Same here. Guess now a days all these online people need a reason to get views and likes. I am sure a lot of them are wrong. A lot of mustard manufacturers say you do not need to refrigerate it to avoid spoiling but they recommend refrigeration to preserve the flavor.
We've kept ketchup and mustard in the fridge since I was a kid and never had any issues. As a side note, I literally just checked both those bottles and on the bottle it says "REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING". I would suggest you look on the packaging of the food you are buying to see for yourself if it needs to be refrigerated or not.
@@poochiew.9302 I also store stuff in the fridge if it says to on the bottle. Also, I have never had any problems from keeping them in the fridge, so if it's not broke, I am going to keep storing them in the fridge.
The purpose of refrigerating most of these products is to slow down the oxidation process; making the shelf life last a bit longer. Condiments are probably used less frequently in households than in resteraunts, so comparing the two is silly. Sure, they can last a good period of time on the table, but they can last even longer in the fridge.
Right! I checked all mine too. Also, I'm not sure about other soya sauces, but China Lily is my favorite soya sauce and I keep mine in the fridge and it tastes good for a very long time. My friends that live upstairs keep their China Lily soya sauce in the pantry. When I ate rice with them and used their soya sauce it was really bad tasting. So I will continue to follow the label and " Refrigerate After Opening".
@@neldapennington8260 I live in Denmark. We don't have the FDA but we have something similar for the EU, all labels say to keep in the fridge after opening for X amount of days or to check the expiration date on package. While these condiments contain preservatives, keeping in the fridge makes them last longer, that's just a fact. The issue is that some of these condiments contain or may contain traces of milk or egg so you do have to refrigerate, if like ketchup it doesn't say that and doesn't have ingredients that could go bad out of the fridge it is more than safe to keep outside but it won't last as long.
Not all pickles are the same. Hot brine pickles are fine at room temp, but cold brine pickles actually do need to be kept refrigerator because of the picking process. That’s why you find them in the cooler section at the grocery store and not on the shelf with the other hot brine pickles.
I think putting your condiments in or out of fridge that have a base of vinegar might also depend on how quickly you consume the product once opened. Restaurants are busy enough that they go through the contents rather quickly. At my house with just my husband and I eating, we won’t go through a container very quickly. Squeeze bottles don’t have the issue of cross contamination which helps with keeping bad bacteria from spoiling the unit. We all should have a certain amount of common sense as knowing if an item has eggs as a base it needs to be refrigerated after opening. ❤
... now that u brought up 'eggers' - the fact is the date on em is when their boxed to ship - they sit out warm for a period of time (many days) prior to shipment - they dont go bad by that date at all. And the best hard boiled eggs r best when hard boiled 'soon after' that date. ALSO - the only diff between brown n white shells r the color - taste is the same - one is NOT worth more $ than the other.
You are so right about that. The nutrients do not vary from one color of egg to another, and the older an egg is the easier it will peel after it’s boiled. Fresh eggs are always harder to peel, even with cold water running over it. Save your older eggs for deviled eggs and your fresher ones, use them for egg salad if you are going to boil them. (Just an idea for you) blessings!
A squeeze bottle draws air from the room, therefore drawing bacteria back into it. Your logic is not logical. Also much of the vinegar currently found in US stores is not acidic enough to prevent bacterial growth. The industry has once again found a way to screw the public for a few cents at a time by diluting it. It has to have a specific percentage of acidity to prevent bacteria.
I've been keeping all that stuff in the fridge for 50 years and I always will. I clicked edit to state a couple more things since my post received 18 replies. Heinz made a statement just the other day that their catsup should be kept in the refrigerator. The bottle ingredients on the Great Value mustard lists vinegar, water, mustard seed, salt, turmeric, and paprika. I've lived in cold climates and in hot climates and I have never in all my life had an issue keeping catsup and mustard in the fridge. What you want to do with your mustard (and other foods) is certainly up to you. I was simply making a comment that at my age (almost 70) I have always kept those products in the fridge and I always will as long as I am alive and have a fridge. I will add, in regards to some diners leaving bottles of catsup on the tables, a big reason why they do that is because the catsup is used up very quickly by the customers. I don't consume an entire bottle of catsup or mustard in a day or two which is what happens at most diners.
That's not a bad idea, though just note that that the butter will have significantly shorter shelf time before it goes bad. That may not be a problem if you use it up before that happens of course.
I’m all about saving room in my refrigerator since I live in a apartment with a smaller than the standard size refrigerator. I also know the many fruits and vegetables that last longer at room temperature like tomatoes, peppers, onions, potatoes, apples, citrus fruits, bananas, to name a few. I have always stored ketchup and mustard in the refrigerator since the label states “For best results refrigerate after opening” Honestly if I never had to refrigerate these things it would make me very happy and save much room for other things! I’m going to check the FDA website to see what they recommend before I make that change before believing some video I watched on RUclips
I don't use my ketchup too often so it tends to last a long time. I noticed that the ketchup developed an 'off' taste when stored on my counter. So I store it in the refrigerator to avoid that problem. I have the same taste problem with unrefrigerated peanut butter.
Restaurants do refrigerate ketchup after opening… ever open a bottle and it explodes that wasn’t refrigerated. It also changes the flavour if left out tasting more like vinegar.
@@misshartman2055 You’re kinda right. Thing you must watch is water can’t get in bottle, that causes the explosion. Bacteria forms if water is allowed in bottle. Restaurants do NOT typically refrigerate ketchup. 30 years in the biz...
On a positive note, I have a bidet and the ER is only 10 minutes away, so I’m looking forward to experimenting with much of these wonderful new revelations!
I read years ago to never refrigerate tomatoes, so my next purchase was out in a colander. Within two days, insects that I had never seen in my house had thoroughly enjoyed them. Lesson learned. And honey does crystallize, but it's still OK. I once took the advice to leave it out. Then I was living in a converted garage apartment. I went to the honey bottle to find three large ants affixed to it in a death grip. Again, lesson learned.
We get ants on our counter in Tucson all the time, so I keep the honey on the top of my frig and never had ants get to it. It dispenses more quickly without crystals until the very end of use. This is the one thing that I have never put in the frig. Everything else in the video goes into the frig.
"Fresh" fruits and vegetables from the grocery store go in the fridge if they were purchased from the chilled racks/shelves. Otherwise, be prepared for fruit flies in a day or two; this is why the grocery stores put them in expensive to run chilled racks/shelves. If they come from my garden, I keep them on the counter and process, freeze, dehydrate, etc., those I do not use within a week-ish.
I hate cold tomatoes, so I'll take it out of fridge at night if I'm gonna have it the next day ,they last longer that way especially in the summer months.
The cherry tomatoes I grow are protected by green spiders, unfortunatelybsometimes those spiders get harvested too. Unrefrigereated onions are a favorite feast of gnats & fruitflies.
Hint for avocados: Pick the fattest ones no matter how green and put them in with an apple in a plastic produce bag. Leave them on the counter (turning once a day) and they will be ready to eat in two days. They might not look dark enough but if you test their firmness, they will have some softness to them. You will get the fattest juiciest avocados in two days. BUT, make sure you take out the apple and put the avocados in the fridge so they don't continue to ripen and get dark. The gas the apple is releasing matures the avocados (and other fruit like tomatoes). Get the cheapest apple, they all work the same. Or get your favorite to eat.
Same as pharma - Rockefeller. The 'elite', royalty etc. put fluoride in the water to keep you from asking questions. They serve Loserfer and keeping us down is their religion. We have to save ourselves from them and then save them. It's quite an undertaking.
AGREE, The so called "best minds , most learned people , the folks running the agency , protecting the American people , should have the most up to date info .. Often their info was OFF.. WTH
Depends on the apple, but also some stores refrigerate theirs at some point in the supply chain, too. I had crisp apples from my local farmer's market, but have gotten mushy or sandy textured apples of the same type from Walmart or Kroger. lol. It's pretty hit or miss. I doubt the end trajectory of the apple is going to matter. Shit 1 week of room temp shelf life = those things are nasty by day 5-6. Versus going "bad" in the fridge by week 7-9... Yeah only 8 more weeks of freshness. lol
"Under refrigerated storage, mineral oil coating extended the shelf-life of chicken eggs by 10 more weeks compared with the noncoated eggs, i.e. a shelf life of 15 weeks compared with 5 weeks, respectively." I always use olive oil. ❤
In America our eggs are treated differently than in Europe. They should NEVER be left unrefrigerated as they will not rapidly age but also spread disease very quickly. American eggs are pre-washed, and that allows bacteria thru the shell that can cause salmonella growth in the egg if it is not kept below a specific temperature. They are pre-washed to protect you from other disease (like Bird Flu strains).
@@josephteller9715 The protection part is not what America is doing for its people. The entire world sees the corruption and evil spreading like a plague. I hope they do not have another culling =(. I am sorry, I had to vent some truth. Let's us hope the eggs will be safe for all.
Smart move, I do too. While mustard CAN be stored at room temperature just fine for for probably multiple weeks, I don't understand why the video claims keeping it cool in the fridge is bad and promotes mold growth, that makes zero sense to me as mold grows slower at low temperatures but much faster at room temperature. Keeping it below 5 degrees celcius should make it last for months.
