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Ketchup - Fridge Or Cupboard?
Comments
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charltonkeston said:Stig said:charltonkeston said:Stig said:ShootersHillGuru said:MartinCAFC said:ShootersHillGuru said:Bedsaddick said:addix said:Bedsaddick said:Cupboard.
Fridge is just weird.
You don't buy it from the chilled section in the supermarket .
So if you open a tin of baked beans and only use half, you put them back in the cupboard too?
I quite like ketchup from a sachet perfect solution that you get the best of both worlds no cold taste and no risk of it going off as you'll use the whole thing in one go.
Also the fridge is the correct answer. Once upon a time when we were lucky enough to have ketchup but not so well off to have refrigeration it was the norm to keep all manner of food stuff at room temperature. We have moved on and become more civilized, tins in the cupboard, runny stuff in the fridge.
Does it not also say, "shake before use"?1 -
This thread reminds me of an old advertising campaign. There's apparently a perfect angle for pouring your ketchup and so Heinz decided to demonstrate that by changing the angle of their label.
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Who on here prefers a 'dollop' on the side of the plate rather than a drizzle over the whole dinner. I'm a dollop kind of guy. Smothering it over the whole dinner especially if people have it with a sunday roast grinds my gears.0
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O-Randy-Hunt said:Who on here prefers a 'dollop' on the side of the plate rather than a drizzle over the whole dinner. I'm a dollop kind of guy. Smothering it over the whole dinner especially if people have it with a sunday roast grinds my gears.3
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I think the answer is probably somewhere in the middle. If you are going to consume the ketchup within a month or less, then it is safe to keep at room temperature. If longer, you need to keep it in the fridge. I would say that regular users will probably be safe enough.0
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eaststandmike said:charltonkeston said:eaststandmike said:charltonkeston said:Stig said:ShootersHillGuru said:MartinCAFC said:ShootersHillGuru said:Bedsaddick said:addix said:Bedsaddick said:Cupboard.
Fridge is just weird.
You don't buy it from the chilled section in the supermarket .
So if you open a tin of baked beans and only use half, you put them back in the cupboard too?
I quite like ketchup from a sachet perfect solution that you get the best of both worlds no cold taste and no risk of it going off as you'll use the whole thing in one go.
Also the fridge is the correct answer. Once upon a time when we were lucky enough to have ketchup but not so well off to have refrigeration it was the norm to keep all manner of food stuff at room temperature. We have moved on and become more civilized, tins in the cupboard, runny stuff in the fridge.
So fridge is not the correct answer, it is today’s answer My grandkids will continue to be served ketchup at room temperature from the cupboard.
Or to put it another way, who would prefer to believe, bloke on the internet or the manufacturers of food stuffs?
My 85 year old mother always has kept sauces in the cupboard, I've tried to to teach her the error of her ways, she wont have any of it. It doesn't matter anymore to her, her taste buds were shot long ago. Give 10 years and your grand kids will be telling you also. ;-)
Don’t believe everything you read on the jar!1 -
sugar, salt and vinegar all preservatives, it aint going off in a hurry one assumes1
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Dazzler21 said:Mendonca In Asdas said:Dazzler21 said:Fridge is the correct answer.3
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mind you as others have said, it doesn't last long enough to find out in our house with teenagers about..0
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Friend Or Defoe said:Fridge.
Can admin put a pole up?0 -
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O-Randy-Hunt said:Who on here prefers a 'dollop' on the side of the plate rather than a drizzle over the whole dinner. I'm a dollop kind of guy. Smothering it over the whole dinner especially if people have it with a sunday roast grinds my gears.1
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razil said:sugar, salt and vinegar all preservatives, it aint going off in a hurry one assumes1
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why are people referring to the label to say 'but its got salt and sugar in it' but ignoring the label saying After opening refrigerate ?
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Does everyone also throw away their food as soon as it reaches its sell-by date?
According to Heinz, if you use Ketchup regularly and not sparsely, it's perfectly fine in the cupboard because it's a shelf-stable product.1 -
ShootersHillGuru said:razil said:sugar, salt and vinegar all preservatives, it aint going off in a hurry one assumes0
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MuttleyCAFC said:ShootersHillGuru said:razil said:sugar, salt and vinegar all preservatives, it aint going off in a hurry one assumes0
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cupboard until it's opened then fridge2
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eaststandmike said:O-Randy-Hunt said:Who on here prefers a 'dollop' on the side of the plate rather than a drizzle over the whole dinner. I'm a dollop kind of guy. Smothering it over the whole dinner especially if people have it with a sunday roast grinds my gears.2
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There's a lot of angry people on this thread....mostly the "fridge brigade"! Get used to it, normal people keep it in the cupboard, we've not been frightened by Heinz's propaganda!2
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MrOneLung said:why are people referring to the label to say 'but its got salt and sugar in it' but ignoring the label saying After opening refrigerate ?1
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YTS1978 said:There's a lot of angry people on this thread....mostly the "fridge brigade"! Get used to it, normal people keep it in the cupboard, we've not been frightened by Heinz's propaganda!2
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YTS1978 said:There's a lot of angry people on this thread....mostly the "fridge brigade"! Get used to it, normal people keep it in the cupboard, we've not been frightened by Heinz's propaganda!1
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I've known ketchup bottles be open in dry stores for well over 8 weeks probably nearer 12 and the ketchup has never gone off, granted the cheap giant cash and carry bottles are probably 50% vinegar so will taste pretty bad but a decent ketchup will be fine for more than 8 weeks in a cupboard.
I'd say it's only in the last 5-7 years has it been recommended to keep in a fridge in commercial kitchens.
Mayo and mayo based condiments, yes , fridge once open.
If you want to keep it in the fridge that's fine, if you want to keep in the cupboard that's also fine, it's not gone kill you if it's been in the cupboard for 8 weeks!!!3 -
Chunes said:Does everyone also throw away their food as soon as it reaches its sell-by date?
According to Heinz, if you use Ketchup regularly and not sparsely, it's perfectly fine in the cupboard because it's a shelf-stable product.0 -
I have carefully studied the responses here and have produced a personality profile of four types of ketchup user. It works (in time honoured fashion) by plotting two psychological traits against each other on a standard x-y chart. The resulting four boxes give the four ketchup personalties. Now all I need is three years off work and an Arts Council grant and I'll be able to knock up a fully normed questionnaire.
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We are mad for ketchup in our house , go through it so quickly at one point we had a bottle each (so 6 bottles , named) on the table to see who was consuming so much (freak show)
I was the lowest consumer and they started nicking mine , so test was aborted after a few days .
Ours is kept in the cupboard , it’s’ done after 2-3 days .
Petrol head is the odd one out, more a mayo fan which he keeps in the fridge .
I didn’t get involved in mayo till I was 31 , I thought it tasted of that rank sour spunk salad cream , so didn’t get involved until my now wife introduced me to it … what a weirdo, fact6 -
I like ketchup on plain food, not all food. Vegegetables like brocolli get a bit. I like it on a pie crust and with sausages accompanied by some Englsih mustard. I like it on a fried breakfast, especially the egg. Not too much though.0
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MuttleyCAFC said:I like ketchup on plain food, not all food. Vegegetables like brocolli get a bit. I like it on a pie crust and with sausages accompanied by some Englsih mustard. I like it on a fried breakfast, especially the egg. Not too much though.1
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Anything that I think is a bit bland. Boiled Broccoli falls into that category.0
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MuttleyCAFC said:Anything that I think is a bit bland. Boiled Broccoli falls into that category.0