- Aug 7, 2003
- 8,087
I’ve got a Vesta Beef Curry 11 years out of date.
Not quite true - it depends on the food. See https://www.bbc.co.uk/food/articles/mould for a decent guide.Never cut mould off , and eat !!!! it will also be starting to go off in the rest of the food just not showing it yet .
Probably tastes better now!View attachment 152916
I’ve got a Vesta Beef Curry 11 years out of date.
I have no knowledge of such things but I imagine the cost of doing that would negate any revenue it produced. In other words, why would they bother?I dont know how true it is but I was told by the quality control manager for Maynards (wine gums) that they make and bag gums for most of the supermarkets and the law only allows a date of 12 months so when nearing that date they remove them and repackage them with a new date and a code telling how many times it has been repackaged. They apparently can legally do this 3 times so the sweets although in date could be up to 4 years old but still be perfectly edible and in good condition. I cannot see a reason for telling me this if not true. I must add this was about 15 years ago so laws and practice may have changed since then
Well it certainly won't taste any worseProbably tastes better now!
That also goes for the "once opened consume within X days" on the labelling for a lot of foods. When I was growing up, this didn't exist. It's a modern inclusion and, IMO, in a lot of cases it's there to create additional demand for the product.
Back in the early 70's I worked for a large supermarket chain (Keymarkets) and it was common practise to cut mould from certain hard cheeses, re-wrap them and put back on sale.In the bad old days - 1960's before "best before" dates - I remember one occasion when my dad, who ran a corner shop, took some cheese out of the cold cabinet to cut some mould off it, and then put it back. It was only a little bit of mould, though.
I was expecting an early '70s date, tbh.View attachment 152916
I’ve got a Vesta Beef Curry 11 years out of date.
I do hope you kept them, to pass through the generations.When I had to clear my late parents house in 2012 I came across a tin of peas. These were dated best before 1966. That was before my brother, Driver8, was even born.
This meant that tin had been packed up and moved to 4 homes in that time by our mum.
Yes agree unfair to eat the unborn and the elderly a bit toughPlus we would be careful with pregnant or elderly visitors.