Drinking milk past 'use buy' date - is it safe? (Fast answers appreciated!)

I do that. I also leave the milk as the very last thing to get when I’m in the supermarket and then I go directly to the register. No wandering all over the store with a milk carton in the cart.

The date on the milk is probably not the use by date but the pull date. If the container on the store has reached it pull date it should be moved off the shelf and returned to the supplier. It should not go bad the day after the pull date, but should be good for at least 7 days. Now if the milk has been left out and warmed up then put back in the refer the the go bad date will be sooner.

That’s true of some things (that have “sell by” dates), but it doesn’t seem to be true of milk, at least in my area.

In my experience, the milk I buy in the store typically has around 2 weeks until it reaches the “best by” date stamped on the jug.

That is as it should be. If the store is not moving the milk fast enough it might approach the pull date. But when it 1srt arrives at the store the pull date should be at least 2 weeks. That is why you are seeing the pull date around 2 weeks. That milk should still good for over a week after the pull date.

…in no small part due to these “<whatever> by” dates that folks take as meaningful. Homeless shelters won’t even take canned goods past their “best by” dates, which is insane. I’ve seen “Best by” dates on HONEY–the food that never spoils, and expiration dates on calcium carbonate tablets: what are they gonna do, turn back into oysters!!!

I often find a container of yogurt in the back of the fridge that’s gone hiding. Six months past “best by” date, it’s always fine unless, of course, the container was breached earlier.

<And yes, I know the old joke: “Yogurt goes bad? How can you tell??!”>

This is very off-topic and pretty irrelevant. If I were the moderator, I’d kill it.

Because there IS some food out there that can make you sick if it’s expired. Then it’s not a waste, it’s a health hazard. You generally can’t eat moldy food. Bread mold can make you very sick. I once opened a can of cat food that I didn’t realize was outdated and it was covered in mold. No way I was giving that to my poor cat.

Yes, there ARE exceptions. But there is often a reason for those dates.

-Is ‘Expired’ Milk Safe to Drink? Here’s How to Know When to Throw Away Food

-How Long Can You Leave Milk Out of the Fridge?

-Do Food Expiration Dates Really Matter?

-13 Foods You Should Never Eat Past the Expiration Date

And while I can see your point about honey, I don’t see why homeless shelters should take food that’s old or expired. A lot of people seem to think of homeless shelters and food banks as places to dump all their unwanted crap, so they don’t feel guilty for throwing it out. Just because they’re poor doesn’t mean they deserve stuff that’s stale and moldy, even if it is safe.

If YOU wouldn’t eat it, why should they? Because they’re homeless, they should be grateful for what they should get? That’s a pretty shitty attitude.

Yes, food can go bad, and you shouldn’t eat food that’s gone bad. But what does that have to do with the dates printed on the package?

Will a child who is 17 years and 364 days old be significantly more traumatized by being abused than one who is 18 years and 1 day old?

But you’ve got to draw the line somewhere. Food banks can’t afford to have every donated can or box analyzed by a laboratory to determine if it’s safe, so they have to have some sort of rule to go by. And you know that if a can of food one day past its marked expiration date hurts someone, there will be a lawyer telling a jury how irresponsible they were for using food they had notice was past date.

Regarding milk, I read somewhere that a lot of the determining factor on milk going bad is the highest temperature reached and duration. Oh heck, just check the link from before:

The longer it sits out on the counter or table while you are using it, that is bleeding off life. Also, duration in your buggy at the store and in your car going home. Hot day versus cold day.

Milk is intended to be of good quality for 5 to 7 days past the date. Typically it is stamped as a sell by date.

The label needs to say which it is. Otherwise, you’re seeing a packaged date and think it’s a sell by date and it’s already past.

Yes, that is inappropriate. That is a money-saving ploy by skanky stores. He may have at it’s root a valid claim. I think stores are supposed to put a “packaged” date to help you see how fresh it is. But the key is that has to be the first packaged date. If it is repackaged for any reason, it should still retain the original date.

One time the news did a story where they used hidden cameras to check out various stores. They definitely caught Food Lion doing that and other dubious practices.