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-   -   How many of us throw away food before it's really gone bad? (https://www.quiltingboard.com/general-chit-chat-non-quilting-talk-f7/how-many-us-throw-away-food-before-its-really-gone-bad-t266421.html)

purplefiend 06-17-2015 10:38 PM

I have to mark the date frozen and the date thawed or my hubby and son will throw it out.

Sewnoma 06-18-2015 06:26 AM

I try to watch dates but I'll toss anything that seems questionable.

I make a lot of soups out of things that are starting to go, I call it "Bitsa stew" because it has "bitsa this and bitsa that" thrown in. :D We have a chest freezer so I'll make a HUGE pot of stew and portion it out in to single-serving size glass "tupperware" and stick them in the deep freeze. DH works from home so those are good fast lunches for him, and good fast workday dinners for me. SO much less sodium and sugar than store-bought soups!

I LOVE all the farmer's markets we have around here but with just DH & I, we can't eat the food as fast as we buy it. I make a lot of soups and casseroles out of fresh seasonal produce to freeze for winter too. (I call those "hibernation soups") It seems crazy that I can cook fresh local food into a soup and freeze it for months, and that will taste so much better than if I buy "fresh" frozen produce and make the soup the day I eat it. The in-season produce is just SO much tastier, even after being cooked up and frozen. I don't have enough single-serving freezerware dishes for that, so those hibernation soups get frozen in gallon-size freezer ziplocks and defrosted in larger batches. It's fantastic, I'll just dump one into the crockpot on a lazy wintery day and we'll have hot soup and yummy smells all day with virtually zero effort.

I love my deep freeze. :) And I'm glad my DH likes my cooking and isn't fussy about "leftovers".

sassysews2 06-21-2015 05:21 PM


Originally Posted by DebbieJJ (Post 7226983)
This is in NO WAY supposed to be a blasting post on my wonderful hubby. My DH grew up with absolutely nothing and he went to bed hungry quite a lot of the time. We met when I was 21 yrs. old, and he's 10 yrs. older. But what I'm getting at is this.....he remembers when an expiration date on something meant that it was the last date to use that item (I really think he dreamed this or it makes sense to him), so now if something says that "sell by" date was last week, it magically went bad, but it was ok until then. So I really have to use all my bought canned food, even pasta and cake mix, etc., before the sell by date, or it goes in the trash. I can't convince him otherwise, but this morning I read this and I printed it out for him so now maybe he'll think twice before wasting our money (or maybe I won't buy as much?)....http://www.grandparents.com/food-and...ampaign=fnl154

OHHH, my #1 pet peeve about my significant other. Rarely will eat leftovers or anything precooked and frozen. But will eat processed food daily (yuk). He always wants "fresh" milk. I say he needs to buy a cow and milk it. Anything dairy has to be bought no longer than 2 days ago. He asks how old the eggs, sour cream, ketchup, mustard, butter, & salad dressing are, requires the cast iron skillets be washed with soap each time before use, often will smell his plate of food before tasting it, but not since I surprised him by throwing the whole plate, food and all, out the back door. I'd say he is OCD but he wouldn't know what that is. What is this with men? My house is clean, no crawlies, my dishes are never left dirty, food is timely refrigerated, & no one has ever gotten sick or died from my cooking. This annoys the h.e.doublel out of me. Last month at church I heard the men at their breakfast meeting worrying about if the leftover raw eggs would be good the following week. The ladies all just laughed at that. lol


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