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i would never eat food that is past expiration.
I always check dates before purchase as some stores are not very good at rotating food. |
I always check first regardless of what product but whether I ignore them also boils down to the product type.
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One of my favorite stories to tell is when I had a job changing expiration dates on cans of tuna fish. I had just left college and was desperate for money, couldn't find a legitimate job anywhere. I went through a temp agency (who told me, after 10 years of college and grad school, that I had no real skills), and they assigned me to go to a factory at midnight in an industrial section of St Louis.
Each night a truck would pull up and offload pallets of cans of tuna fish which had expiration dates that had already passed. We would proceed to take the label off, put a new label on and add a new expiration date. We'd then pack them up and put them back on the truck. I don't remember which brand but it was one of the major ones. The official story was that the dates were wrong to begin with and we were just correcting them. That may have been true but I've always wondered.... luckily I got a real job a few weeks later, though I still can't have a tuna fish sandwich without thinking about that job. |
Originally Posted by carlhaynes
(Post 7995540)
The official story was that the dates were wrong to begin with and we were just correcting them. That may have been true but I've always wondered....
luckily I got a real job a few weeks later, though I still can't have a tuna fish sandwich without thinking about that job. |
Originally Posted by BamaVol
(Post 7996286)
It certainly raises the question in my mind: what does tuna fish smell like when it's gone bad?
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Originally Posted by carlhaynes
(Post 7995540)
One of my favorite stories to tell is when I had a job changing expiration dates on cans of tuna fish. I had just left college and was desperate for money, couldn't find a legitimate job anywhere. I went through a temp agency (who told me, after 10 years of college and grad school, that I had no real skills), and they assigned me to go to a factory at midnight in an industrial section of St Louis.
Each night a truck would pull up and offload pallets of cans of tuna fish which had expiration dates that had already passed. We would proceed to take the label off, put a new label on and add a new expiration date. We'd then pack them up and put them back on the truck. I don't remember which brand but it was one of the major ones. The official story was that the dates were wrong to begin with and we were just correcting them. That may have been true but I've always wondered.... luckily I got a real job a few weeks later, though I still can't have a tuna fish sandwich without thinking about that job. I saw a special one time that did an undercover story on Winn Dixie Supermarket, they were doing this with ALL of their meats at certain locations. |
Stranger things have happened.....
I didn~t know, that St.Louis had a tuna industry.
I have a large and a small can of Chicken of the Sea tuna in the refrigerator unopened. Well past their experation dates by about 10 years or so. WHat should I do with them? Is there a second home for them: Let me know. :cool: |
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