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Sell-by/use-by dates, a new extreme re safety!

(34 Posts)
Witzend Sat 04-Jan-25 10:39:50

Just seen on MN, someone asking whether teabags dated end of Nov 24 are safe to use! Words almost fail me….

welbeck Sat 04-Jan-25 10:48:53

Someone else on MN recently had no idea that hazard warning lights were both indicators flashing together.
This was in a discussion about driving in fog.
No one seemed to think that driving at 70 mph on a bend in a dual carriageway was not ideal.
It's strange that there are frequent queries like the tea bag one.
The perception of risk is odd.

fancythat Sat 04-Jan-25 10:53:25

But they are all things we have learnt ourselves, somewhere along the line.

welbeck Sat 04-Jan-25 10:58:22

You mean that we are older and wiser ?
Of course.
But anyone driving should walk around their vehicle and make basic checks re lights etc.
And thereby notice how hazard warning lights operate.

Witzend Sat 04-Jan-25 11:03:17

Honestly, re the teabag query, I was almost tempted to reply, ‘No! Bin them immediately! Once past the date they turn instantly into arsenic!’

Baggs Sat 04-Jan-25 11:03:49

Do you mean a dual carriageway, welbeck, where the two directions of travelling vehicles are distinctly separate? Or do you mean a two-way carriageway where traffic going in different directions is only separated by a white line?

welbeck Sat 04-Jan-25 11:56:20

I don't know what that MN
poster meant.
Presumably a dual carriageway.
But I wouldn't be driving at 70 mph in fog on any kind of road.
Let alone approaching a bend.
My point was more that a driver didn't understand how hazard lights worked.
And had some query about pulling out indicating while using hazards.
Having come up suddenly behind a slow moving vehicle around that bend...

Baggs Sat 04-Jan-25 11:57:53

Ah, I see. Thanks. The type of carriageway wasn't really the point but fog and hazard lights 👍

maddyone Sat 04-Jan-25 11:58:59

I took it to mean that the two directions of travelling vehicles are distinctly separate, but maybe I’m wrong.

It is surprising that tea bags even have a use by date on them. To be honest I’ve never noticed.

Baggs Sat 04-Jan-25 12:16:38

Our generation was taught differently too. For younger people, I think if something is not written down, or of a warning (use by, etc) is written down, they accept it as an instruction. We mostly grew up using our eyes, noses and tongues to ascertain if a food was edible. Many of us still do.

Krispii Sat 04-Jan-25 12:20:08

A youngster in my office asked for some paracetamol as I usually had some in my drawer and then immediately threw the packet into the bin as they were just past their date!
I tried to explain that they didn't turn into anything lethal as soon as the expiry date was reached....

welbeck Sat 04-Jan-25 12:25:19

I doubt that there is a use by date on tea bags.
More likely a best before date.
Use by relates to food safety.
Best before relates to quality.
May be a bit stale if beyond best before date.
Whereas ignoring use by may risk health.

Lizzies Sat 04-Jan-25 12:27:29

Krispii, I have just finished the paracetamol that was prescribed for my husband who died in 2020! It went out of date in 2023. They still worked perfectly well. May have been the placebo effect!

grandMattie Sat 04-Jan-25 12:33:38

I'm still using a large pot of petroleum jelly, BBE 2002.

HelterSkelter1 Sat 04-Jan-25 12:34:00

Up until my 40s or 50s, I was pretty ignorant about all sorts of things and often pretty stupid. I have learned a lot since....hopefully.

PS. If you watch and read rubbish, you tend to think rubbish.

Calendargirl Sat 04-Jan-25 14:11:50

Witzend

Just seen on MN, someone asking whether teabags dated end of Nov 24 are safe to use! Words almost fail me….

What sort of replies did she get?

E.G.

“I would bin them, best to be on the safe side” ?

M0nica Sat 04-Jan-25 14:16:01

fancythat

But they are all things we have learnt ourselves, somewhere along the line.

Not necessarily, much of it is common sense learned at a very young age.

The problem is that too many people are so divorced from how the food they eat is produced and processed that they are incapable of thinking through whether any product is safe to eat after the 'best before' date, - whcih answers the question before it is asked.

kittylester Sat 04-Jan-25 16:18:00

It never even occurred to me that teabags would have BBE date on.

The only dates I keep an eye on are things that go in the fridge and even then I look and smell regardless.

M0nica Sat 04-Jan-25 16:26:46

I rarely if ever look at any kind of date on food. I know when I bought it, how it was produced and what and how to judge whether it is safe to eat or not.

Indigo8 Sat 04-Jan-25 16:45:49

HelterSkelter1

Up until my 40s or 50s, I was pretty ignorant about all sorts of things and often pretty stupid. I have learned a lot since....hopefully.

PS. If you watch and read rubbish, you tend to think rubbish.

I'm still pretty stupid and ignorant and I am in my 70s. Must be all the rubbish books I read and the rubbish films I watch.

MayBee70 Sat 04-Jan-25 17:42:36

welbeck

You mean that we are older and wiser ?
Of course.
But anyone driving should walk around their vehicle and make basic checks re lights etc.
And thereby notice how hazard warning lights operate.

Whenever I have my car MOT’d they seem to leave various lights on or adjust the heating. I drove back from the garage once, turned the heater on and couldn’t see a thing as the windscreen clouded over. I always check everything before I drive off now. One year they left my ( I think) fog light on and I got pulled over by the police because it’s illegal to have it on if it isn’t foggy

theworriedwell Sat 04-Jan-25 18:31:26

I've always assumed best before dates were about them tasting fresh and if you go past they might not taste as good. I use things past the date but not usually by much and they seem fine.

M0nica Sat 04-Jan-25 18:42:23

grandMattie

I'm still using a large pot of petroleum jelly, BBE 2002.

My pot dates back to the late 1980s/early 1990s, or possibly even older. It is the only pot I have ever owned.

NotSpaghetti Sat 04-Jan-25 19:03:45

Witzend

Just seen on MN, someone asking whether teabags dated end of Nov 24 are safe to use! Words almost fail me….

Whilst this does seem ridiculous I do know that herbs kept in a kitchen can go off and develop toxins if damp gets in.
Where were the teabags stored?
There was a case of poisoning from herbal tea bags in America a couple of years ago.

Delila Sat 04-Jan-25 21:21:41

M0nica

grandMattie

I'm still using a large pot of petroleum jelly, BBE 2002.

My pot dates back to the late 1980s/early 1990s, or possibly even older. It is the only pot I have ever owned.

My pot of Vaseline Petroleum Jelly is BBE 2006, still as good as new. How does that company make a profit?