pruwyben ( @pruwybn@discuss.tchncs.de ) English78•19 days agoSome tourists in the Museum of Natural History are marveling at some dinosaur bones. One of them asks the guard, “Can you tell me how old the dinosaur bones are?”
The guard replies, “They are 65,000,011 years old.”
“That’s an awfully exact number,” says the tourist. “How do you know their age so precisely?”
The guard answers, “Well, the dinosaur bones were sixty five million years old when I started working here, and that was eleven years ago.”
mozz ( @mozz@mbin.grits.dev ) 63•19 days agoSometimes expiration dates refer to when enough plastic from the packaging has decayed into the food material that it might be a problem. Bottled water works that way.
I don’t know:
- How much science there is behind the dating
- How much plastic you’re consuming in your food anyway and so who cares what’s the difference
- Whether that’s what’s going on with this salt package specifically
But it’s not automatically crazy for there to be an expiration date on an immortal product if it comes packaged up in plastic.
Rhaedas ( @Rhaedas@fedia.io ) 11•19 days agoWhile I’ve always thought that, I’ve also heard that it’s the point where the plastic may not be reliable enough to contain or keep the contents uncontaminated. Either way, it’s the plastic.
Didros ( @Didros@beehaw.org ) English8•19 days agoYou would think that the abrasive nature of the salt would shave off more plastic than the plastic breaking down. I guess you need to keep track of how many earth quakes you get and how much you shake the container when you get salt.
ryannathans ( @ryannathans@aussie.zone ) English10•19 days agoNow I am just annoyed not everything has a plasticless alternative packaging
Shdwdrgn ( @Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz ) English9•19 days agoAnd to think of how mad everyone got when everything was packaged in those ‘heavy’ glass bottles and jars, and manufacturers started putting everything into plastic because the glass was creating too much litter on the roads. Now here we are 30 years later and everyone is being killed by plastic.
Rhaedas ( @Rhaedas@fedia.io ) 4•19 days agomanufacturers started putting everything into plastic because
the glass was creating too much litter on the roadsplastic was cheaper.Fixed. It’s always about profit.
Shdwdrgn ( @Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz ) English3•19 days agoIt’s also lighter weight and thus cheaper to ship… But they promised that you totally couldn’t tell the difference in taste to food products! (Everybody could tell the difference)
Firestorm Druid ( @v4ld1z@lemmy.zip ) English47•19 days agoYou may have to wash the salt first
lugal ( @lugal@sopuli.xyz ) English27•19 days agoYes, salt doesn’t go bad
anarchrist ( @anarchrist@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) English11•19 days agoBut this looks like natural salt, so no preservatives 😁
lugal ( @lugal@sopuli.xyz ) English16•19 days agoMaybe they used natural preservation like, let’s say, salt? OP should check the ingredients
snooggums ( @snooggums@midwest.social ) English9•19 days agoThis comment is absolute gold.
lugal ( @lugal@sopuli.xyz ) English10•19 days agoGlad to be of service
pezmaker ( @pezmaker@programming.dev ) English8•19 days agoIt’s probably NaCl
lugal ( @lugal@sopuli.xyz ) English1•19 days agoWhat a salty response
AccountMaker ( @AccountMaker@slrpnk.net ) English22•19 days agoFrom what I heard, salt is usually packaged with iodine or some substances that prevent clumping that expire over time. So after some time the salt won’t have those anymore, but it should be safe to consume. Salt cannot spoil because bacteria cannot grow in salty places.
Don’t know how plastic containers relate to that sadly.
Venator ( @Venator@lemmy.nz ) English1•18 days agoThe label says it’s 100% uncontaminated though 😂
Well, I understand that with some years in an plastic bowl, the salt may absorb some substances and microplastics. But about Honey, what comes in glass jars? There they also put an expiration date, even though still edible honey has been found in several thousand years old Egyptian tombs.
Wxnzxn ( @Wxnzxn@lemmy.ml ) English11•19 days agoThe expiration date - unless it’s a different legal definition where you are from - is not really about being edible, but just signifies the guarantee the producer gives, basically “up until this date we will guarantee this product will maintain the expected quality”. In this case, I think it will be them not guaranteeing that the salt won’t have drawn water from the air and clumped up or something like that.
JCreazy ( @JCreazy@midwest.social ) English6•19 days agoIt’s required by law so they have to put something.
mozz ( @mozz@mbin.grits.dev ) 2•19 days agoAs weird as it sounds, this actually isn’t true in general. Except on baby formula, it’s not required by federal law. Some states require it and some don’t, but it’s more or less put there voluntarily by everyone because they don’t want spoiled stuff going around with their name on it.
Zoot ( @Zoot@reddthat.com ) English4•19 days agoYoure also more likely to replace it after its “expired”
DavidGarcia ( @DavidGarcia@feddit.nl ) English13•19 days agoThat’s just the data after which the microplastics have aged to their finest toxicity
jet ( @jet@hackertalks.com ) English12•19 days agoPossibly. Depends on what your use case is, perhaps the container it’s stored in is degrading and putting some contaminants on the salt itself, microplastics and the like
BeigeAgenda ( @BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca ) English10•19 days agoMore than 250 million years of shelf life, I think it can last a few million years more.
KingJalopy ( @KingJalopy@lemm.ee ) English7•19 days agoLots of salty comments in this thread
darkphotonstudio ( @darkphotonstudio@beehaw.org ) English3•19 days agoYes.