Who throws away food ?
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No doubt with some quickly perishable foods.Curb_It said:
I tried that with some hummous recently, 3 days out of date i think. AFter about an hour i realised that the eat by dates are there for a reason.Oggy Red said:
Many food items are perfectly safe to eat for some days after the 'sell by date' - that's just the date the store must sell the item by.
Anyway, any odds and ends can always get used up in one go.
That's why they invented stews and curry.
I mean, you wouldn't risk eating prawns 3 days out of date.
I bought a bag of potatoes today, with today's 'sell by date' - reduced by 40%.
They're in perfect condition.
Being potatoes, they'll be good to use for a while yet.
And I get them for almost half price. Why pay more?
Loads of other 'out of date' foods stay usable for days.
Many other tinned and packet foods have a month and year sell by date stamped on them.
That always refers to the last day of the month - and you can be sure they'll still be fine to use for a short period after.
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A number of strategically placed mirrors should sort that problemcolthe3rd said:
Unfortunately I can't see my living room from the toiletsoapy_jones said:
After having strategically lined the TV up within clear sight of the crapper of course!colthe3rd said:I rarely throw food away. Meat gets frozen and really the only stuff in my fridge is milk, veg (which is probably the only thing I do throw away if it hasn't been used) and anything defrosting from the night before. The benefits of living on your own. That and sitting around in your boxers and having a number 2 with the toilet door open.
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Unfortunately I can't see my living room from the toilet
A number of strategically placed mirrors should sort that problem
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Thanks mister partridge.0 -
this thread deserves a reprise .. read this BBC article .. ridiculous, wasteful and surely not economically viable:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-346474540 -
Excellent I'll use that excuse to refuse to eat spinach ever again.Covered End said:if it smells ok and tastes ok, then it's ok.
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But you wouldn't switch on an empty one........?tangoflash said:And remember folks, a full freezer uses less electric than an empty one..........
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Mrs. Dave is a "Sell by date" Taliban we constantly argue over food she wants to throw away which is perfectly fine to eat. My opinion is that most of these dates are there to protect the food retailer and manufacturer from litigation and bears no resemblance to reality. The last time I got food poisoning was from a piece of Chicken we had bought and cooked the same day.
The other big issue I have is nut allergy information. My granddaughter has a nut allergy hence when she is staying with us we check carefully what food contains nuts. What you see on EVERY biscuit and cake wrapper is "Nuts may have been used on the process" this again is to cover arses and not give people proper information after all the food either contains nuts or it doesn't. Drives me NUTS!!!0 -
Me and Mrs FA to be used to shop in-store @ Asda, used to be around £80 per week with a bit of waste, instead we now do the Click and Collect where we go to the relevant point at the store (You select your time and date) and we're now paying about £30-40 per month0
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I thought this was going to be about a food based protest against RD and KM at the Wednesday game...0
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they might act like a coupla turnips .. but the BBC article is about REAL turnipskillerandflash said:I thought this was going to be about a food based protest against RD and KM at the Wednesday game...
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Everything get's eaten - we don't have ready meals, and everything is cooked from scratch...larger meals get portioned and frozen. I've got a nutra-bullet , so any fruit and veg that's left over & hasn't been cooked will end up in that for breakfast.0
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No processed frozen food? Are you from a time that Iceland forgot?
Took me 6 months to work out it was the microwave making the "bing" noise and not the God of ready meals blessing the steaming carton of gloop set before me!1 -
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Covered End said:This came up in the household budget thread & I thought it deserved it's own thread. Just call me Paulie :-) I don't understand this "throwing away unused food". If you have a big enough fridge & a big enough freezer, there should be virtually no need to throw away any food ? We never throw away unused food.
There was a household budget thread?0 -
CAFCTrev said:Covered End said:This came up in the household budget thread & I thought it deserved it's own thread. Just call me Paulie :-) I don't understand this "throwing away unused food". If you have a big enough fridge & a big enough freezer, there should be virtually no need to throw away any food ? We never throw away unused food.
There was a household budget thread?
It was removed to save money.
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I had sealled bags of nuts in the cupboard for two years. Brazil, Walnuts and Macadamia, all tasted like soapy gas.
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My mate had a pickled egg from behind the bar of the Raglan in Burrage Rd it was rank,
when he asked what was the date was on the jar, Best before June 99 was the reply, it was consumed only 1 yr short of its 10th birthday.6 -
usetobunkin said:My mate had a pickled egg from behind the bar of the Raglan in Burrage Rd it was rank,
when he asked what was the date was on the jar, Best before June 99 was the reply, it was consumed only 1 yr short of its 10th birthday.
Totally unrelated to the thread.4 -
My wife refuses to throw any food away which is admirable, even when it's gone mouldy she can't bring herself to do it.
The point I wish to land with her is that the crime isn't throwing it away - the world doesn't give a fuck if we ate it or not. The issue is that we bought it in the first place and didn't need it, or bought something else when we already had something to eat.9 - Sponsored links:
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PopIcon said:I had sealled bags of nuts in the cupboard for two years. Brazil, Walnuts and Macadamia, all tasted like soapy gas.0
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Me and my wife both work hard and are in a position we don't struggle to feed ourselves. I've always played fast and loose with best before dates. What does wind me up is how quickly fresh fruit and vegetables goes bad from some shops. Asda and Aldi are particularly bad at this. So it gets returned to the earth where is shall feed my plants and hopefully this years sensimilia. Much better than the dried horse shit I've been using
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Carter said:Me and my wife both work hard and are in a position we don't struggle to feed ourselves. I've always played fast and loose with best before dates. What does wind me up is how quickly fresh fruit and vegetables goes bad from some shops. Asda and Aldi are particularly bad at this. So it gets returned to the earth where is shall feed my plants and hopefully this years sensimilia. Much better than the dried horse shit I've been using1
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It is quite a good idea to only get what you’re going to eat or drink.
All of us waste a bit, but waste food can be reduced.
There is something disturbing about waste food in a hungry world with food banks.1 -
My wife almost always makes way too much food for the people that are supposed to be eating it. It's effing criminal the amount of food we end up throwing away. As I'm always the one who clears up after meals, the amount of food I scrape into the bin really annoys me.0
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JiMMy 85 said:My wife refuses to throw any food away which is admirable, even when it's gone mouldy she can't bring herself to do it.
The point I wish to land with her is that the crime isn't throwing it away - the world doesn't give a fuck if we ate it or not. The issue is that we bought it in the first place and didn't need it, or bought something else when we already had something to eat.
One thing that is missed in this and goes against what was drilled into many of us as kids is that eating something you don't actually need i.e. you must clear your plate is as much of a waste as throwing it out. and can do a lot of serious health damage long term. The bigger waste is putting it on your plate in the first place. Its taken me a while to be able to listen to my body and stop when comfortable.3 -
Seeing how fat we are as a nation i am surprised any food gets binned.2
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We’ve managed to reduce our food wastage to nearly 0.
As mentioned above we do a weekly meal plan and then we order on click and collect. No wandering around the markets and supermarkets and picking up random things we don’t need and won’t eat!0