It might be time to clean out your condiment shelf

Last year most of us eschewed large gatherings, which meant fewer occasions to use that tub of mayonnaise, jar of mustard, or bottle of ketchup. We might have these condiments and more left over from pre-pandemic times (I am among the guilty). Now that picnics, cookouts, and other celebrations are happening again, it’s time to give your condiment shelf a once-over and throw out any items past their prime. To help you decide what to pitch and what to keep, head over to Food & Wine, which offers a guide to how long condiments last once opened.

Expiration dates are not the best way to determine if a condiment should be tossed, according to food safety experts. The ‘best by’ dates refer to how long the product will stay fresh unopened. Once you crack the seal, the shelf life of condiments depends on several factors including where it is stored and what it is made of. Food & Wine recommends the FoodKeeper App, published by the US Department of Health and Human Services and found on the website Foodsafety.gov. The app provides a list on how long you should keep condiments ranging from honey to hoisin sauce and chili sauce to chocolate syrup.

I admit that I flaunt these suggestions for some items such as honey. Since they found edible honey in the tombs of Egyptian Pharoahs, I think it will be okay to hang out a few months more in my cabinet than is recommended. There is a risk, of course, to ignoring these rules and while I might be comfortable consuming mustard that’s been in the fridge for two years, when I am serving guests I will break out a new jar. Also, flavor diminishes the longer anything is stored, so it is probably a good idea to rotate condiments just for the sake of your tastebuds.

The one suggestion that surprised me was to toss soy sauce after just one month. While I don’t keep bottles of soy sauce around for years, a large bottle usually hangs out in the cupboard for a few months. Did any of the recommendations surprise you? Are you a rule breaker like me or do you follow these guidelines religiously?

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8 Comments

  • EskieF  on  July 6, 2021

    Definitely a rule-breaker – and I never seek out or read any of the rules or guidance from American sources – they are so conservative they lead to food waste, and are written with an eye to protecting the manufacturers from litigation in a litigation-happy country without strong consumer-protection laws. I’m just finishing a bottle of Soy sauce with a BB date of Aug 2019. Nobody has gotten sick or died yet in my household!

  • lean1  on  July 6, 2021

    I keep soy sauce in the fridge. I have never had a problem keeping it for months.

  • Rinshin  on  July 6, 2021

    If you think Americans are particular about expiration date, Japanese are much more so. I don’t follow any of it and judge by little taste and aroma. I have come across stale tasting big, big bottle of soy sauce at someone’s home though and it was very obvious stale taste. I suspect it was quite old and sitting in a warm condition. I make many big batch sauces like shiitake ponzu etc that uses soy sauce but those are always kept refrigerated and improves with age.

  • susan g  on  July 6, 2021

    I’m in the ‘keeper’ side of the question, and I buy 1/2 gallons of our regularly used condiments.
    I think people;’s problems most often may be due to user contamination, that is, using the same utensil from one thing to another. Even worse, taking a taste and putting the spoon (or whatever) into that jar or another. It’s especially hard on non-acidic foods such as jams.
    My biggest mistake was to keep a tin of roasted sesame oil in a cabinet with a fluorescent light under it. There’s no better way to ruin it, and no saving possibilities. (Maybe for a squeaky door hinge?)

  • averythingcooks  on  July 8, 2021

    Another rule breaker here. The “1 month soy sauce” rule – never followed/probably never will – was a surprise! I do try to buy smaller jars…pricier yes but they don’t hang around as long & fridge space here is prime real estate – big jars take up too much room!

    I am a bit of a “specialty condiment / savoury preserve / chutney / paste” collector – both buying for myself & being gifted lots of things. I was thinking about this while reading the recent forum discussion re: the number of vinegars people have….I just have a different collectable 🙂 When I am out of town, I hit grocery stores, hunting these aisles looking for things that I can’t get at home. Online shopping can also be a bit of a bear trap for me. As a result, I’ll often go on a “jar mission” when meal planning, specifically trying to use stuff up. For example, I make Melissa Clark’s marmalade meatballs all the time but hardly ever the same way – all kinds of things have gone into the delicious glaze – but very rarely the marmalade actually called for 🙂

    The main thing I am very careful about is homemade items. I currently have mason jars of BBQ sauce, grainy mustard and Vivian Howard’s “little green dress” & “community organizer” in there….the “use by” date is clearly labelled and I commit to getting through them in time.

  • SACarlson  on  July 10, 2021

    I’m a total rule-breaker, but am pretty vigilant about user contamination risks. I buy massive bottles of soy sauce at Costco and typically get through one of these in 4-5 months (I do a lot of marinades). Mustards last for a very long time if kept cold.

  • Tovie  on  July 11, 2021

    Soy sauce 1 month?!? Really? I buy a bottle from the Asian grocery store and it sits on my counter until it’s gone, sometimes several years (as per covid and lack of entertaining opportunities). It’s already fermented. Now I’ve got to go see what they say about oyster sauce, kecap manis and some of those ? I’m not admitting how old those are… (But I just used both a couple weeks ago and they were fine).

  • jluvs2bake  on  July 15, 2021

    Rule breaker! I keep almost all my opened condiments in the refrigerator, and I am vigilant about using separate utensils for them. The other thing that annoys me is someone spreading a condiment directly on their meat and then putting the utensil back in the condiment!! When I have guests, I try to put enough of the condiment in a serving dish that it doesn’t look sparse but isn’t wasteful to throw out afterward. It’s too easy to replenish, and throwing food out just kills me. As long as something smells right and isn’t moldy or showing other warning signs, outside of rare exceptions, I feel fine with it.

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