Tue Jan 16, 2007 1:45PM EST
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I came home from a week of travel to that "science experiment" refrigerator scene. The wilted, semi-gelatinous lettuce was easy to recognize and toss, but things like cream cheese and juices looked OK, and the thought of doing the milk taste test turns my stomach.
Here's a high tech answer to the question, "How long has it been in the fridge." And it's cheap, too. At howmanydaysago.com, $12 buys you two DaysAgo Digital Day Counters that you can stick onto your jars or containers using a suction cup. The counter goes up to 99 days and can be reset. Batteries last about 18 months and can be replaced.
And anything that needs to have days counted can get one of these digital counters. The web site suggests you can just as easily use these to keep track of when to clean your pet's cage or water a plant.
Not sure how long something stays fresh? The web site has a good chart of everything from eggs to sandwich meat.
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Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Here, here; the chart's great. But what do these do that a Sharpie won't do for $1.29?
I've done the Sharpie route so much that all of my plastic containers have multiple Sharpie scrawls. Then I used Sharpie on masking tape but it's a big pain. I'm not sure I'd stick one of these on every sauce in the fridge but there are a few offenders like salad dressings and leftovers that I'm always keeping too long.
This is so great! I have so many arguments with my partner about how old our food is and whether it is still edible. I'm ultra-conservative when it comes to eating "old" food. My partner, of course is ultra conservative when it comes to throwing stuff out. I'm planning to buy these AND post that chart on the fridge door too!!
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1 Posted by shutrbug@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:21PM EDT Report Abuse
Thanks for the link to the chart. I've been keeping my food for a lot longer than those published lifetimes (gulp!).