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Thread ID: 97874 2009-03-02 22:17:00 Use by/Best by Dates Poppa John (284) PC World Chat
Post ID Timestamp Content User
752801 2009-03-02 22:17:00 Hi all.
How seriously do you take notice of these? How much leeway is there in using a product after it's use by date. Yes I realise this will vary with the product.
However, I cannot believe that, say, a tin of beans becomes extremely poisonous if opened one week after it's date. PJ
Poppa John (284)
752802 2009-03-02 22:33:00 I take notice of it on a product by product basis where common sense will almost ell you without the date being there.
A Carton of Milk vs a can of Beans.
I think I would keep the beans and toss the Milk if they were both over their dates.
Bantu (52)
752803 2009-03-02 22:41:00 Yea, purely case by case. Also best before doesn't always mean expired. rob_on_guitar (4196)
752804 2009-03-03 00:15:00 Yea, purely case by case. Also best before doesn't always mean expired.

Whereas "Use By:" does....
johcar (6283)
752805 2009-03-03 00:49:00 "Use by" to me sounds more specific than "best before"... rob_on_guitar (4196)
752806 2009-03-03 01:29:00 Seems that canned food is good for ages :spam

Obviously with milk etc. you need to be a bit careful.

wiki.answers.com
Fifthdawn (9467)
752807 2009-03-03 01:33:00 I'm a bit anal over use by dates (and leftover food too).
My thoughts are why take the risk over getting sick: "when in doubt, throw it out" ;)
dyewitness (9398)
752808 2009-03-03 02:18:00 what i hate even more is when there is a date stamp on the food product, but it does not say whether it is manufactured date, used by date, best before date ...

Like 01Jan09 on a can of something ...
SKT174 (1319)
752809 2009-03-03 02:30:00 My brother used to work at a milk factory and he says you still have up to a couple of days to drink the milk after the best before/use by date. --Wolf-- (128)
752810 2009-03-03 02:34:00 Hi all.
How seriously do you take notice of these? How much leeway is there in using a product after it's use by date. Yes I realise this will vary with the product.
However, I cannot believe that, say, a tin of beans becomes extremely poisonous if opened one week after it's date. PJ

They are very different. My family produces food products, and they are required to put a 'best before' sticker on it. For their product it is 2 years from production, but you can easily keep it for over 5 years without any problem. Shops can legally sell products well past their 'best before' date. Use By, is usually used on more perishable foods like bread and milk etc. A lot of food is wasted becuase of NZs anal laws and the date labeling of products. Australia is less anal about it.
robbyp (2751)
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