@@CrazyGaming-ig6qq Humidity contributes to mold growth though, and the refrigerator can be a very humid environment, particularly in the summer months if it is not set at the right temperature and sweating is occurring inside it, dampness on the shelves and door.
@@Tall_Order My mustard gets watery on top even in the fridge, Does she maybe use a different brand than you, maybe yours is thicker or something? I use French's most of the time.
These tips are much appreciated since my fridge is smaller than I would like! I grew up with most condiments being left on the kitchen table or in the pantry. Somehow that practice fell by the wayside with no valid reason!
About 35 years ago, I found some little bugs in my flour. I’ve refrigerated it along with cornmeal and sugar ever since. My cousin put bagged potato chips in fridge. When hens lay eggs, it has a protective film on it. You can lay it out on counter several weeks or so. If you wash them, you have to use it right away or refrigerate it.
flour should never be refridgerated it can result in a kind of fungus growing in the flour that can not be seen but you will know its there when anything made with that flour will put who ever eats it on the toilet for a few days keep flour at room temp in an air tight container no bugs no fungus
I freeze my flours and nuts and especially seeds. Many years back I got a sack of sesame seeds that hatched meal moths. It took me 4 or so years to rid myself of them -- they are very persistent. But freezing kills the eggs in a few days, and anyway keeps the oils from going rancid.
I don't normally eat crap, but I'll buy those "barrels" of pretzels, cheezy-poofs, etc., just for the container with screw-on lid. Then I'll take a virgin produce bag (that come on a roll like paper-towels) and fill that with coffee-beans, flour, farina, oatmeal, sugar, whatever I don't want to keep in crappy paper bags they come on, and/or what I want to keep airtight. Easy to toss the bag when empty and get a new virgin bag for refills. Also lets you tamp down and twist the bag for less trapped air vs just using the jar itself. Never had any bugs in flour, etc., when doing it that way, vs getting an infestation of "junebugs" when kept in the original paper sack. Those little f'ers even ate through foil-lined bags for those Knorr knoodles!
Thanks. I just removed some things from my fridge and I have a recommendation: if you like mustard, buy a little can of dry mustard from the spice section of the grocery store. If you ever run out of the prepared stuff, you can whip up some more (just add a little water and stir.) But be careful, it's strong. Sniffing freshly mixed mustard will clear your sinuses instantly!
I once tried leaving a bottle of ketchup on a kitchen shelf. It did not spoil but the color became much darker and the flavor changed. Back to storing open bottles in the fridge and no further problems.
Like my Grandparents, I do keep a lot of these in a cool pantry. But eggs salsas, jams, jellies, peanut butter, certain types of fruits, etc. We do not buy a bunch of perishables so they go fast. In Canada, our foods do not have the high amounts of soya oil in them. I guess it's up to us to refrigerate or not depending on how quickly things are used or not used. My husband loves keeping bananas in the fridge. I don't but he does.
Tomatoes last far longer in the refrigerator than on the counter in my experience. I did not used to put them in the fridge, but when I started putting them in the fridge I noticed I had a lot more time before they spoiled.
Yes, it's a trade-off between spoilage and quality. They will 'spoil' faster outside the fridge but they will have texture changes (become mealy) and some flavor changes, including retarding of sugar development which continues to occur as tomatoes sit out.
If you are in the US (or Japan) you MUST keep eggs refrigerated. American and Japanese egg producers are required by law to wash their eggs to prevent the transmission of salmonella bacteria. Washing off the natural coating drastically shortens the shelf life of eggs, and if you try to keep them at room temperature, they will rapidly spoil. Any other country, you'll be OK keeping them out at room temp, but storing them cold will extend their life just the same.
If they are fresh you don't want to wash them keep the plume or put olive oil on them I've had eggs up to 3 months that were still good when in doubt use the float test if they float they aren't good
I check the container that the condiment comes in (the example they used for mustard was French's); that clearly states, refrigerate after opening. And secondarily, about bananas, and since I only buy them once a week; I keep them in a cooler and change an ice pack daily which keeps them edible for the duration. (I live in the south where the house temperature is usually 78 degrees). I do agree that the refrigerator is too cold for bananas, but other than turning the skin dk brown/black, will preserve them to an extent.
I'm keeping my stuff in the refrigerator. I think that mold growth is actually slowed down by refrigeration. I use to work in the produce department and most everything was refrigerated. Strawberries would last a lot longer if kept cool. Strawberries would mold in a few days without being refrigerated. All the apples came from the warehouse refrigerated. Potatoes and onions were not refrigerated although they had to be kept in the dark. Potatoes turn green because solanine is caused by light exposure.
Also, some restaurants don’t refrigerate ketchup bottles because they go through so much in a day that there’s no need to. Side note: marrying condiments was such a common side work but is actually not ideal since it’s mixing old products with new which is kind of gross.
As a former restaurant worker, and a witness to /many/ exploded ketchup bottles (and cleaning up thereof), I confirm and attest to this statement. You simply have to. Natural airborne yeasts will infect the ketchup and ferment it. And it is not delicious. Also, the practice of 'consolidating condiments' at end-of-shift certainly does not help the matter.
@David Lemley ugh... I remember consolidating (marrying) the ketchup bottles. They even manufactured a device for it! I worked at a family/golf resort where the owner stood in the kitchen at breakfast to make sure staff 'recycled' butter, syrup, and creamer that had been on tables and used. Amazing there wasn't illness there all the time... late 80s into the 90s.
''Marrying'' ketchup at restaurants is disgusting. I have seen old brand name bottles on the tables but who knows which brand is actually going into them and they are never cleaned nor disposed of....
There is always confusion around the spoilage of bottled products and condiments like ketchup and mustard. The assumption that there is only one way a product can go bad (bacteria, microbes, mold) is what causes people to believe that the acidity of ketchup and of mustard make it highly shelf stable so that there is no need to refrigerate it. Both are very shelf stable and will last quite a while in the pantry at room temperature. However, their quality will deteriorate faster if not chilled and so they will not taste as good. The cold fridge helps slow down other types of decomposition that happen regardless of microbial stability, such as oxidation, that affect the products flavor and even color. It is absolutely untrue that ketchup shouldn't be refrigerated. The reason that ketchup bottles say to refrigerate after opening is because this maintains the quality much longer and so, the ketchup will taste better. While it's generally true that ketchup can last around a year UNOPENED in the pantry, it will deteriorate within a month or so after being opened and I wouldn't expect it to be fit to use longer than three months, depending on conditions. People who make RUclips videos should learn the difference between the words should not and do not have to. Refrigerating ketchup will not cause mold growth. This is absurd. If ketchup is so stable because of its acidity, then why in the world would mold be caused by a cooler temperature and not a warmer one? Cooler temperatures slow down mold growth. They do not accelerate it. Again, Mustard and ketchup do NOT last longer OUTSIDE the fridge. I'd really like to know where you came across this grossly inaccurate and frankly ridiculous info. I do appreciate the attempt at a pseudo-explanation..it contains a natural acid that somehow magically means it should not be refrigerated. Most of us call this natural acid vinegar. The fact that you said 'natural acid' instead of just reading an ingredient label and discovering that the condiment mustard is made with vinegar, something we are all familiar with, shows that the content for this video is a hodgepodge of shoddy research with no real background knowledge. Also, while some restaurants do refrigerate ketchup at the end of the day, or at least will refrigerate the larger bulk bottles they pour from, they go through the bottles MUCH FASTER than we do at home, so they know that the quality will hold for a very short amount of time it will take to empty those small table bottles.
I agree, it's misinformation and potentially dangerous if someone actually takes the advice to heart and thinks ketchup is going to last longer at room temperature... and they put moldy kethup in the meat sauce for example :(
The way to handle peanut butter is to mix the oil in at room temperature, then refrigerate. That way the oil will not separate, and the peanut butter will not be rock hard either, even though it is cold. Regarding other items, the only ones I keep at room temperature are tomatoes (to keep flavor), honey (to prevent crystallization) and olive oil (to prevent hardening).
@@LostHope84 Natural peanut butter, separates oil from solids.,it's not poured on... "filled with oil" .Other brands have additives like sugar & hydrogenized vegetable oil that is homogenized,that it "appears" creamy & smooth.
I always have purchased with Peter Pan or JIF. No oil problems ever. Then again Peter pan and JIF are probably full of something else than actual peanut butter.
i do agree with this. i have a small woodworking i shop built in my yard. i have to work and eat even in retirement to just stay busy.. so i'm out here more than in the house. i keep my ketchup, mustard, a-1, pickles, relish, soy sauce, worstershire sauce, some salad dressings, and my sister has chickens, so even eggs out here. (i'm in my shop now) nothing ever goes bad. sure it's climate controlled, a/c in summer and heat in winter. but i think the wood i store to make the pieces i make, can be more damaged than the condiments. course i do keep the same in the house. still though, never any mold ever, no 'crusties' on anything either. been doing it for years too.
EGGS - You should mention the bloom helping to seal the shell. It is true UK eggs are sold on the shelf. But it is also true they have laws about manufacturers not washing them. Commercial US eggs are washed.
