News3 mins ago
Sour Milk?
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I have made a fishy starter for Christmas day made of mixed fish covered in a cheese sauce. I only found out after I had made the sauce and poured it on the fish, that the milk I used in the sauce had turned sour, despite being a fresh bottle! The sauce tasted ok to me, but is this 'sour milk sauce' likely to make anyone ill?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Interestingly, (to my mind any way) the milk I used was B.O.B milk- the yellow topped plastic bottles (the fat content of skimmed but tastes like semi-skimmed) which I really like, but this is the third time I've had a bottle turn sour long before the use by date. On this occasion I opened a new bottle on 21/12 and the use by date was 30/12, so didn't think to sniff the bottle. It was only after I made the sauce then made a cup of coffee I found the milk was sour. I'm going to stop buying it now. I've tried to ring them on the number on the bottle - no reply!
Wow, sour milk. I have not had milk go sour in the UK for (I think) decades, but it has gone properly off to become bitter (not sour). I wrote to ask the Dairy Council (that is what I think they are called) to discover why this happens with UK milk but not foreign milk, but I never received a reply. Sour milk and cream are fine for cooking but the bitter stuff is utterly useless.
Lol Jno - I waited until today to post just to be sure!!
Jackdaw33 - a few years ago I used to buy regular glass bottled milk from a small local supplier. However, I cancelled their delivery as they would only deliver on alternate days and not weekends so would usually be left with 16 pints on a Friday - all with the same use by date!! When I cancelled my order and told the milkman I was going to buy supermarket milk that had a longer shelf life than his milk, he intimated that supermarket milk was chemically treated to give it a longer shelf life. He also said that his unsold milk was disposed of, but unsold supermarket milk was sold to chocolate manufacturers for manufacturing use!! Not sure if there is any truth in this or not??!!
Jackdaw33 - a few years ago I used to buy regular glass bottled milk from a small local supplier. However, I cancelled their delivery as they would only deliver on alternate days and not weekends so would usually be left with 16 pints on a Friday - all with the same use by date!! When I cancelled my order and told the milkman I was going to buy supermarket milk that had a longer shelf life than his milk, he intimated that supermarket milk was chemically treated to give it a longer shelf life. He also said that his unsold milk was disposed of, but unsold supermarket milk was sold to chocolate manufacturers for manufacturing use!! Not sure if there is any truth in this or not??!!