Inspect Before You Toss

Women examining a leftover found in her refrigerator.

When in doubt, toss it out is a phrase that is often used with regard to food safety. While food that has unusual color/odor/texture, is slimy, has something growing on it, or has been improperly cooked or stored should be tossed, consumers unknowingly toss food that could still provide nourishment without risk. Food waste is a huge problem in the US with 30-40% of our food supply ending up in landfills where it produces methane gas, an environmental concern. In addition, food waste contributes to financial loss from farm to dinner table.

Food waste is due to many factors. One of the leading causes is ambiguous packaging dates which consumers have come to believe are dates regarding food safety rather than food quality as determined by the manufacturer. Chances are much of the food tossed based on a package date is still good. Before tossing, consider the following:

Where did the food come from? Food purchased from suppliers who exhibit best practices for food handling, good hygiene, and quality standards will remain at best quality for a longer time.

Has the food been stored properly? Frozen food stored in airtight packaging can last indefinitely in the freezer. Frozen foods may become dry or less tasty when frozen beyond the recommended freezing time but they are still safe to eat. 

Refrigerated foods should be kept at 40⁰F or below for best quality, freshness, and safety. Carefully inspect refrigerated foods kept beyond the recommended time using your senses.

Most pantry foods are shelf-stable and are safe indefinitely. Canned goods will last for years as long as the can itself is in good condition. Packaged dry foods such as cereal, pasta, mixes, and cookies will be safe but may eventually become stale or develop an off flavor. Pantry items stored in airtight packaging will retain freshness longer. Your senses will let you know if the food has lost quality. Remember, package dates on foods refer to quality, not safety, with the exception of infant formula.

What do my senses tell me? How does it look? How does it smell? How does it feel? Food past its prime often develops mold, bacteria, or yeast causing it to give warning signs to our senses. Spoiled food will usually look different in texture and color, smell unpleasant, and taste bad. Bacteria usually doesn’t change the taste, smell, or look of food, so you can’t tell if it’s dangerous to eat. The USDA recommends consuming refrigerated leftovers within 3 to 4 days. After that, the risk of food poisoning goes up. The 3 to 4 days recommendation applies to foods that have been refrigerated within 2 hours (or half that time in higher heat) of preparation. It is always a good idea to date foods placed in the refrigerator or freezer. If you don’t think you’ll be able to eat leftovers within four days, freeze them right away. Frozen leftovers will stay safe for a long time. Inspect cans for dents, rust, and bulging. Look for signs of insects or pests in pantry foods. 

Have the rules for food temperature been followed?  Keep cold foods cold (less than 40⁰F), and hot foods hot (above 140⁰F).  Perishable foods at room temperature should be refrigerated within 2 hours of preparation (or half that time in higher heat), Reheat leftovers to 165⁰F as measured with a food thermometer.  Cook foods to safe internal temperatures as measured with a food thermometer.  When these rules are violated, the food should be tossed.

Were best practices used? Keeping food preparation surfaces clean and avoiding cross contamination of food items will prevent unnecessary spoilage and ensure food safety. Foodborne illness results from contamination, not from natural decay.

Food packaging dates are a guide to food quality, not food safety. Before tossing, give food items a second look to determine both quality and safety. When something is suspicious (can or jar is leaking, bulging, badly dented; the food has a bad odor/color; insects present; rotting; mold; food improperly handled or stored) throw it out. Consider composting tossed food when it is an option rather than sending it to a landfill.

Marlene Geiger

I am a graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a BS in Home Economics Education and Extension and from Colorado State University with a MS in Textiles and Clothing. I enjoy spending time with family and friends, gardening, quilting, cooking, sewing, and sharing knowledge and experience with others.

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Reduce Kitchen Waste – Make Broth

Bowl of kitchen scraps--peels, shells, vegetable ends

If you eat, cook or handle food, you likely produce kitchen waste: peels, rinds, husks, meat scraps, bones, shells, skins, roots, leafy tops, stems, and even leftover food.  The waste list is endless. The truth is, all of that stuff left on the cutting board isn’t necessarily waste. A lot of it can be repurposed or given a second life as broth or stock*. 