My egg lady told me that eggs once stored in the fridge should stay in the fridge and that the eggs should be put in the cartons pointed side down. Also, eggs can last up to 6 weeks or longer.
@@cathrynpaterson7539 Fun fact: If you put eggs in a pot of water, you can tell how fresh they are instantly. If an egg under water lays on its side, it's very fresh. If it stands up on its end, it's about to go bad, if it floats, it's rotten and you shouldn't eat it.
My house gets very warm during the day because I live in the desert. Things don't last on a counter. I've refrigerated apples and they keep for months. My house also has a fruit cellar, which would keep apples quite cool and downright cold in the winter.
And it is completely fine, most of it will benefit from lasting longer and retaining taste and freshness longer. The video contains some misinformation.
Just think about where they are in the supermarket. I google fruits to check what can go together in the bins and what can't. I never put my tomatoes in the fridge. They loose their taste.
I notice if I keep ketchup in the cupboard, it turns brown much more quickly. I wonder if it varies from country to country partially because of climate. Cupboards get pretty hot sometimes if you live in the sunbelt in the US vs. the UK.
Always look at your bottle. If the bottle says "REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING" Then that's what you should do. I know what you mean by changing colors and I believe that's because it's starting to go bad. All the ketchup bottles I've seen have said refrigerate after opening 🤷🏻♀️ so maybe we should follow the directions
If your ketchup is turning brown then you might want to buy different brand. My Heinz ketchup stays on shelf and I sometimes have to shake it to mix . Or it must be seriously hot there. I live in very hot humid LA (the state) and never a problem with color, taste, etc.
@@derhohlenbar I live in southern California. It doesn't get anywhere near as humid as Louisiana, but it can get a lot hotter. The sun gets way more intense without that layer of humidity to protect.
I don't know about other countries. But here in the UK in the past ketchup had more salt and preserved better outside the fridge, but today the recipe contains less salt and so it has to be refrigerated. Same with jam. In the past it had more sugar which preserved it better. Always a good idea to look at storage instructions on the bottle/jar before deciding.
@@Erati243 need to own a place before I install AC in the kitchen... Lately Ive been thinking of a wine fridge for things that should be cool but not cold.
New subscriber here, I'm originally from Maine, I find lots of things keep well between 44-48° which is the average temperature of a potato house, also very dark as well, lots of the older homes there still have a root cellar for this purpose
Does mustard need to be refrigerated? Like we said, the answer isn’t so simple. Do you have to refrigerate mustard? No, you do not. However, should you refrigerate mustard? If you want to maintain the optimal flavors, then yes. According to the official website for French’s Mustard, “Dijon and Horseradish mustards will lose their distinct flavors if not refrigerated, so we encourage refrigerating both.” Gulden’s Mustard is not quite as verbose on their website, but they deliver the same message: “Refrigerate after opening.” However, French’s does go on to say that for regular yellow mustard, it is totally cool to serve it at room temperature if that’s your preference. Yellow-mustard purists (if such people exist) may notice slightly less tangy notes, but we imagine said purists probably wouldn’t dream of defying the optimal preserving method.
I had the French's mustard and I use mustard daily I always finish the mustard way before the expiration date in case anyone wants to know didn't refrigerate it and it got a bad taste so I say if like your mustard put it in refrigerator
It's not a bad idea to refrigerate natural peanut butter, as it keeps the oil from separating. Your average jar of, say, Jif doesn't need to be refrigerated.
I have been using refrigerated mustard for over 50 years !!! Never any problems. Tastes just fine. In fact, when one Mustard container is getting low, I mix it in with a new Mustard container.
Put the soft cukes in a container with enough tap water to submerge them in the fridge for a few days. You should notice a difference overnight. Works on most veggies i.e. cukes, carrots, celery and more.
If you have some of these items in your refrigerator should you discard them and buy new or just try to use them quickly and keep replacements in the pantry?
You can also make store bought eggs able to be unrefrigerated by coating them with mineral oil. Wash the unwashed fresh eggs right before using. Another tip: the fresher the egg the harder it is to peel when hard boiled. Store bought eggs peel easier and the older they get the easier to peel. Check to see if eggs are still good to eat by filling a deep bowl with water and setting egg in it. If it floats it's bad. If it stands on one tip longways it's about to go bad but still fine to eat. If it lays on bottom it's perfectly fine. Works like a charm.
A lot of products if you read the labels, it says refrigerate after opening including French‘s mustard. that’s because mold and bacteria resumes growth immediately after opening. Older folks knew what they were doing when they would freeze or refrigerate bread to inhibit molding faster. My grandmother lived to be 102.
I waitresses for awhile in college. One of the things we did at closing was to refill the bottles of catsup on the tables. We refilled them with a big bottle of catsup that was stored IN THE REFRIGERATOR.
I prefer to go to the bathroom and used the toilet bowl 🚽🧻🪠🙄😒So no I will not be using my refrigerator or someone else refrigerator to go to the bathroom in .
great video but i can say for sure that bananas ripen way faster at room temp. The skin doesnt get affected either way and still turns the same but the Banana itself lasts way longer in the fridge!
FYI other than dairy items the grocery should give you a clue. Look at the produce dept and see what it refrigerated. Just because your bananas turn dark in the fridge doesn't mean they are bad, they will still be good inside for 2 weeks. My dad was a farmer and the bananas seldom went bad in the fridge.
Okay the part about eggs yes if you buy eggs in the in the grocery store and they're refrigerated you have to refrigerate them. If you get them off of a farm as long as you don't wash them you can leave them on the counter if you wash them it changes things and the longer you leave them out on the counter they will start becoming kind of thick and rubbery before you wash them it has like a protective coating on it chickens don't always sit on eggs immediately after they lay them they lay so many wait a while and then when they have quite a few then they sit on them all at once and generally 21 days later you have hatched eggs if they're fertile
the "rubbery" coating is called a Pellicle, it's a protective barrier that tends to keep salmonella out. since we prewash our eggs in the U.S. we have to refrigerate them to reduce the risk of salmonella penetrating the shell and contaminating the egg. however, an unwashed egg is good at room temperature for about 40 days.
The secret is rotating turn the eggs over after a week and repeat next week etc etc.. I have kept eggs fresh doing this all year, my boyfriend did not believe me even after proving him wrong after my chickens after they quit laying eggs in the winter.
A friend who has chickens gave some to me and made sure to express that they were “counter eggs” aka “I assume you don’t have experience with fresh eggs city dweller so don’t put these in the fridge”
Several grocery stores in my area store and sell cucumbers cold, I'm always saying something about it to them because obviously they think they last longer by doing so. Known most of this all my life growing up with family from the Appalachia, or with common sense. ; )
Very informative. Love the mustard bit and took my mustard and soy sauce out of the fridge after this (but not honey mustard). I'll stick to cold pickles for sure though. They are just crunchier!
I disagree about storing olive oil at room temp and here why. Oil keeps longer when it is cold and away from light. Yes, it will get cloudy and more viscous, but it won't go rancid nearly as fast as a half filled bottle does in the pantry or worse yet - on the counter. Oils can last years in the fridge whereas they begin degrading as soon as you open them and expose it to air.
If you have to store your olive oil in cold storage to increase longevitiy, then you should just stop buying olive oil. It takes around a year before it truly goes rancid. Using it within 6 months is recommended. Unless you are buying it by the galleons... there shouldn't be any reason you need to refridgerate it. A small 250ml or 500ml bottle should last 3-6 months for light home cooking, avid cooks could go through a bottle in1-2 months. Also a lot of mixed oils or scented oils last much longer.
@@yummychips_ My husband eats Chickpea pasta with lots of olive oil and powdered garlic. Either that or quinoa. He adds canned salmon/tuna/egg for protein.
While watching this I checked every condiment mentioned (including the soy sauce) & they all said "refrigerate after opening." They are all kept in the door shelves, so they are semi-mostly refrigerated. I did have salsa mold over more than once from keeping it in the door, so that goes deep now. The eggs are true, along with most of the fruit, but I'll stick to my refrigerated eggs (NEVER IN THE DOOR). BTW the more the ripe the banana the more nutrient rich & increasing in antioxidants it becomes. This video is partially incorrect.
The Heinz Ketchup bottle says *REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING* ...and so THAT is what you should do. Restaurants need not refrigerate their ketchup because they will consume an entire bottle in one or two days. Whereas the average family will take weeks to finish theirs. *_BIG DIFFERENCE!_*
But what you don't know... Those bottles of Ketchup & Mustard, that get used "every two or three days"??? Filled from large buckets... That aren't refrigerated. 😂
I'm currently buying cheese in smaller blocks since lately I've had to cut off mold. I cut 1/2 inch although I've been advised that I should cut off at least an inch. Also, my father was very annoyed when the Australian government put expiration dates on cans etc. We have now persuaded that an expiration date is a necessary date. Finally, an American friend here commented that, although he liked Vegemite, he couldn't eat it because it was expired. I pointed out that Vegemite NEVER expires. But then I eat it frequently so I've never tested that idea.
