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let's play: What's in my tuna?


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Posted

i opened a can of tuna to find little white balls all over the top. i'm assuming that it's congealed fat (tuna packed in oil), as i keep the cans in the fridge. but they seem too perfect. this happened once before as well. i ate it then. this time i didn't. any ideas?

fc9a0f0f.jpg

Posted

:laugh::laugh::laugh: (to ranitidine)

Seriously, though -- yeah, it's probably just globs of oil. That's tuna in olive oil, right? I notice that I get similar little globules in jars of home-roasted peppers in olive oil, and jars of the oil I drain off from roast garlic. I don't worry about it. But now I know another reason not to keep my tuna in oil in the fridge; water-packed is okay, though.

Posted
i opened a can of tuna to find little white balls all over the top.  i'm assuming that it's congealed fat (tuna packed in oil), as i keep the cans in the fridge.  but they seem too perfect.  this happened once before as well.  i ate it then.  this time i didn't.  any ideas?

fc9a0f0f.jpg

Why do you keep cans of tuna in the fridge?

Posted

It's fat.

You also get them in anchovies packed in oil when the oil becomes too cold.

They do cause you to stop and think for a second though

:biggrin:

Posted

Am I the only one who has 5+ year old cans of sardines in my pantry? I turn them periodically, but never thought to chill them. I don't chill any canned food except maybe V-8 juice. Should I? :shock:

Lobster.

Posted

Check out cans of salmon you'll see the same thing.

I'm a NYC expat. Since coming to the darkside, as many of my freinds have said, I've found that most good things in NYC are made in NJ.

Posted
Am I the only one who has 5+ year old cans of sardines in my pantry?  I turn them periodically, but never thought to chill them.  I don't chill any canned food except maybe V-8 juice.  Should I? :shock:

I'd probably get rid of it. If it doesn't get you sick, it isn't going to have any taste left.

I'm a NYC expat. Since coming to the darkside, as many of my freinds have said, I've found that most good things in NYC are made in NJ.

Posted
i think i'll pass.  but thanks double o.  :wink:

I know you pass on on capitals but its 0 not O

I'm a NYC expat. Since coming to the darkside, as many of my freinds have said, I've found that most good things in NYC are made in NJ.

Posted
Am I the only one who has 5+ year old cans of sardines in my pantry?  I turn them periodically, but never thought to chill them.  I don't chill any canned food except maybe V-8 juice.  Should I?   :shock:

I'd probably get rid of it. If it doesn't get you sick, it isn't going to have any taste left.

Why would storage of sardines for 5+ years have the effect of removing all flavour from them?

Posted

I read somewhere that canned sardines improve with age. That there are secret societies of sardine-can keepers, who maintain private lists of which brands are best at what age. All very esoteric. No, I am NOT making this up. I just can't remember where I read it. :rolleyes:

So what if you've got 5+-year-old cans? My storage philosophy is, if it ain't bulging, it's staying. Of course, if it looks or smells weird when I open it, THAT'S when it gets dumped.

Posted

Dude, they are canned sardines, they all look and smell weird. :biggrin: . However, I once opened a can of sardines that had one fish in it, now that was very weird and not a little creepy. A large can of oil and one sardine. In my mind I think of it as the "evil-born-of-a-jackal" sardine. Just isn't right, sardines individually canned. :hmmm:

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