliers for hook removal, pressure clamps for fine model work, or even parcel-wrapping pliers since they excel at holding crossed ribbons in place as you tie a bow in them. As for their use in surgery, there are probably as many fly-fishing doctors who have such pliers attached to their fishing vests as use them in the O.R.'

I got a pair— satisfying.

Good Luck

Stan
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2

Personally, I like to use a knife. You can just stab the knife in the packing, right on the edge of the can's circular top. Then, you can just go around the edge of the can, cutting through the seal. This will leave a ring around the top of the can, but you can remove that by cutting a small line in it and then just peeling it off.

michaelpri
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2

Just switch containers after opening the one the coffee came in. Use a clean, opaque, airtight container to store the coffee instead of the one that they provide you. Also from what I can see, the container they give you is clear which is not ideal for coffee storage.

celeriko
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  • Interesting, not really a lifehack but end result is indeed satisfying. As for clear container, got no problem with that - even prefer it ,easier to see what's inside and prevent mistakes. :-) – Shadow Wizard Chasing Stars Apr 16 '15 at 18:42
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From watching How It's Made, I know that the seal has glue that is heat-activated, therefore, I think the idea of heating it should work. It would have to be pretty hot I think, maybe an iron?

Lefty
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  • Sounds bit risky, I don't want to start a fire. The comments on the question raise similar idea. – Shadow Wizard Chasing Stars Jan 11 '15 at 21:19
  • I can't see how there's any fire risk - but it certainly sounds like a lot of trouble. – Lefty Jan 11 '15 at 21:22
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    What about using an iron or heat-gun to make a REALLY good job of cleaning off the seal - then use the same jar all the time afterwards and just "decant" each new jar into your clean one? – Lefty Jan 11 '15 at 21:25
  • By iron you mean something like [this](http://content.artofmanliness.com/uploads//2011/04/Classic-Iron-Aluminum400.jpg), right? Dunno, but having it on plastic sounds risky that's all. (must admit, interesting idea though :)) – Shadow Wizard Chasing Stars Jan 11 '15 at 21:41
  • Yes, a clothes iron. I wouldn't be concerned at all - but I think a heat-gun would be a lot easier. – Lefty Jan 11 '15 at 22:14
  • Heat gun reminds me for some odd reason of good old Trogdor: http://th09.deviantart.net/fs49/PRE/f/2009/233/8/5/TROGDOR_THE_BURNINATOR_by_BlitzGraphics.jpg ;) – Shadow Wizard Chasing Stars Jan 11 '15 at 22:48
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    This is a plausible solution, would like to see it tested. – Shog9 Jan 13 '15 at 18:10
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Removing it very slowly while pulling back at a sharp angle works. If it tears, start from the other side. The patience required is almost not worth it.

subjectivist
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