Lol, Vegemite has so much salt in it that nothing that would make you sick will EVER grow in that environment. You are correct, Vegemite (and Marmite, for that matter) will never go bad.
Most cheese molds are just fine to trim off. I rarely shave off more than 1/8" off each side with mold on it, especially if it's a hard cheese. When you put it away, wrap in waxed paper and tie with a loose rubber band or tape. Air helps keeps mold off. I also tend to buy "eating" cheeses in small blocks if available so they don't dry out before I eat them.
Some of those might work in Arizona and Northern areas, not so much in Florida. Mustard is fine in fridge. Our apples do well in fridge for some reason. Maybe a function of newer fridges.
Since I’ve just seen your video, can I take out my condiments that don’t need to be put in the refrigerator out and leave them out or will they mold…??
In the 1960's I worked in a restaurant. Our ketchup bottles were labelled "For Restaurant Use Only" and were never refrigerated. We'd keep full bottles on the table by topping off bottles from other bottles. The ingredients label didn't mention preservatives. We did note, however, after a weekend when we would top off bottles that hadn't been opened for several days, they'd "pop" and spray. I always assumed that was fermentation and that the room-temperature bottles just didn't hang around long enough to spoil. Was this fermentation, or a chemical/physical reaction of which I was unaware?
@@Ochreification It might be worth mentioning though, that fermentation, while it changes the flavor, is not necessarily the same thing as spoilage. It's my understanding that both sugar and vinegar are natural preservatives.
@@serenatwilite4005 Oh, agreed, 100%. It will still technically be edible, but it won't taste the way you expect, and if you consume enough of it, it will indeed get you drunk. But as far as spoilage, fermented products are usually safer than non-fermented products, because the activity of the yeast will out compete any possible pathogenic organisms that might make you sick.
@@Ochreification Very interesting information that's good to know. I didn't know that about yeast. There are a lot of natural preservatives that people aren't aware of when it comes to food.
@@serenatwilite4005 And so is salt... ketchup has sugar, but is it concentrated enough for the "preservative effect". Try diluting honey with water. It will start fermenting very quickly. Honey undiluted is VERY stable. Sugar that is not concentrated enough is just food for bacteria. My guess is that ketchup is really preserved by vinegar and salt... and probably refrigeration is helpful for an extended time with an opened bottle. These videos are usually full of errors... I never trust them.
I live in California. My catsup, mustard, & jam labels say "refrigerate after opening." My Clausson pickles are in the refrigerator at the store & directions say to keep refrigerated. Cucumbers are kept in wet open fridges. More room in my fridge now, thanks!
I’ve been keeping my mustard in the refrigerator for 50 years and I’ve never had a problem😂
But now you know not to keep mustard in the fridge. Even old dogs can be trained 😂
Same here. Guess now a days all these online people need a reason to get views and likes. I am sure a lot of them are wrong. A lot of mustard manufacturers say you do not need to refrigerate it to avoid spoiling but they recommend refrigeration to preserve the flavor.
A lot of incorrect info in this post.
Why does my mustard say refrigerate after opening?
@@archmasterone But if it doesn't effect the mustard, there's no need to. I'm sticking with the fridge.
I've been keeping my Mustard and Ketchup in the Fridge for 60 years and I have never had a problem!
ketchup gets gone to fast here for it to have time to mold lol
me too, and hot sauce and jarred pickles, I'm looking at them right now. They look happy 😄
After 60 years, it might be time to take it out!
I'm going for the record, I can see no problem with going another 60 years! Feliz Navidad!@@studuerson2548
He didn't say the same bottles, duh!@@studuerson2548
Now that I know nothing bad is going to happen I'm going to continue keeping my mustard in the fridge.
Same.
It taste so much better room temperature and it's not shockingly cold on your Weiner. 😂
@@Angelsbliss818room temp mustard flows so much better out of the squeeze bottle too
@@garrythomas492 READ THE CONTAINER
@@garrythomas492 I've never seen a difference.
We've kept ketchup and mustard in the fridge since I was a kid and never had any issues. As a side note, I literally just checked both those bottles and on the bottle it says "REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING". I would suggest you look on the packaging of the food you are buying to see for yourself if it needs to be refrigerated or not.
IIRC there's some FDA regulation that requires that labeling. It's not there because the makers wanted it.
@@raygunsforronnie847 Either way, if it says anything about refrigerating on the product, I tend to do so.
@@poochiew.9302 I also store stuff in the fridge if it says to on the bottle. Also, I have never had any problems from keeping them in the fridge, so if it's not broke, I am going to keep storing them in the fridge.
Read the label! Great idea! 😁
The purpose of refrigerating most of these products is to slow down the oxidation process; making the shelf life last a bit longer. Condiments are probably used less frequently in households than in resteraunts, so comparing the two is silly. Sure, they can last a good period of time on the table, but they can last even longer in the fridge.
Exactly !!!
restaurants refill ketchup bottles on tables daily from gallon jug in the fridge if its already open. or they open 1 on shelf.
I get more from this video be cause of REPLIES‼️👍 thank guys😘‼️
@@christineboydstrongtower exactly!! it's hilarious!
So many experts commenting, no thank you.
I checked my ketchup, mustard, pickles, hot sauces, soy sauce, etc. and ALL of them have "Refrigerate After Opening" on the label. WTF!
Right! I checked all mine too. Also, I'm not sure about other soya sauces, but China Lily is my favorite soya sauce and I keep mine in the fridge and it tastes good for a very long time. My friends that live upstairs keep their China Lily soya sauce in the pantry. When I ate rice with them and used their soya sauce it was really bad tasting. So I will continue to follow the label and " Refrigerate After Opening".
They have the label because the FDA requires it. But this is true. Other countries don't have the FDA so they can do a lot more.
*i 2nd that*
@@neldapennington8260 I live in Denmark. We don't have the FDA but we have something similar for the EU, all labels say to keep in the fridge after opening for X amount of days or to check the expiration date on package. While these condiments contain preservatives, keeping in the fridge makes them last longer, that's just a fact. The issue is that some of these condiments contain or may contain traces of milk or egg so you do have to refrigerate, if like ketchup it doesn't say that and doesn't have ingredients that could go bad out of the fridge it is more than safe to keep outside but it won't last as long.
Because that’s what you should do
Not all pickles are the same. Hot brine pickles are fine at room temp, but cold brine pickles actually do need to be kept refrigerator because of the picking process. That’s why you find them in the cooler section at the grocery store and not on the shelf with the other hot brine pickles.
also why cold brine pickles taste so much better the pickles taste "real and fresh" not like plastic and sadness and or republicanism
CLAUSEN PICKLES ❤👍🏻😃
@@cl844
You sound smart, you must keep the record player on at night. God save the Queen.
@@percyhawkins716 the queen has likely been pickled in cold brine per british laws...🤣🤣🤣
@@crippleguy415 Clausen dills, best pickle ever!
I think putting your condiments in or out of fridge that have a base of vinegar might also depend on how quickly you consume the product once opened. Restaurants are busy enough that they go through the contents rather quickly. At my house with just my husband and I eating, we won’t go through a container very quickly. Squeeze bottles don’t have the issue of cross contamination which helps with keeping bad bacteria from spoiling the unit. We all should have a certain amount of common sense as knowing if an item has eggs as a base it needs to be refrigerated after opening. ❤
... now that u brought up 'eggers' - the fact is the date on em is when their boxed to ship - they sit out warm for a period of time (many days) prior to shipment - they dont go bad by that date at all. And the best hard boiled eggs r best when hard boiled 'soon after' that date. ALSO - the only diff between brown n white shells r the color - taste is the same - one is NOT worth more $ than the other.
You are so right about that. The nutrients do not vary from one color of egg to another, and the older an egg is the easier it will peel after it’s boiled. Fresh eggs are always harder to peel, even with cold water running over it. Save your older eggs for deviled eggs and your fresher ones, use them for egg salad if you are going to boil them. (Just an idea for you) blessings!
A squeeze bottle draws air from the room, therefore drawing bacteria back into it. Your logic is not logical. Also much of the vinegar currently found in US stores is not acidic enough to prevent bacterial growth. The industry has once again found a way to screw the public for a few cents at a time by diluting it. It has to have a specific percentage of acidity to prevent bacteria.
I've been keeping all that stuff in the fridge for 50 years and I always will. I clicked edit to state a couple more things since my post received 18 replies. Heinz made a statement just the other day that their catsup should be kept in the refrigerator. The bottle ingredients on the Great Value mustard lists vinegar, water, mustard seed, salt, turmeric, and paprika. I've lived in cold climates and in hot climates and I have never in all my life had an issue keeping catsup and mustard in the fridge. What you want to do with your mustard (and other foods) is certainly up to you. I was simply making a comment that at my age (almost 70) I have always kept those products in the fridge and I always will as long as I am alive and have a fridge. I will add, in regards to some diners leaving bottles of catsup on the tables, a big reason why they do that is because the catsup is used up very quickly by the customers. I don't consume an entire bottle of catsup or mustard in a day or two which is what happens at most diners.
