If you think of food safety as a serious concern, then there are probably certain things you pay attention to when it comes to buying and eating any kind of food, whether it’s something already made or something packaged. You might give it a once-over to make sure there’s no mold or signs that it’s very old, you might smell it to make sure it didn’t go bad, and chances are you also glance at the expiration date. After all, every food — even canned goods — have an expiration date. And the thought is, generally, that you don’t want to eat that food after that date.
The results can vary. If you’re eating something like milk or cheese or another dairy product after its expiration date, there’s a good chance you’ll get sick or feel terrible.
But what about if it’s something like cereal or a can of beans or olives or bread? It’s kind of icky to think about, and so most of us just toss food when it’s past the date. But someone decided to test this out on their own.
Food label dates aren't expiration dates. MOM's founder wants consumers to know that. @MOMsOrganicMrkt @WTOP :https://t.co/R1dMPuijsu
— Jeff Clabaugh (@wtopclabaugh) February 22, 2019
Scott Nash, the founder of MOM’s Organic Market, spent a year eating food that was past its labeled date to prove a point.
Nash told WTOP that expiration dates are random and not actually representative of freshness. Instead, they just contribute to the billions of dollars worth of food Americans waste every year. He calls this “consumer anxiety disorder” over food safety, saying:
To be honest most of us in the grocery business eat quite a bit of outdated food because its readily available (and delicious)!
— MOM's Organic Market (@MOMsOrganicMrkt) February 22, 2019
WTOP has pointed out that, aside from infant formula, the dates on food products actually aren’t required by any kind of federal law or regulation, and instead are given by manufacturers and producers to indicate what they think is their best quality window.
On his blog, Nash wrote that it seemed fine, so he used it in a smoothie, drank it, and was fine.
Nash even ate romaine lettuce that had been recalled because of E. coli, writing:
You ever eat Romaine lettuce and not die just to flex on E Coli?
— Rye ziggy (@ZickafooseRyan) February 20, 2019
He even joked that he had eaten sea salt past its date.
I lol’d at the sea salt
— Guido Torpedo (@Guidotorpedo410) February 23, 2019
Nash also ate meat and fish that had expired.
He added, “By cooking the meat, we essentially reset its freshness date — we ate what we could that night and saved the rest for later.”
Nash didn’t write about whether or not he got sick from certain foods, but he did add that he was going to continue cooking with expired foods, making it seem like things were fine.
Andrea Goergen, a registered dietitian and nutritionist at MedStar Washington Hospital Center, told WTOP:
And Munchies pointed out that one study shows that “a near-universal misunderstanding of the dates on food labels is ‘strongly associated’ with the amount of food we all discard.”
The lead study author, Dr. Roni Neff, told FoodIngredientsFirst, “Given how widespread these two perceptions were, this study suggests there may be a considerable amount of food unnecessarily discarded as a result.”
My religious institution gets donations from stores that are within or a month past expiration for our foodbank. We’ve never had a problem because of the guidelines. If the gov has these recommendations, just change them for the entire industry
— Felicia N. Mason (@Afro_blue32) February 17, 2019
Just be careful, and always keep food safety in mind!
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