The Shelf Life Advice Quick Reference Guide has answers about refrigerated unopened and opened foods. To receive your copy, type your email address in the box below and click "Sign Up".

STOP! Don’t Rinse That Raw Chicken!

Rinsed ChickenI confess. All my cooking life, I’ve been rinsing off raw turkey (inside and out), chicken, and fish (but not meat) before preparing it for cooking.  I don’t remember who told me to do this or why I’ve been rinsing poultry.  I know why I’ve been rinsing the fish—because I start by soaking it in milk (to get rid of any “fishy” odor), and then I rinse to get rid of the milk.  Maybe you’ve been treating your raw entrées the same way.

Would You—Should You—Do You--Eat Irradiated Food?

Radura A cheerful, optimistic scientist took me on a tour of his research lab, where he housed many lively chickens, all of whom seemed to be thriving on a diet of irradiated food.  They’d been eating it for about 2 years and were in good health and producing normal offspring.  I left the lab thinking that irradiated food—with almost no pathogens and a longer shelf life than untreated food—would be the wave of the future.  At that time, I was a student journalist at the University of Michigan (in Ann Arbor). The year was 1954.  Now, more than 50 years later, less than 1% of the food Americans eat is irradiated. Would we be better off if that percentage were higher?  If so, why are we shying away from this technology?  I asked our site’s Advisory Board scientists, as well as my computer, the answers to these and related questions. Their responses follow.

Why You Need a Safe Cooking Temperature Chart and How to Get One Right Now

Food ThermometerCooking a hot dinner tonight?  Then take out your food thermometer and your list of minimum safe temperatures for various foods.  What?!  You don’t possess either of these items?  No problem.  Just click here, and Shelf Life Advice will happily and promptly get our site’s temperature chart to you.  Sorry, we can’t email you a thermometer, but your local supermarket or home products stores will, no doubt, have it in stock.

Do Food Product Dates Make Consumers Safer or Just Poorer?

Poor ManFood product dates encourage food waste—that’s what the creators of ShelfLifeAdvice.com hypothesized. To find out if they were right, they hired Harris Interactive to conduct a survey to test the theory.

 

More than 2,000 American adults responded to the following question about 10 food products: “To the best of your knowledge, which of the following refrigerated food products, if any, would be considered unsafe to consume once the date printed on the packaging has passed?”  The correct answer?  If properly handled, NONE of the products listed would cause illness if used shortly after the so-called “expiration” date.  Yet, 76% of respondents checked at least one.  Since most people don’t consume food they believe is unsafe to eat, the survey strongly suggests that most Americans throw out a lot of perfectly good food because the date on the package has passed, and they fear the product will make them sick.

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