Every one lives in different CLIMATES. So they do different. And that's ok. I live in hot climate so I keep A lot of things in frig
Tomatoes too, no matter what the food connoisseurs say. I like em cold.
Yep. Don't need the internet to tell me where to keep my mustard.
@@RhinoVenturesOutdoors 👍😃
I think this guy only made this video to get views, not because he has any important advice to give
I don't keep the stick of butter I'm currently using in the fridge, only the butter I'm storing. Much easier to spread at room temp.
Same here, hard butter is hard to spread, although I find using salted butter does last longer when kept out.
If you need to use cold butter (for example, you just took it out of the fridge) you can use a cheese slicer to shave off thin pieces and spread them.
That's not a bad idea, though just note that that the butter will have significantly shorter shelf time before it goes bad. That may not be a problem if you use it up before that happens of course.
@@CrazyGaming-ig6qq Using salted butter instead of unsalted also helps.
@@Violet316 you're right. why is there unsalted butter? I suppose it's due to maybe some cooking recipes needs the butter but not the salt?
I’m all about saving room in my refrigerator since I live in a apartment with a smaller than the standard size refrigerator. I also know the many fruits and vegetables that last longer at room temperature like tomatoes, peppers, onions, potatoes, apples, citrus fruits, bananas, to name a few. I have always stored ketchup and mustard in the refrigerator since the label states “For best results refrigerate after opening” Honestly if I never had to refrigerate these things it would make me very happy and save much room for other things! I’m going to check the FDA website to see what they recommend before I make that change before believing some video I watched on RUclips
I've been keeping my Mustard and Ketchup under a rock for 60 years and I have never had a problem!
I keep them under my mattress. Keeps them warm too.
Are the ketchup manufacturers aware that ketchup shouldn’t be refrigerated? Label: refrigerator after opening.
I don't use my ketchup too often so it tends to last a long time. I noticed that the ketchup developed an 'off' taste when stored on my counter. So I store it in the refrigerator to avoid that problem. I have the same taste problem with unrefrigerated peanut butter.
Restaurants do refrigerate ketchup after opening… ever open a bottle and it explodes that wasn’t refrigerated.
It also changes the flavour if left out tasting more like vinegar.
@@misshartman2055 Yes, I also noticed it tastes like vinegar.
@@misshartman2055 You’re kinda right. Thing you must watch is water can’t get in bottle, that causes the explosion. Bacteria forms if water is allowed in bottle. Restaurants do NOT typically refrigerate ketchup. 30 years in the biz...
@@misshartman2055 we found that out in our restaurant as well. Leaving it out made it taste vinegary.
On a positive note, I have a bidet and the ER is only 10 minutes away, so I’m looking forward to experimenting with much of these wonderful new revelations!
youre gonna try ginger ale in your bidet??
I read years ago to never refrigerate tomatoes, so my next purchase was out in a colander. Within two days, insects that I had never seen in my house had thoroughly enjoyed them. Lesson learned. And honey does crystallize, but it's still OK. I once took the advice to leave it out. Then I was living in a converted garage apartment. I went to the honey bottle to find three large ants affixed to it in a death grip. Again, lesson learned.
We get ants on our counter in Tucson all the time, so I keep the honey on the top of my frig and never had ants get to it. It dispenses more quickly without crystals until the very end of use. This is the one thing that I have never put in the frig. Everything else in the video goes into the frig.
"Fresh" fruits and vegetables from the grocery store go in the fridge if they were purchased from the chilled racks/shelves. Otherwise, be prepared for fruit flies in a day or two; this is why the grocery stores put them in expensive to run chilled racks/shelves. If they come from my garden, I keep them on the counter and process, freeze, dehydrate, etc., those I do not use within a week-ish.
I hate cold tomatoes, so I'll take it out of fridge at night if I'm gonna have it the next day ,they last longer that way especially in the summer months.
Yes! The bugs. Little brown things everwear in the house...
The cherry tomatoes I grow are protected by green spiders, unfortunatelybsometimes those spiders get harvested too.
Unrefrigereated onions are a favorite feast of gnats & fruitflies.
Hint for avocados: Pick the fattest ones no matter how green and put them in with an apple in a plastic produce bag. Leave them on the counter (turning once a day) and they will be ready to eat in two days. They might not look dark enough but if you test their firmness, they will have some softness to them. You will get the fattest juiciest avocados in two days. BUT, make sure you take out the apple and put the avocados in the fridge so they don't continue to ripen and get dark. The gas the apple is releasing matures the avocados (and other fruit like tomatoes). Get the cheapest apple, they all work the same. Or get your favorite to eat.
Who eats avocados except people in Mexico. Our the mentally ill hippie people in the us..😂
Or you can just put them in a paper bag in a dark place by themselves. Works fast and great.
@twalrus1 Thanks so much for the great tip on avocados 🥑. Can’t wait to try it out. 🤍💛TEXAS
😂 Thanks 🥰 for sharing your great tip. I'll definitely try it. 😊
The real question is, "Who actually runs the FDA and how many times have they fudged up since their inception?"
Same as pharma - Rockefeller.
The 'elite', royalty etc. put fluoride in the water to keep
you from asking questions.
They serve Loserfer and keeping us down is their religion.
We have to save ourselves from them and then save them.
It's quite an undertaking.
Too often they are people who bounce back and forth between high level jobs at the FDA and Pharmaceutical companies.
@@leggiemeggie5837 If it has 3 letters and its part of the government odds are its corrupt.
AGREE, The so called "best minds , most learned people , the folks running the agency , protecting the American people , should have the most up to date info .. Often their info was OFF.. WTH
@@lukequigley121 It was not off, greed and power does crazy things
I have had apples in the refrigerator 3 months at 37 degrees, STILL CRISP and EATABLE!
Yea me as well.
Depends on the apple, but also some stores refrigerate theirs at some point in the supply chain, too.
I had crisp apples from my local farmer's market, but have gotten mushy or sandy textured apples of the same type from Walmart or Kroger. lol.
It's pretty hit or miss. I doubt the end trajectory of the apple is going to matter.
Shit 1 week of room temp shelf life = those things are nasty by day 5-6. Versus going "bad" in the fridge by week 7-9... Yeah only 8 more weeks of freshness. lol
Certain apples shouldn't be stored in or out of a fridge. Red Delicious apples, for example, should only be stored in the trash bin.
@@misterkaos.357 comment win of the day. Agree 100%!!!!😂😂😂
Edible
I left out an already opened jar of preserves. It didn't take long before it became moldy! In the refrigerator...it's NEVER become moldy since.😊
I learned so much watching and listening to this. Very good tips. Thank you. ❤
Funny, the mustard and ketchup bottles I have both say, "Refrigerate after opening."
I always put mustard and ketchup in the fridge. I love the coldness, especially in contrast with something hot like a hot dog or hamburger.
I have not noticed in reduction in their shelf life by refrigerating them either.
same
Me too...never had any issues.
Mustard lasts forever
To me mustard has more kick to it if kept at room temperature.
"Under refrigerated storage, mineral oil coating extended the shelf-life of chicken eggs by 10 more weeks compared with the noncoated eggs, i.e. a shelf life of 15 weeks compared with 5 weeks, respectively."
I always use olive oil. ❤
In America our eggs are treated differently than in Europe. They should NEVER be left unrefrigerated as they will not rapidly age but also spread disease very quickly. American eggs are pre-washed, and that allows bacteria thru the shell that can cause salmonella growth in the egg if it is not kept below a specific temperature. They are pre-washed to protect you from other disease (like Bird Flu strains).
@@josephteller9715 The protection part is not what America is doing for its people. The entire world sees the corruption and evil spreading like a plague. I hope they do not have another culling =(. I am sorry, I had to vent some truth. Let's us hope the eggs will be safe for all.
I've been keeping mustard in the fridge for 300 years and I've never had a problem.
322 years here...
522 years here' I am older than you. :)
@@Juliemorgana Haha, yes we both have great genes. Same last name w/o the a on the end.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I got a bottle of mustard from Moses that was long before refrigerators came out and it is still good.
On my bottle of French’s mustard it says to Refrigerate After Opening, so that’s what I’m doing.
Smart move, I do too. While mustard CAN be stored at room temperature just fine for for probably multiple weeks, I don't understand why the video claims keeping it cool in the fridge is bad and promotes mold growth, that makes zero sense to me as mold grows slower at low temperatures but much faster at room temperature. Keeping it below 5 degrees celcius should make it last for months.
Same here I've been doing it for years
Plochman's agrees. "...refrigerate to maintain freshness."
@@CrazyGaming-ig6qq Humidity contributes to mold growth though, and the refrigerator can be a very humid environment, particularly in the summer months if it is not set at the right temperature and sweating is occurring inside it, dampness on the shelves and door.
@@Tall_Order My mustard gets watery on top even in the fridge, Does she maybe use a different brand than you, maybe yours is thicker or something? I use French's most of the time.
Mustard never lasts long enough in my fridge for it to ever go bad.
True story.....
Exactly! Same as ketchup, hot sauce, etc.
100% Facts, mustard so many uses yum
These tips are much appreciated since my fridge is smaller than I would like! I grew up with most condiments being left on the kitchen table or in the pantry. Somehow that practice fell by the wayside with no valid reason!