Making broth with kitchen waste is not a new concept. People have been doing it for generations. What is new is the renewed interest in reducing the amount of kitchen waste going into landfills or sewer systems. Rotting food in landfills produces methane, a potent greenhouse gas which contributes to environmental issues. (Composted kitchen waste does not release methane gas and creates a beneficial product to enrich soil.)

There are countless suggestions and guidelines available in recipe books and from recipe websites on how to go about making broth from kitchen waste and what to include or what not to include. One thing is for sure, regardless of whatever recipe or guide one uses, the broth will be a slightly different product each time due to the waste that is used and the quantity of the various components. Kitchen Scraps Vegetable Broth by Oregon State University is a good place to start if you are new to making broth from kitchen waste. Regardless of how it is made, the result is a flavorful, nutritious broth suitable for soup making, sauces, adding flavor to vegetables or rice, or sipping.

In addition to making broth from vegetable waste, one can also use poultry carcasses or bones from red meat or fish to make delicious, nutritious broth or stock. Bones require a longer cooking time than vegetables to break down the bone structure to release nutrients, proteins, and collagen. Use these resources as guides for making poultry broth, red meat broth, and fish broth.

SIX Reasons Making Broth from Kitchen Waste is a WIN! WIN!

  1.  Economical – minimal cost, all of the ingredients are at hand; all parts of food is used; no additional cost for a pre-packaged container.
  2. Reduce kitchen waste – less going to landfills, sewer systems, or compost (after cooking and straining, the remaining vegetable scraps are less bulky and decompose faster; carcasses and fish bones are more compact); no packaging to dispose of.
  3. Nutritious – vitamins and minerals in the scraps leach into the simmering water surrounding them—broth! Great support for all bodily systems.
  4. Control of ingredients and flavor – tweak to your liking, omit offending ingredients, control sodium, no preservatives.
  5. No special equipment needed – prepare broth on a stove top, in a crock pot or pressure cooker.
  6. Easy – save, cook, strain, cool, store. 

Store Broth Safely

Once a broth has been made, it must be cooled quickly and stored in an airtight container. Broth will keep in the refrigerator for three days or maintain best quality for four months in the freezer. When freezing, use freezer containers/bags or wide mouth jars allowing head space for freezing expansion. Broth can also be frozen in ice cube trays or silicon muffin cups for individual servings with the frozen portions transferred to a freezer bag. 

Canning is an option for preserving broths/stocks as well. However, because broths are made from low-acid foods, they must be made from a carefully followed tested recipe and processed with a pressure canner. The National Center for Home Food Preservation provides directions for poultry and meat stock, but does not have specific canning recommendations and times for vegetable or fish broth. Newell Brands provides recipes and directions in the Ball® Blue Book, 38th Edition, Guide to Preserving for chicken, beef, and vegetable stocks.

Making homemade broth from kitchen scraps is a simple, satisfying way to reduce waste and make the most of what you grow or buy. In addition, there is the satisfaction of knowing it was made with ingredients you enjoy and/or saved from becoming waste.   

*NOTE: For the purposes of this blog, broth is used to mean either broth or stock. The difference is subtle and the two are quite often used interchangeably. Both involve cooking ingredients slowly over a long period of time to extract maximum flavor and nutrients. Traditionally, broth is a clear, thin liquid with great flavor resulting from the use of herbs and spices, vegetables, aromatics and/or meat. Stock is traditionally made from animal bones resulting in a more gelatinous, less clear liquid; it may also be made with the addition of herbs and spices, vegetables, and aromatics.

Marlene Geiger

I am a graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a BS in Home Economics Education and Extension and from Colorado State University with a MS in Textiles and Clothing. I enjoy spending time with family and friends, gardening, quilting, cooking, sewing, and sharing knowledge and experience with others.

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Food Packaging Dates – What Do They Mean?

Woman reading the date of a refrigerated item.  Image Source FDA, https://www.fda.gov/food/consumers/social-media-toolkit-food-loss-and-waste

We’ve all done it—the date on a food package exceeds today’s date so we toss it!  As a result, consumers are the biggest contributor to food waste; households toss an estimated 43% of our food supply annually for various reasons. A huge contributor to the waste is consumer misunderstanding of the dates found on food packaging. With the exception of infant formula, the dates found on food products ARE NOT expiration dates. Rather, they are BEST QUALITY dates. 

