Does "Easy Cheese" go out of date?
- Martin Milner
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Does "Easy Cheese" go out of date?
I got a squirt can of Easy Cheese on my visit to the States in 2004, and I see it has a date on the bottom of Oct 04.
It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that schwing
- Flyingcursor
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- missy
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I think that may be like Twinkies - they don't have shelf lives - they have half lives!!!
Seriously, there are two "dates" that may be on food in the US. One is a "use by" date. The other is a "sell by" date. If you have a "sell by" date, depending on the food product, it could last indefinately afterwards. If it's a "use by" date, I wouldn't chance it.
On a similar vein:
why does bottle water have a "use by" date on it?
(actually I know the answer to this, but it's kinda silly)
Seriously, there are two "dates" that may be on food in the US. One is a "use by" date. The other is a "sell by" date. If you have a "sell by" date, depending on the food product, it could last indefinately afterwards. If it's a "use by" date, I wouldn't chance it.
On a similar vein:
why does bottle water have a "use by" date on it?
(actually I know the answer to this, but it's kinda silly)
- Flyingcursor
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Y'know...I have done something like that...I.D.10-t wrote:Strangest thing that we ever ate that should have been expired was a head of lettuce that was in our crisper for over a month. It was crisp, green, and beautiful. We should have left it alone as an experiment.
my wife hates onions, so I only use them when I cook for myself. Needless to say, they don't get used very often.
One weekend, I guess about a year ago, my wife was out of town with her sister, so I thougt I'd make myself some killer fajitas or something...I bought 3 onions, and used only two...I put the other in the crisper for later.
Fast forward nine or ten months... my wife opens the crisper and discovers a scallion monster with huge tentacles growing in it. (we don't use the crisper very often, as we usually cook what we buy and only for the two of us...) Somehow Mr. Onion was able to not only survive in the fridge, but thrive (it probably canniballized a sweet potato I had in there, that's my best guess.) despite having little moisture and little light (the stalks were a pale greenish white, but they were alive and fresh)!
Against the protests of my wife I decided to keep the onion as a pet...it looks like a little baby Cthulhu! I might keep it when we move this weekend.....or even better, I may put this little horror back into the crisper to awate the next tenant
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- brewerpaul
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Technically speaking, Easy Cheese is not really food at all, so I don't think it can go bad... how can something go BAD if it was never GOOD in the first place?
Food goes bad when it either gets inhabited by bacteria or fungi, or when it oxidizes. Being sealed inside a sterile airtight can, neither of these can happen so I suspect you can use this as long as you like. I'll bet that expiration date is more of a CYA (cover your ass) thing that the maker puts there, possibly as a US Govt requirement.
Food goes bad when it either gets inhabited by bacteria or fungi, or when it oxidizes. Being sealed inside a sterile airtight can, neither of these can happen so I suspect you can use this as long as you like. I'll bet that expiration date is more of a CYA (cover your ass) thing that the maker puts there, possibly as a US Govt requirement.
- SteveShaw
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One day in the supermarket I was discussing spag bol with a bloke I know as we stood by the cheese counter. I was after a block of Parmesan. He asked me why I was bothering to buy the block when you can buy it ready-grated in a tub. I said that I liked it freshly-grated. He said that he'd been using the same tub of grated for the past eleven years and it still tasted great to him. Aargh!
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That's presupposing that the packing environment was sterile to begin with.brewerpaul wrote:Technically speaking, Easy Cheese is not really food at all, so I don't think it can go bad... how can something go BAD if it was never GOOD in the first place?
Food goes bad when it either gets inhabited by bacteria or fungi, or when it oxidizes. Being sealed inside a sterile airtight can, neither of these can happen so I suspect you can use this as long as you like. I'll bet that expiration date is more of a CYA (cover your ass) thing that the maker puts there, possibly as a US Govt requirement.
Even vacuum-packed military MREs go bad (albeit after around 10 years or so at 60 degrees), because it's near impossible to get rid of all the bacteria and stuff. In fact the warmer you keep an MRE, the faster it goes bad, for exactly that reason. See the handy chart: http://www.goldenseason.com.sg/mre_shelf_life.html
Considering that the first three ingredients in Easy Cheese are milk water, and whey protien there seems plenty of "food" there for bacteria to work on. If it's past it's expiration date, I wouldn't eat it.
- Martin Milner
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I squirted a bit out, it's still the same colour (orange), but it's a lot drippier than before, and a whole lot less appetising looking than it seemed in the supermarket in March 2004.Wanderer wrote:That's presupposing that the packing environment was sterile to begin with.brewerpaul wrote:Technically speaking, Easy Cheese is not really food at all, so I don't think it can go bad... how can something go BAD if it was never GOOD in the first place?
Food goes bad when it either gets inhabited by bacteria or fungi, or when it oxidizes. Being sealed inside a sterile airtight can, neither of these can happen so I suspect you can use this as long as you like. I'll bet that expiration date is more of a CYA (cover your ass) thing that the maker puts there, possibly as a US Govt requirement.
Even vacuum-packed military MREs go bad (albeit after around 10 years or so at 60 degrees), because it's near impossible to get rid of all the bacteria and stuff. In fact the warmer you keep an MRE, the faster it goes bad, for exactly that reason. See the handy chart: http://www.goldenseason.com.sg/mre_shelf_life.html
Considering that the first three ingredients in Easy Cheese are milk water, and whey protien there seems plenty of "food" there for bacteria to work on. If it's past it's expiration date, I wouldn't eat it.
Actually, it wasn't even appetising in the supermarket, I just wanted to show it to my work colleagues as an example of USA good eats.