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I absolutely adore roasted piquillo peppers and use them in all kinds of dishes, even just tossed into salads. I usually use a different (superior) brand to this, but as these come pre-sliced (and are way cheaper) they also serve their purpose. Anyhow, I went to make a quick tomato sauce the other day and was about to add some of these when I thought to look at the use-by date, since I had been away in Málaga and actually couldn’t remember when I’d opened this jar. Well, the expiry date was about a year away but then something else caught my eye… in small print on the back label it said that once opened the peppers must be kept refridgerated. No problem there. But then it said “for a maximum of 48 hours”. Whaaat??
I’ve been eating these things for years and I am quite sure I have used them even after having been in the fridge for a couple of weeks, or even longer. The only time I wisely decide not to use them is when I see they’ve gone all furry (obvs). But they seem to last a long time, and fellow foodie pal Lynsey @larosillacomida tells me that as long as they are still under the brine in the jar then they are fine. Which these were. And they hadn’t gone furry. But I still ended up tossing them. Dammit.
But honestly… 48 hours??? I’ve never heard of any preserved food spoiling IN THE FRIDGE after such a short time. What is the point of preserving them if you have to eat the whole damn jar once it’s been opened? This can’t be right.
They sell a lot more if people tbrow them away after 2 days. I’m generally pretty sceptical about this kind of labelling & rely on my eyes & nose. I do obey tbe rules for packs of cooked meat, but I’ve been known to give month out of date yogurt a cursory sniff & a little taste before digging in. Still here 🤣
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I’ll go two weeks with yoghurt (unless it’s gone moudly). I’ll even give cured meats (bacon) about a week. The thing is, I couldn’t remember if this jar had been open a couple of weeks or a month. Though I’m guessing the peppers still would have been fine.
Hey, it’s good for our immune system!
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