A very eye opening and informative video. I knew some of this but still learned quite a bit
About 35 years ago, I found some little bugs in my flour. I’ve refrigerated it along with cornmeal and sugar ever since. My cousin put bagged potato chips in fridge. When hens lay eggs, it has a protective film on it. You can lay it out on counter several weeks or so. If you wash them, you have to use it right away or refrigerate it.
flour should never be refridgerated it can result in a kind of fungus growing in the flour that can not be seen but you will know its there when anything made with that flour will put who ever eats it on the toilet for a few days keep flour at room temp in an air tight container no bugs no fungus
I freeze my flours and nuts and especially seeds. Many years back I got a sack of sesame seeds that hatched meal moths. It took me 4 or so years to rid myself of them -- they are very persistent. But freezing kills the eggs in a few days, and anyway keeps the oils from going rancid.
@@lemleyd I freeze my flour too. I buy in 100lb. sacks and fill part of my deep freezer with it.
@@cl844 I wouldn't notice the difference, wheat flour sends me to the toilet in any case. 😢🤓🍻
I don't normally eat crap, but I'll buy those "barrels" of pretzels, cheezy-poofs, etc., just for the container with screw-on lid. Then I'll take a virgin produce bag (that come on a roll like paper-towels) and fill that with coffee-beans, flour, farina, oatmeal, sugar, whatever I don't want to keep in crappy paper bags they come on, and/or what I want to keep airtight. Easy to toss the bag when empty and get a new virgin bag for refills. Also lets you tamp down and twist the bag for less trapped air vs just using the jar itself.
Never had any bugs in flour, etc., when doing it that way, vs getting an infestation of "junebugs" when kept in the original paper sack. Those little f'ers even ate through foil-lined bags for those Knorr knoodles!
So for 40 years I've put my mustard in the fridge. I'm not stopping now.
Thanks. I just removed some things from my fridge and I have a recommendation: if you like mustard, buy a little can of dry mustard from the spice section of the grocery store. If you ever run out of the prepared stuff, you can whip up some more (just add a little water and stir.) But be careful, it's strong. Sniffing freshly mixed mustard will clear your sinuses instantly!
Man apples where I live expire in three days where I live, it's actually necessary to fridge them here. Big plus is it gives them a month to eat them.
I once tried leaving a bottle of ketchup on a kitchen shelf. It did not spoil but the color became much darker and the flavor changed. Back to storing open bottles in the fridge and no further problems.
Like my Grandparents, I do keep a lot of these in a cool pantry.
But eggs salsas, jams, jellies, peanut butter, certain types of fruits, etc.
We do not buy a bunch of perishables so they go fast.
In Canada, our foods do not have the high amounts of soya oil in them.
I guess it's up to us to refrigerate or not depending on how quickly things are used or not used.
My husband loves keeping bananas in the fridge.
I don't but he does.
Thanks for the info!
Tomatoes last far longer in the refrigerator than on the counter in my experience. I did not used to put them in the fridge, but when I started putting them in the fridge I noticed I had a lot more time before they spoiled.
Yeah, but once they're refrigerated they loose most of their flavor, and their texture goes all to hell.
@@mournblade1066 I totally agree. Want to ruin a fresh tomato, put it in the refrigerator.
@@mournblade1066 @ashleyjennings5224 If they are fully ripe FIRST, fridge to give them a few more days of usability
Store the tomatoes on the counter with the stem side down to prolong their shelf life.
Yes, it's a trade-off between spoilage and quality. They will 'spoil' faster outside the fridge but they will have texture changes (become mealy) and some flavor changes, including retarding of sugar development which continues to occur as tomatoes sit out.
If you are in the US (or Japan) you MUST keep eggs refrigerated. American and Japanese egg producers are required by law to wash their eggs to prevent the transmission of salmonella bacteria. Washing off the natural coating drastically shortens the shelf life of eggs, and if you try to keep them at room temperature, they will rapidly spoil. Any other country, you'll be OK keeping them out at room temp, but storing them cold will extend their life just the same.
We have our own chickens so we don't refrigerate our eggs.
I bought eggs from store and it smelled like bleach. Blaa!
Indeed - then you have to start floating your eggs to know which are safe to eat, which are not.
If they are fresh you don't want to wash them keep the plume or put olive oil on them I've had eggs up to 3 months that were still good when in doubt use the float test if they float they aren't good
I keep mine on the counter for weeks. Never had a problem.
I check the container that the condiment comes in (the example they used for mustard was French's); that clearly states, refrigerate after opening.
And secondarily, about bananas, and since I only buy them once a week; I keep them in a cooler and change an ice pack daily which keeps them edible for the duration. (I live in the south where the house temperature is usually 78 degrees). I do agree that the refrigerator is too cold for bananas, but other than turning the skin dk brown/black, will preserve them to an extent.
I'm keeping my stuff in the refrigerator. I think that mold growth is actually slowed down by refrigeration. I use to work in the produce department and most everything was refrigerated. Strawberries would last a lot longer if kept cool. Strawberries would mold in a few days without being refrigerated. All the apples came from the warehouse refrigerated. Potatoes and onions were not refrigerated although they had to be kept in the dark. Potatoes turn green because solanine is caused by light exposure.
15 years working in resorts and restaurants - YES, MANY restaurants DO refrigerate that ketchup at the end of the day.
Also, some restaurants don’t refrigerate ketchup bottles because they go through so much in a day that there’s no need to. Side note: marrying condiments was such a common side work but is actually not ideal since it’s mixing old products with new which is kind of gross.
As a former restaurant worker, and a witness to /many/ exploded ketchup bottles (and cleaning up thereof), I confirm and attest to this statement.
You simply have to. Natural airborne yeasts will infect the ketchup and ferment it. And it is not delicious.
Also, the practice of 'consolidating condiments' at end-of-shift certainly does not help the matter.
@David Lemley ugh... I remember consolidating (marrying) the ketchup bottles. They even manufactured a device for it! I worked at a family/golf resort where the owner stood in the kitchen at breakfast to make sure staff 'recycled' butter, syrup, and creamer that had been on tables and used. Amazing there wasn't illness there all the time... late 80s into the 90s.
''Marrying'' ketchup at restaurants is disgusting. I have seen old brand name bottles on the tables but who knows which brand is actually going into them and they are never cleaned nor disposed of....
There is always confusion around the spoilage of bottled products and condiments like ketchup and mustard. The assumption that there is only one way a product can go bad (bacteria, microbes, mold) is what causes people to believe that the acidity of ketchup and of mustard make it highly shelf stable so that there is no need to refrigerate it. Both are very shelf stable and will last quite a while in the pantry at room temperature. However, their quality will deteriorate faster if not chilled and so they will not taste as good. The cold fridge helps slow down other types of decomposition that happen regardless of microbial stability, such as oxidation, that affect the products flavor and even color.
It is absolutely untrue that ketchup shouldn't be refrigerated. The reason that ketchup bottles say to refrigerate after opening is because this maintains the quality much longer and so, the ketchup will taste better. While it's generally true that ketchup can last around a year UNOPENED in the pantry, it will deteriorate within a month or so after being opened and I wouldn't expect it to be fit to use longer than three months, depending on conditions.
People who make RUclips videos should learn the difference between the words should not and do not have to.
Refrigerating ketchup will not cause mold growth. This is absurd. If ketchup is so stable because of its acidity, then why in the world would mold be caused by a cooler temperature and not a warmer one? Cooler temperatures slow down mold growth. They do not accelerate it.
Again, Mustard and ketchup do NOT last longer OUTSIDE the fridge. I'd really like to know where you came across this grossly inaccurate and frankly ridiculous info. I do appreciate the attempt at a pseudo-explanation..it contains a natural acid that somehow magically means it should not be refrigerated. Most of us call this natural acid vinegar. The fact that you said 'natural acid' instead of just reading an ingredient label and discovering that the condiment mustard is made with vinegar, something we are all familiar with, shows that the content for this video is a hodgepodge of shoddy research with no real background knowledge.
Also, while some restaurants do refrigerate ketchup at the end of the day, or at least will refrigerate the larger bulk bottles they pour from, they go through the bottles MUCH FASTER than we do at home, so they know that the quality will hold for a very short amount of time it will take to empty those small table bottles.
I agree, it's misinformation and potentially dangerous if someone actually takes the advice to heart and thinks ketchup is going to last longer at room temperature... and they put moldy kethup in the meat sauce for example :(
Excellent dispositive analysis of the click-hungry pseudo-expertise offered in this video.
The way to handle peanut butter is to mix the oil in at room temperature, then refrigerate. That way the oil will not separate, and the peanut butter will not be rock hard either, even though it is cold.
Regarding other items, the only ones I keep at room temperature are tomatoes (to keep flavor), honey (to prevent crystallization) and olive oil (to prevent hardening).
If you’re buying the kind that comes filled with oil, you’re doing peanut butter wrong.
,Yes.that vworks..just discovered that ..by account.. actually.
