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Blubber19
1 year ago

The durability date says only that it is still enjoyable. So whoever it runs means that it becomes automatically bad. Usually, if you place it cool, you can eat it even weeks later.

SweetKitty36849
1 year ago
Reply to  Blubber19

It’s about the expiration date. Not the Mhd. Fish has no mhd, but a “use up to…”.

Bomberos911
1 year ago
Reply to  Blubber19

There is a minimum retention date, so the statement applies. But there is a “to consume up to” in meat, fish, etc. This date should be taken seriously because it can no longer be guaranteed that the food can be consumed safely.

Charalambos
1 year ago

Sure. The consumption date states that the manufacturer guarantees that it is durable up to this date.

Although you should take a “to use up” date seriously, it is often about fast/lightly perishable things.

But on the one hand the date is yes today. There you are at the edge of what the manufacturer guarantees you, but still in the deadline.

In addition, even if food is a day behind that date, they are usually still good. The “to consume up” date also has a small temporal buffer.

Moewe4
1 year ago

You can do that, but I wouldn’t keep it any longer.

Tarniabur
1 year ago

Good morning, you can eat it, please

SweetKitty36849
1 year ago

If it says “to consume up to 29.5.”, then everything is great.