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Topic: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments  (Read 1652 times)

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Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« on: August 07, 2014, 09:59:53 AM »
A subject close to many hearts here:

Daily Fail Article on where to store condiments

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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #1 on: August 07, 2014, 10:11:41 AM »
I love the bit about leaving strawberry jam in the cupboard due to 'fruit having a high acidity.' Anyone who has ever made strawberry jam for home canning (to the USDA guidelines anyway) knows you have to add lemon juice or citric acid specifically because most fruit is NOT acidic enough to inhibit bacteria. Also, it isn't the bacteria that I'm worried about with any jam I've bought in the UK, it's the darn mould that seems to grow all over it, even in the fridge!

Also my mom's 5 year old bottle of Tabasco is still kept in the pantry in the States. Still perfectly fine!

I've already started calling the paper the 'Daily Fail' as well, and it's a very apt name for it. Especially considering that they should add 'Reading the daily mail' to their ever growing list of things that cause cancer.  ::)


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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #2 on: August 08, 2014, 06:58:04 AM »
My OH sent me a link to this the other day, and I was delighted to have been proved 'right' on so many things that he likes to argue with me about!

I need to forward it to one of our local Wetherspoons, who leave MAYONNAISE BOTTLES out on the tables, at room temp, all day long.


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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #3 on: August 08, 2014, 09:05:44 AM »
My grandmother left stuff out all the time in the very hot 'way down south in Dixie' part of the USA. No AC, windows open, and screens that only partially kept the flies out. Now, I would not DARE eat some of the things I consumed without a second thought as a child. My grandmother came from the era when a huge meal was prepared at noon, then left on the table (covered with a cloth) until 'supper time' when the workers came in from the fields, or later in that era, from the local mill.

Back when I first came to the UK in the early 90s, a demonstrator in a local Sainsburys asked me "what do you Americans keep in those huge refrigerators?".....my answer?.....EVERYTHING.

Recently I bought a bottle of red wine vinegar, which I use for marinating. Used some, then stored it in the cupboard, and it was only a few weeks 'old' when I needed it for a vindaloo marinade. Guess what? The biggest, nastiest clumps of mold imaginable...on vinegar. Cannot imagine that happening. Never in a gazillion years would I have thought vinegar needed to be refrigerated.
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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #4 on: August 08, 2014, 03:59:57 PM »
My grandmother came from the era when a huge meal was prepared at noon, then left on the table (covered with a cloth) until 'supper time' when the workers came in from the fields, or later in that era, from the local mill.

My grandmother referred to the cloth placed over the table as a "drop cloth" (North Florida). She would also reboil things like peas or what-have-you that had been out a while. 
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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #5 on: August 10, 2014, 01:04:58 PM »
Especially considering that they should add 'Reading the daily mail' to their ever growing list of things that cause cancer.  ::)

Or, at least, acute food poisoning.

My MIL seems to think that the microwave is a magical box, and that everything you put into it is held in some kind of stasis.  She's always putting dinner leftovers in it, and leaving them for a day or two before inevitably throwing it out.


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Re: Daily Fail article on where to store condiments
« Reply #6 on: August 19, 2014, 12:18:58 PM »
I disagree on the ketchup, tabasco and soy sauce.


Always kept in cupboard and they are fine. Another thing on ketchup - I don't want really cold ketchup on my chips.

Most of the "keep refrigerated" is because they are just covering their backs. It also says "eat within 6 weeks"...just so they can sell more!

Funny - just had this discussion on my football club message board.
"We don't want our chocolate to get cheesy!"


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