@@LostHope84 Natural peanut butter, separates oil from solids.,it's not poured on... "filled with oil" .Other brands have additives like sugar & hydrogenized vegetable oil that is homogenized,that it "appears" creamy & smooth.
I always have purchased with Peter Pan or JIF. No oil problems ever. Then again Peter pan and JIF are probably full of something else than actual peanut butter.
i do agree with this. i have a small woodworking i shop built in my yard. i have to work and eat even in retirement to just stay busy.. so i'm out here more than in the house. i keep my ketchup, mustard, a-1, pickles, relish, soy sauce, worstershire sauce, some salad dressings, and my sister has chickens, so even eggs out here. (i'm in my shop now) nothing ever goes bad. sure it's climate controlled, a/c in summer and heat in winter. but i think the wood i store to make the pieces i make, can be more damaged than the condiments. course i do keep the same in the house. still though, never any mold ever, no 'crusties' on anything either. been doing it for years too.
I think it varies because of different areas of the country. Some areas having produce out just attracts insects.
EGGS - You should mention the bloom helping to seal the shell. It is true UK eggs are sold on the shelf. But it is also true they have laws about manufacturers not washing them. Commercial US eggs are washed.
Right
My egg lady told me that eggs once stored in the fridge should stay in the fridge and that the eggs should be put in the cartons pointed side down. Also, eggs can last up to 6 weeks or longer.
@@cathrynpaterson7539 Fun fact: If you put eggs in a pot of water, you can tell how fresh they are instantly. If an egg under water lays on its side, it's very fresh. If it stands up on its end, it's about to go bad, if it floats, it's rotten and you shouldn't eat it.
I just asked that very question, couldn't remember what it was called. Bloom. Yeah, they're all cleaned up here in the US at the stores.
Some great tips!! Especially the upside down peanut butter one😋!!
Pretty interesting. I learned a lot. Thank You
My house gets very warm during the day because I live in the desert. Things don't last on a counter. I've refrigerated apples and they keep for months. My house also has a fruit cellar, which would keep apples quite cool and downright cold in the winter.
Yup exactly. My wife leaves bread on the counter and it goes bad in a week. A lot of stuff lasts ways longer in fridge.
@@boostedmaniac I never liked refrigerated bread since it quickly got hard. Though it going bad quickly is probably a factor of modern bread.
Exactly. I was thinking how before refrigerators, people had root cellars to keep things cool and insulated from heat and frost.
@@bradandrews777We freeze bread and thaw it as we use it (or toast it).
Yeah, not much of this applies when you live in the tropics, either…
Hell... just about everything on here is in my fridge. 😮
And it is completely fine, most of it will benefit from lasting longer and retaining taste and freshness longer. The video contains some misinformation.
Just think about where they are in the supermarket. I google fruits to check what can go together in the bins and what can't. I never put my tomatoes in the fridge. They loose their taste.
@@tamahtaylor348 1 tomato in the pantry is better than 10 in the fridge.
I notice if I keep ketchup in the cupboard, it turns brown much more quickly. I wonder if it varies from country to country partially because of climate. Cupboards get pretty hot sometimes if you live in the sunbelt in the US vs. the UK.
I have never seen ketchup turn brown and I keep it in the fridge for years and years.
Always look at your bottle. If the bottle says "REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING" Then that's what you should do. I know what you mean by changing colors and I believe that's because it's starting to go bad. All the ketchup bottles I've seen have said refrigerate after opening 🤷🏻♀️ so maybe we should follow the directions
If your ketchup is turning brown then you might want to buy different brand. My Heinz ketchup stays on shelf and I sometimes have to shake it to mix . Or it must be seriously hot there. I live in very hot humid LA (the state) and never a problem with color, taste, etc.
@@derhohlenbar I live in southern California. It doesn't get anywhere near as humid as Louisiana, but it can get a lot hotter. The sun gets way more intense without that layer of humidity to protect.
Love these tips! 🦋🍎
The kind of mustard I buy always says "MUST refrigerate after opening" Gonna keep doing that
You must live in one of those places where you can eat without fruit flies beating you up for your food 😂
I don't know about other countries. But here in the UK in the past ketchup had more salt and preserved better outside the fridge, but today the recipe contains less salt and so it has to be refrigerated. Same with jam. In the past it had more sugar which preserved it better. Always a good idea to look at storage instructions on the bottle/jar before deciding.
1/3rd of jams these days are sugar-free.
Ive been keeping my mustard in the refrigerator for a hour now, and I've never had a problem...
Mustard is not your problem,
😅😂🥰🤗🤗🤗
What if room temperature is 38C/100F? I keep a lot of fruit in the fridge, because otherwise they literally explode if left out for more than a day..
You don’t need to watch this video
if your room temp(in Canada?) is 100f you have bigger problems than moldy Ketchup.
@@alexsmart5452 Costal Mexico...
at that point you have 2 options 1. get better AC 2. move.
@@Erati243 need to own a place before I install AC in the kitchen... Lately Ive been thinking of a wine fridge for things that should be cool but not cold.
New subscriber here, I'm originally from Maine, I find lots of things keep well between 44-48° which is the average temperature of a potato house, also very dark as well, lots of the older homes there still have a root cellar for this purpose
Thank you for that information
This is interesting information that I didn't know. Thanks for the video.😊
Does mustard need to be refrigerated?
Like we said, the answer isn’t so simple. Do you have to refrigerate mustard? No, you do not. However, should you refrigerate mustard? If you want to maintain the optimal flavors, then yes.
According to the official website for French’s Mustard, “Dijon and Horseradish mustards will lose their distinct flavors if not refrigerated, so we encourage refrigerating both.”
Gulden’s Mustard is not quite as verbose on their website, but they deliver the same message: “Refrigerate after opening.”
However, French’s does go on to say that for regular yellow mustard, it is totally cool to serve it at room temperature if that’s your preference. Yellow-mustard purists (if such people exist) may notice slightly less tangy notes, but we imagine said purists probably wouldn’t dream of defying the optimal preserving method.
Someone who does their own research instead of just believing something on RUclips! I like it! I'm same way.
THIS
I had the French's mustard and I use mustard daily I always finish the mustard way before the expiration date in case anyone wants to know didn't refrigerate it and it got a bad taste so I say if like your mustard put it in refrigerator
Frenchs sucks if you want real mustard instead of watered down crap . Get Plochmans.
Then...They are STUPID!
Been putting ketchup and mustard in my refrigerator for 54 years and I ain’t about to change. I also keep my Peanut Butter in the refrigerator.
Me too, but 55 years.
@@nadogrl Great minds think alike 😀😃
Some people freeze Pop Tarts ... Weird !
you had me until peanut butter...
It's not a bad idea to refrigerate natural peanut butter, as it keeps the oil from separating. Your average jar of, say, Jif doesn't need to be refrigerated.
I work for an apple orchard. They store apples from july to march in a huge cold storage area. I have apples from last yr in my fridge
I have been using refrigerated mustard for over 50 years !!! Never any problems. Tastes just fine. In fact, when one Mustard container is getting low, I mix it in with a new Mustard container.
After reading a lot of these comments.... I'm putting everything that I took out of the fridge... back in the fridge.
Use clean utensils to avoid cross contamination ~
Put the soft cukes in a container with enough tap water to submerge them in the fridge for a few days. You should notice a difference overnight. Works on most veggies i.e. cukes, carrots, celery and more.
I refridgerate every thing & love it.
Thanks for the tips
My mustard is ALWAYS in the fridge and so are my apples.
That was actually useful.❤
Thank you This is exactly the questions I've been tossing around in my mind and not sure where to look for these answers THX THX THX
If you have some of these items in your refrigerator should you discard them and buy new or just try to use them quickly and keep replacements in the pantry?
If you have fresh eggs not from a store . Don't wash them off and you won't have to fredgerate
LOL " Fredgerate," or Federal gate ? You probably meant Refrigerate right ? LOL or American FDA approved federal government approved Consumer rated.
@@richa.s9912 maybe I did but sometimes with only one eye that sees half as good as it used to , I do pretty damn good.
Exactly. And they're the greatest to have at camp! Gives more space in the cooler! For... Beer?
You can also make store bought eggs able to be unrefrigerated by coating them with mineral oil. Wash the unwashed fresh eggs right before using.
Another tip: the fresher the egg the harder it is to peel when hard boiled. Store bought eggs peel easier and the older they get the easier to peel.
Check to see if eggs are still good to eat by filling a deep bowl with water and setting egg in it. If it floats it's bad. If it stands on one tip longways it's about to go bad but still fine to eat. If it lays on bottom it's perfectly fine. Works like a charm.
@@IdahoRanchGirl not in my case with my chickens. My fresh eggs were always easy to peel . Was store bought that I hade my issues peeling.
Just looked at the Ketchup from Aldi: Refrigerate after opening to maintain freshness.
Same with mustard: Refrigerate after opening.
A lot of products if you read the labels, it says refrigerate after opening including French‘s mustard. that’s because mold and bacteria resumes growth immediately after opening. Older folks knew what they were doing when they would freeze or refrigerate bread to inhibit molding faster. My grandmother lived to be 102.
