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Recent media stories, tell you to only scramble your eggs to cook or use in baking products, no runny yokes or protein drinks allowed. I am not a big egg eater, we will make a big breakfast after church on Sundays with eggs, as omellettes, scrambled or over easy medium.
I found recently, that if you put your eggs in water and if they float, they are old and not good to eat. Two floated, three did not, but the box gave me another week of shelf life. We ate all of them anyway. Didn't get sick either!
When the milk in your fridge reaches its sell-by date, you show no mercy: It gets poured out.
You're not alone. A recent survey shows that 61 percent of Americans would follow suit, believing the milk to be spoiled.
Add it all up and that's a lot of money down the drain — money that could be saved with a visit to ShelfLifeAdvice.com, where you'd find out that when properly stored, milk can last up to five days after the sell-by date without off flavors.
The site's a wealth of knowledge, providing the real scoop on shelf life data for hundreds of food products, storage tips and updates on food news and food safety issues. You'll even find suggestions for cutting your costs at the grocery store.
Save milk, save money.
By visiting www.shelflifeadvice.com.