Dates on packages can be a guide for consumers. The dates indicate the period in which a food manufacturer has determined a food product will maintain its best quality. However, the labels are not standardized, science-based, or regulated by a governmental agency. There are NO laws or federal regulations (infant formula, excepted) requiring product dating. Therefore, food manufacturers have total freedom to determine criteria for product quality and to create a date for their product. Ambiguous date labeling has significantly decreased food being fully utilized.

Manufacturers usually print two kinds of dates—open and closed—on food packaging. Opening dating is a calendar date usually followed by phrases such as “sell by,” “best by,” and “use by.” Closed dating is a code system, a series of letters and/or numbers, used by manufactures to track and identify the time, date, and location of production; closed dates use no specific date visible to consumers. While maintaining quality from production to consumer use is the intent of package dating, consumers have come to interpret the dates as “expired” and therefore, believe it to be unsafe and/or cause for a foodborne illness. 

In an attempt to standardize labeling, the Food Date Labeling Act was introduced in both houses of Congress in May 2016. No action has been taken so far as the bill remains in committee in both houses.  Until package dating is standardized, food waste can only be reduced by consumers’ understanding of what the dates mean for various products and how to inspect food before throwing it away. 

How to Read Food Product Packaging Dates

Sell by: Many refrigerated items use “Sell by” dates. Retailers use the date to control their stock. Unless the product has spoiled, the product is still safe for consumers to consume after that date. Many refrigerated products are good for much longer than the sell-by date assuming they are properly stored/refrigerated. For instance, milk can be good for a week after the date; eggs remain fresh for 3 to 5 weeks after the date.

Best By, Best if Used By, Freshest By: This date indicates how long the manufacturer has determined the product will remain at optimal flavor and quality. Dry products, mixes, and canned foods use this designation. Most foods can be consumed safely after this date; however, the quality of the product may diminish over time. For example, products containing oils may gradually become rancid and those containing leavening agents may not rise as much after the date. In many cases, dates are conservative; if you eat food past that date, you may not notice any difference in quality, especially if the date has recently passed. Again, proper storage helps maintain quality.

As a means to reduce food loss and waste by consumers, the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Services (FSIS) recommended the phrase, “Best if Used By,” on food products in 2016. Research shows that this phrase helps consumers better understand the date as an indicator of quality, rather than safety.

Expires By or Expiration: This is the last day that a product should be consumed. Infant formula is the only food product that is regulated and bares a true expiration date. Expiration dates may also be found on medications, vitamins, leavening agents, and other products with a limited lifetime as specified by the manufacturer due to less or no functionality after the date.

Consumer Resources

Resources are available to help consumers with packaging dates. Here are a few to get familiar with:

Food Keeper App. The app is available for Android and Apple devices or at FoodSafety.gov for computer users. The Food Keeper helps consumers with food and beverage storage and maximizing the freshness and quality of items. 

Still Tasty. The website, StillTasty.com, has comprehensive information about how long thousands of foods and beverages can be kept and used after packaging dates have passed.

Help Lines. There are numerous help lines available from universities, government agencies, health departments (check local listings), and private companies (check for product information on product or search product consumer support) to help consumers with food safety questions. Here’s three to know:

  • USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 1-888-MPHotline (1-888-674-6854); 9am-3pm CT, Monday-Friday, in English or Spanish.
  • FDA Food Safety Hotline at 1-888-SAFEFOOD (888-723-3366); 9am-3pm CT, Monday-Friday, except federal holidays. There are also more than 200 hours of recorded messages available 24/7.
  • AnswerLine at Iowa State University Extension and Outreach has specialists ready to answer calls and emails from Iowa and Minnesota residents, 9am-12pm and 1pm-4pm, Monday-Friday at 1-800-262-3804 (IA) and 1-800-357-1678 (MN). Other land-grant universities may have similar help lines for consumers.

Lack of standardized package dating and consumer misunderstanding of packaging phrases and dates has led to increased food waste as well as calorie loss, financial loss, and a negative impact on the environment. Knowing what the phrases and dates mean can help consumers conserve loss. Next up, inspecting before tossing!

Marlene Geiger

I am a graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a BS in Home Economics Education and Extension and from Colorado State University with a MS in Textiles and Clothing. I enjoy spending time with family and friends, gardening, quilting, cooking, sewing, and sharing knowledge and experience with others.

