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/ck/ - Food & Cooking


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3931079 No.3931079 [Reply] [Original]

I got some cheddar cheese crackers that expired exactly 1 month ago... safe to eat?

>> No.3931094

Are they still vacuum-sealed? Probably.

If not, they'll probably be stale and disgusting.

Eat some and see if you get an upset stomach or diarrhea. If not, then devour.

The entire idea behind crackers is long-term storage. The law forces them to create an expiration date for the liberals.

>> No.3931111

>>3931079
Eating crackers (sealed) expired 2 yrs ago. Still good. Slightly stale.

>> No.3931121

I ate a piece and then I started thinking about expired cheese and expired milk. It grossed me out so I threw out the rest.

>> No.3931130

>>3931121
Grow up, son.

>> No.3931135

>>3931094
>The entire idea behind crackers is long-term storage

No, that really has little to do with it.

>> No.3931142

>>3931135
OK, so prove it.

>> No.3931149

>>3931142
>say something with no proof
>someone tells you that you're wrong
>tell them to prove it
o-ok

>> No.3931179

>>3931149
Typical liberal, reddit bullshit.

If you're so awesome at life, then just prove it already.

>> No.3931182

Is there anyone over the age of 12 on right now?

>> No.3931184

>>3931179
You asked me to prove it, he just stepped in with that post.

I'll say that the problem with your request is that there isn't proof, and there shouldn't have to be. I just think that you saying the entire idea for crackers is storage, or any variation of this statement.

I'd think the idea behind them is a crunchy bread product that goes with soup. When crackers were invented, the idea probably stemmed from the crunchy crust of bread, and the appeal to that crunch being made into every bite in individual pieces such as crackers. Why would the idea behind it come from someone saying "this bread would last a long time if we make it crunchy". It just doesn't seem as likely as them being made because people like to eat it that way.

>> No.3931186

>>3931149
not guy you were replying to, but

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cracker_(food)
>a pilot-like bread product from just flour and water that he called Pearson's Pilot Bread. It was an immediate success with sailors because of its shelf life.
not that wikipedia is necessarily true, ofc.

>>3931179
>>>/pol/

>> No.3931200

I had some leftover turkey in the fridge from thanksgiving (Canadian version), but now I've got a sore stomach and bad shits. It's only one day after the keep-till, how stupid.

>> No.3931245

>>3931184
You don't know the history of the world apparently.

Food storage was a huge concern before the invention of the refrigerator and freezer.

Read a book or two.

>> No.3931273

So Op are you too dumb to throw out expired food or too poor?

>> No.3931275

Are they like the Kraft kind?

>> No.3931282

>>3931273
It's called 'being a jew'.