I waitresses for awhile in college. One of the things we did at closing was to refill the bottles of catsup on the tables. We refilled them with a big bottle of catsup that was stored IN THE REFRIGERATOR.
Never in my life, nearly 70 years, has mustard gone bad.
I've been putting shit in the refrigerator for decades and it's never been an issue.
Why would anyone put shit in their refrigerator??
@@gregoryfuller1136 they eat it for breakfast
All 3 comments got a like because all 3 deserve it
I prefer to go to the bathroom and used the toilet bowl 🚽🧻🪠🙄😒So no I will not be using my refrigerator or someone else refrigerator to go to the bathroom in .
@@gregoryfuller1136 LOL 😂 yes Exactly what I was thinking 🤔. LOL 😂😂😂
great video but i can say for sure that bananas ripen way faster at room temp. The skin doesnt get affected either way and still turns the same but the Banana itself lasts way longer in the fridge!
in the village they picked the apples off the trees in summer and kept them in a cool dark place and were eating them in winter, they kept for months
FYI other than dairy items the grocery should give you a clue. Look at the produce dept and see what it refrigerated. Just because your bananas turn dark in the fridge doesn't mean they are bad, they will still be good inside for 2 weeks. My dad was a farmer and the bananas seldom went bad in the fridge.
i started refrigerating my bananas, because I don't eat them fast enough and they were turning bad plus it draws gnats to them if left out.
Exactly! Just look how it was stored at the store. Largely though is the label states "Refrigerate after opening"
As far as I’m concerned, bananas are bad if they’re no longer green. I can’t stomach a yellow banana with brown spots or a totally brown one.
@@ralfie8801 same here, if it doesn't still have some green on it I can't eat it. I don't like that sickly sweet taste.🤔🤓🍻
My neighbor puts his banana in the fridge wat she likes
Okay the part about eggs yes if you buy eggs in the in the grocery store and they're refrigerated you have to refrigerate them. If you get them off of a farm as long as you don't wash them you can leave them on the counter if you wash them it changes things and the longer you leave them out on the counter they will start becoming kind of thick and rubbery before you wash them it has like a protective coating on it chickens don't always sit on eggs immediately after they lay them they lay so many wait a while and then when they have quite a few then they sit on them all at once and generally 21 days later you have hatched eggs if they're fertile
absolutely .... you explained it perfect
Exactly..eggs aren't kept refrigerated in New Zealand. Our eggs aren't washed.
the "rubbery" coating is called a Pellicle, it's a protective barrier that tends to keep salmonella out. since we prewash our eggs in the U.S. we have to refrigerate them to reduce the risk of salmonella penetrating the shell and contaminating the egg. however, an unwashed egg is good at room temperature for about 40 days.
The secret is rotating turn the eggs over after a week and repeat next week etc etc.. I have kept eggs fresh doing this all year, my boyfriend did not believe me even after proving him wrong after my chickens after they quit laying eggs in the winter.
A friend who has chickens gave some to me and made sure to express that they were “counter eggs” aka “I assume you don’t have experience with fresh eggs city dweller so don’t put these in the fridge”
Interesting about the peanut butter, will have to try that one.
Thank you so much 😊
Love me a cold apple
Several grocery stores in my area store and sell cucumbers cold, I'm always saying something about it to them because obviously they think they last longer by doing so. Known most of this all my life growing up with family from the Appalachia, or with common sense. ; )
I am glad to know that I have been keeping all of these things at room temp with no issues. The one exception is pickles, which I like to eat COLD!
Very informative. Love the mustard bit and took my mustard and soy sauce out of the fridge after this (but not honey mustard). I'll stick to cold pickles for sure though. They are just crunchier!
The labels say refrigerate.
Buy a new bottle. Once refrigerated, keep it refrigerated.
I disagree about storing olive oil at room temp and here why. Oil keeps longer when it is cold and away from light. Yes, it will get cloudy and more viscous, but it won't go rancid nearly as fast as a half filled bottle does in the pantry or worse yet - on the counter. Oils can last years in the fridge whereas they begin degrading as soon as you open them and expose it to air.
My pantry is very dark and somewhat cool. All my oils do fine in there.
If you have to store your olive oil in cold storage to increase longevitiy, then you should just stop buying olive oil. It takes around a year before it truly goes rancid. Using it within 6 months is recommended. Unless you are buying it by the galleons... there shouldn't be any reason you need to refridgerate it. A small 250ml or 500ml bottle should last 3-6 months for light home cooking, avid cooks could go through a bottle in1-2 months. Also a lot of mixed oils or scented oils last much longer.
Good to know. Thanks
@@yummychips_ My husband eats Chickpea pasta with lots of olive oil and powdered garlic. Either that or quinoa. He adds canned salmon/tuna/egg for protein.
Great video, most of us repeat what we learned growing up. Otherwise we follow the instructions on the label; refrigerate after opening!
While watching this I checked every condiment mentioned (including the soy sauce) & they all said "refrigerate after opening." They are all kept in the door shelves, so they are semi-mostly refrigerated. I did have salsa mold over more than once from keeping it in the door, so that goes deep now. The eggs are true, along with most of the fruit, but I'll stick to my refrigerated eggs (NEVER IN THE DOOR).
BTW the more the ripe the banana the more nutrient rich & increasing in antioxidants it becomes.
This video is partially incorrect.
The Heinz Ketchup bottle says
*REFRIGERATE AFTER OPENING*
...and so THAT is what you should do. Restaurants need not refrigerate their ketchup because they will consume an entire bottle in one or two days. Whereas the average family will take weeks to finish theirs.
*_BIG DIFFERENCE!_*
But what you don't know...
Those bottles of Ketchup & Mustard, that get used "every two or three days"???
Filled from large buckets... That aren't refrigerated. 😂
@@WraithWriter
GROSS!
I prefer packets!
I'm currently buying cheese in smaller blocks since lately I've had to cut off mold. I cut 1/2 inch although I've been advised that I should cut off at least an inch. Also, my father was very annoyed when the Australian government put expiration dates on cans etc. We have now persuaded that an expiration date is a necessary date. Finally, an American friend here commented that, although he liked Vegemite, he couldn't eat it because it was expired. I pointed out that Vegemite NEVER expires. But then I eat it frequently so I've never tested that idea.
Lol, Vegemite has so much salt in it that nothing that would make you sick will EVER grow in that environment. You are correct, Vegemite (and Marmite, for that matter) will never go bad.
Most cheese molds are just fine to trim off. I rarely shave off more than 1/8" off each side with mold on it, especially if it's a hard cheese. When you put it away, wrap in waxed paper and tie with a loose rubber band or tape. Air helps keeps mold off. I also tend to buy "eating" cheeses in small blocks if available so they don't dry out before I eat them.
Some of those might work in Arizona and Northern areas, not so much in Florida. Mustard is fine in fridge. Our apples do well in fridge for some reason. Maybe a function of newer fridges.
Since I’ve just seen your video, can I take out my condiments that don’t need to be put in the refrigerator out and leave them out or will they mold…??
In the 1960's I worked in a restaurant. Our ketchup bottles were labelled "For Restaurant Use Only" and were never refrigerated. We'd keep full bottles on the table by topping off bottles from other bottles. The ingredients label didn't mention preservatives. We did note, however, after a weekend when we would top off bottles that hadn't been opened for several days, they'd "pop" and spray. I always assumed that was fermentation and that the room-temperature bottles just didn't hang around long enough to spoil. Was this fermentation, or a chemical/physical reaction of which I was unaware?
Nope 100% fermentation. Ketchup has enough sugar in it that yeast will ferment it, even though it's a very acidic product.
@@Ochreification It might be worth mentioning though, that fermentation, while it changes the flavor, is not necessarily the same thing as spoilage. It's my understanding that both sugar and vinegar are natural preservatives.
@@serenatwilite4005 Oh, agreed, 100%. It will still technically be edible, but it won't taste the way you expect, and if you consume enough of it, it will indeed get you drunk. But as far as spoilage, fermented products are usually safer than non-fermented products, because the activity of the yeast will out compete any possible pathogenic organisms that might make you sick.
@@Ochreification Very interesting information that's good to know. I didn't know that about yeast. There are a lot of natural preservatives that people aren't aware of when it comes to food.
@@serenatwilite4005 And so is salt... ketchup has sugar, but is it concentrated enough for the "preservative effect". Try diluting honey with water. It will start fermenting very quickly. Honey undiluted is VERY stable. Sugar that is not concentrated enough is just food for bacteria.
My guess is that ketchup is really preserved by vinegar and salt... and probably refrigeration is helpful for an extended time with an opened bottle.
These videos are usually full of errors... I never trust them.
Mustard should print Not to be refrigerated on label 😉
I am 66 and in all my years the mustard has always been in the fridge.
They want you to buy more.
I live in California. My catsup, mustard, & jam labels say "refrigerate after opening." My Clausson pickles are in the refrigerator at the store & directions say to keep refrigerated. Cucumbers are kept in wet open fridges. More room in my fridge now, thanks!
Some pickles and hot sauces say to refrigerate.
I generally keep veggies out of the fridge, until it's cut.
I immediately took a lot of bottles from my frig. Also lemons and apples. Thank you.