This article was co-authored by Bill Holdenstern. Bill Holdenstern is a Baker and the Co-Owner of East Bay Pie Co. in San Francisco, California. With over 10 years of experience in the food industry, he specializes in making pot pies filled with flavors from around the world. Bill trained with chefs in multiple restaurants and studied business at Bunker Hill Community College. East Bay Pie Co has been profiled in The Manual, Purple List, and Nosh.
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You can ship perishable items at your own risk if they are properly packaged, abide by regulations, and can be delivered in a reasonable time limit so as not to deteriorate.[1]
Items are perishable if environmental conditions (like humidity or extreme temperatures) can cause a decrease in value, pose a health hazard, or create a bad odor, nuisance, or disturbance under normal shipping and storage conditions for longer than seven calendar days. For example, dairy, seafood, meat, plants, live fish, vegetables and fruit are all perishable items.[2] When you need to ship perishable items, it's important for everyone’s safety to make sure that they'll arrive in good shape.Related New
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