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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Someone sent me some brownies on November 19, and I've just received the
box. They were sealed in Ziploc plastic bags inside the box. They look and smell okay. How long a shelf life do brownies have when shipped by mail? They haven't been refrigerated, but they probably have not been exposed to high temperatures, either. They still feel relatively soft. Someone went to a lot of trouble to make them and I'd hate to throw them out. At the same time, though, I can't really afford to be sick for two days from eating something that has spoiled. What do I do? What sort of spoilage occurs in baked goods, anyway? I know that things like bread and cookies get stale and stiff, but do they ever get hazardous to eat? thanks, kathy |
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In rec.food.cooking, kathy > wrote:
> Someone sent me some brownies on November 19, and I've just received the > box. Call your local department of public works and find out when the next pickup of hazardous waste will occur. In the meantime, get them out of the house, preferably sealed in an airtight metal container. -- ....I'm an air-conditioned gypsy... - The Who |
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sf writes:
> It's your summer now - is it humid? Not in Europe (where I live). It's moderately humid outside, but quite cold. Warmer inside but much less humid. > Do they have any mold? I dunno. What does mold look like? > I sincerely doubt they will spoil on you... but they will > get stale and should be very stale by this time. So they are safe to eat, but probably won't taste good? They still feel soft through the plastic. -- Transpose hotmail and mxsmanic in my e-mail address to reach me directly. |
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I know you didn't mean it this way, but you've asked a sort of trick
question. No one can tell you the brownies are safe to eat because then you might get sick, and we'd be at fault. On the other hand, brownies aren't really a highly volatile food. If they look and smell O.K., they probably are fine. Then on to the third hand, how valuable are a bunch of home made brownies? If you're worried, toss them. The peace of mind will be worth it. If it were me, I'd go with the reasoning on the third hand. Any time I'm not sure of food, I throw it away instead of worrying about it. But then, I wouldn't be worried about the brownies in the first place. Baked goods might get stale which means they don't taste good, but they're not usually poisonous. Baked goods sometimes get green mold on them, but then you can see it; you don't have to guess. I wouldn't worry about brownies the way I'd worry about unrefrigerated chicken or seafood where the food might taste fine but make the eater dreadfully sick later. --Lia kathy wrote: > Someone sent me some brownies on November 19, and I've just received the > box. They were sealed in Ziploc plastic bags inside the box. They look > and smell okay. How long a shelf life do brownies have when shipped by > mail? They haven't been refrigerated, but they probably have not been > exposed to high temperatures, either. They still feel relatively soft. > > Someone went to a lot of trouble to make them and I'd hate to throw them > out. At the same time, though, I can't really afford to be sick for two > days from eating something that has spoiled. What do I do? > > What sort of spoilage occurs in baked goods, anyway? I know that things > like bread and cookies get stale and stiff, but do they ever get > hazardous to eat? > > thanks, > > kathy |
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On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 22:34:51 +0100, Mxsmanic
> wrote: > sf writes: > > > It's your summer now - is it humid? > > Not in Europe (where I live). It's moderately humid outside, but quite > cold. Warmer inside but much less humid. ? (kathy)> ? You moved? > > > Do they have any mold? > > I dunno. What does mold look like? > Here's what it looks like: http://www.cheesy-wotsits.co.uk/breadexpday7.htm Practice safe eating - always use condiments |
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Mxsmanic > wrote:
> sf writes: >> It's your summer now - is it humid? > Not in Europe (where I live). It's moderately humid outside, but quite > cold. Warmer inside but much less humid. >> Do they have any mold? > I dunno. What does mold look like? You'll know it when you see it. Lots of white/dark blotches. >> I sincerely doubt they will spoil on you... but they will >> get stale and should be very stale by this time. > So they are safe to eat, but probably won't taste good? They still feel > soft through the plastic. At worse, they'll be stale. Try one and see how it tastes. |
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![]() "kathy" > wrote in message om... > Someone sent me some brownies on November 19, and I've just received the > box. They were sealed in Ziploc plastic bags inside the box. They look > and smell okay. How long a shelf life do brownies have when shipped by > mail? They haven't been refrigerated, but they probably have not been > exposed to high temperatures, either. They still feel relatively soft. > > Someone went to a lot of trouble to make them and I'd hate to throw them > out. At the same time, though, I can't really afford to be sick for two > days from eating something that has spoiled. What do I do? > > What sort of spoilage occurs in baked goods, anyway? I know that things > like bread and cookies get stale and stiff, but do they ever get > hazardous to eat? > > thanks, > > kathy You're kidding right? You've has some home made Brownies since November 19th? Shame on you.... ;-) If they have no mold and small OK they are probably OK. Hurry. Dimitri |
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Dimiri writes:
> You've has some home made Brownies since November 19th? No, they didn't arrive until December 29 or so. -- Transpose hotmail and mxsmanic in my e-mail address to reach me directly. |
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>At worse, they'll be stale. Try one and see how it tastes.
> > I might wrap a brownie in a paper towel, and get the paper towel a little damp and nuke it 10-15 seconds. It would probably make it quite not so stale. Michael O'Connor - Modern Renaissance Man "The likelihood of one individual being correct increases in a direct proportion to the intensity with which others try to prove him wrong" James Mason from the movie "Heaven Can Wait". |
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