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Reducing Holiday Food Waste

Reduce food waste.  Food waste trash dump in a landfill.  Image Source:  FDA Social Media Tool Kit

Holiday food waste is a significant issue. The US Ecology Center estimates a 25% increase in waste delivered to landfills between Thanksgiving and New Year’s. The bump in waste is comprised of food and non-food items. Due to the excess and indulgence associated with holiday meals, food waste from uneaten food amounts to millions of dollars. In 2023, it was estimated that 312 million pounds of food was wasted from just US Thanksgiving meals alone. Other holiday waste includes discarded packaging (including online shopping boxes and envelopes), decorations, wrappings, cards, and disposable paper/plastic/aluminum food containers.

While all of the holiday waste is of concern, the consequences of food waste and ways to prevent it will be the topic of this blog. Food waste contributes negative consequences to the environment and to our expendable food dollar.

When food is wasted, there is more waste than just the food itself. There is waste of the seed, land, water, labor, energy, and transportation required to grow, produce, and deliver food to our tables. Further, there is waste of ingredients, time, and energy expended to prepare the food in the home. When food goes into our landfills, it decays producing greenhouse gas emissions; methane is of particular concern as it is a dangerous gas and contributes to climate change. Further, we live in a time when food costs consume a large portion of our expendable income worsened by inflation and supply chain issues. 10.5 percent of all US households are food insecure or undernourished and could use the food that goes to waste.

Whether it be an environmental, social, or humanitarian issue, every consumer needs to do their part to reduce food waste. As the holidays approach, here are some tips to reduce holiday food waste: 

  • Plan ahead. Plan out the meal. Prevent waste from happening from the get go. Digital tools like Save the Food’s Guest-Imator can help consumers calculate how much food will be needed. 
  • Buy only what is needed. If you knowingly buy more than needed, have a plan for the leftovers.
  • Store food properly if purchased or prepared ahead. Put meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, and produce in the refrigerator as soon as you get home. Potatoes, onions, sweet potatoes, squash, and pumpkin should be stored in a cool dark place. Freeze bakery items to keep them fresh. 
  • Encourage less plate waste by using smaller serving spoons. Send uneaten food left on a plate home with guests in take home containers. Label with name and refrigerate until they depart.
  • Refrigerate leftovers within two hours of cooking or removing food from a warming appliance to prevent foodborne illness. Cool foods quickly using an ice bath or downsizing portions. Avoid crowding foods in the refrigerator; leave space so air can circulate.
  • Share leftovers with guests in take-home containers or donate to an agency in your area that accepts prepared food donations.
  • Be creative with leftovers. Use leftovers to create a new dish–turkey pot pie, casseroles, soup, and stock or broth. Incorporate leftover veggies into omelets. Turn potatoes into pancakes. Cornbread into salad. Charcuterie into pizza. Squash into mac and cheese. Freeze individual meals for later use or quick meals.
  • Use refrigerated leftovers within 3 to 4 days or freeze to extend their use.
  • Freeze leftovers. Allow food to cool completely before putting in the freezer. Even pumpkin pie can be frozen. Frozen leftovers are best used within 2-6 months for best quality but will keep indefinitely in the freezer. Package carefully to prevent freezer burn or dehydration and be sure to label and date the food.
  • Save food scraps like vegetable peels and meat trimmings to make broths; scraps can be gathered and frozen until ready to use for broth. If not saved, compost scraps and leftovers that go bad whenever possible. If you are unable to compost, find someone or a group in your area that does.

This holiday season, think about ways that you can reduce food waste. It is up to each one of us to change our unsustainable consumption and wasteful habits.

Sources:
Give a Gift to the Planet by Reducing Holiday Waste, National Environmental Education Foundation
Tips to Reduce Food Waste at Thanksgiving, USDA
Thanksgiving and Food Waste, University of Minnesota
Sizing up America’s Thanksgiving Food Waste Problem, Ag Fund News
Food Waste during the Holiday Season, Each Green Corner

Marlene Geiger

I am a graduate of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a BS in Home Economics Education and Extension and from Colorado State University with a MS in Textiles and Clothing. I enjoy spending time with family and friends, gardening, quilting, cooking, sewing, and sharing knowledge and experience with others.

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