Morrisons scraps "use by date" on milk..
Morrisons scraps "use by date" on milk..
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Discussion

rjfp1962

Original Poster:

9,142 posts

99 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
in favour of sniff test...! (Just check nothing drops in it from your nose...! biggrin)

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-59928650

sherman

15,041 posts

241 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
Good idea.
If it doesnt smell funny or leave lumps in your tea its probably still fine.
Milk can be fine for a couple of days out of the fridge. Over a week in a decent fridge and it can still be fine too.

NDA

25,178 posts

251 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Also doubles as a Coronavirus check. If it smells fine, you're infected.

FredericRobinson

4,830 posts

258 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Makes it impossible to find the freshest stuff when buying, I rarely buy milk more than once a week, this would make it more likely for me to waste milk, not less

monthou

5,223 posts

76 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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FredericRobinson said:
Makes it impossible to find the freshest stuff when buying, I rarely buy milk more than once a week, this would make it more likely for me to waste milk, not less
It'll have a best-before.

Matt_E_Mulsion

1,745 posts

91 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
Sounds like a load of waffle to me. It even states in the article that the dates will stay the same. I won't make a jot of difference to my consumption of milk.

sherman

15,041 posts

241 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
Matt_E_Mulsion said:
Sounds like a load of waffle to me. It even states in the article that the dates will stay the same. I won't make a jot of difference to my consumption of milk.
Wont make a jot of difference to most peoples consumption but if it stops a few chucking stuff out as soon ss the pack says when actually its still fine to consume then it achieves its goal.

hyphen

26,262 posts

116 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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People with covid can't smell/taste.So they will die from milk poisoning.

It's a conspiracy to get covid deaths up yes

Nickbrapp

5,277 posts

156 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Makes sense to me, up until yesterday (the 8th) I’ve been drinking organic milk from Waitrose (full fat) in my tea that was “use by” the 29th

I think modern fridges are so good that stuff just doesn’t go off like it used to, veg seems to hold up fine too.

hyphen

26,262 posts

116 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
Nickbrapp said:
...I think modern fridges are so good that stuff just doesn’t go off like it used to, veg seems to hold up fine too.
I wouldn't look to the fridge, I would look to whatever they are adding to the food!!

Nick Pappagiorgio

75 posts

59 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Nickbrapp said:
Makes sense to me, up until yesterday (the 8th) I’ve been drinking organic milk from Waitrose (full fat) in my tea that was “use by” the 29th
RIP Nickbrapp

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

269 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
FredericRobinson said:
Makes it impossible to find the freshest stuff when buying, I rarely buy milk more than once a week, this would make it more likely for me to waste milk, not less
How would it make you waste milk?

LunarOne

7,145 posts

163 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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I think it's a good idea. I've never put any faith in use by dates and always use my nose. Having said that, I use lactose-free milk and that keeps for several weeks even after opening. It's always finished before there's any danger of it going off. Perhaps it's the lactose that the bacteria feast on in milk!

craigjm

20,878 posts

226 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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A large percentage of people don’t understand the difference between best before and use before dates anyway. If you are one of the idiots throwing out food on the best before date anyway then this won’t make any difference to you. Use by dates should be such that it’s literally starting to rot when the date passes. The sniff test should trump all though

miniman

29,599 posts

288 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Replacing a date printed on a milk carton with a date printed on a milk carton in the interest of reducing waste seems like a great example of virtue signalling to me.

Sheepshanks

39,776 posts

145 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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I find the supermarket bought milk smells a couple of days before the date anyway - and that’s with it kept in our very cold fridge.

The bottled milk we have delivered just has a letter code on it - I’m not aware it means anything, you just have to be careful to use it in order.

Chebble

1,954 posts

178 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Sheepshanks said:
I find the supermarket bought milk smells a couple of days before the date anyway - and that’s with it kept in our very cold fridge.

The bottled milk we have delivered just has a letter code on it - I’m not aware it means anything, you just have to be careful to use it in order.
It’s the opposite for me - I find that milk (Sainsbury’s mostly, so supermarket milk) lasts a few days beyond its use by date in our fridge.

Sheepshanks

39,776 posts

145 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
Chebble said:
It’s the opposite for me - I find that milk (Sainsbury’s mostly, so supermarket milk) lasts a few days beyond its use by date in our fridge.

Our’s is Sainsburys too - we buy low fat milk there but don’t use it much. I don’t have much sense of smell but edgy milk stands out to me.

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

269 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
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Chebble said:
Sheepshanks said:
I find the supermarket bought milk smells a couple of days before the date anyway - and that’s with it kept in our very cold fridge.

The bottled milk we have delivered just has a letter code on it - I’m not aware it means anything, you just have to be careful to use it in order.
It’s the opposite for me - I find that milk (Sainsbury’s mostly, so supermarket milk) lasts a few days beyond its use by date in our fridge.
It's entirely dependent on the time of year.
You'll find Winter milk will last far longer than Summer milk.

Evoluzione

10,345 posts

269 months

Sunday 9th January 2022
quotequote all
craigjm said:
FredericRobinson doesn’t understand the difference between best before and use before dates anyway. If you are one of the idiots throwing out food on the best before date anyway then this won’t make any difference to you. Use by dates should be such that it’s literally starting to rot when the date passes. The sniff test should trump all though
Harsh hehe