On Mon, 20 Jun 2016 14:46:47 GMT, "l not -l" <
lal...@cujo.com> wrote:
>
>On 20-Jun-2016, "Julie Bove" <
juli...@frontier.com> wrote:
>
>> I am curious about this. I know some here have made the claim that mustard
>>
>> grows stronger in taste with age. I have not found this to be the case at
>> all.
>>
>> At some point I had totally run out. I placed a mail order somewhere for
>> Colman's which I thought I had read was the very best. But maybe I read
>> this
>> wrong because I've since read complaints from people about its weak
>> flavor.
>> Anyway... I got a rather large tin and it had a May expiration date on it.
>>
>> This ticked me off because there was no way I could use such a large
>> amount
>> in such a short amount of time. I can't remember when I ordered it but
>> perhaps 2-3 months before it expired.
>Perhaps you buy a different Coleman's mustard than I do; but, here in STL,
>Coleman's doesn't have an expiration date, only a Best by date. I have a
>large tin that says Best by Nov 11, 2015; it is still potent and dissolves
>quickly (at least it did this past Wednesday). I have previously used
>Coleman's that was well over a year past its Best by date and found it
>perfectly fine; however, I must admit that I have never tasted the dry
>powder alone. When mixed with vinegar or in other uses, it works as
>expected.
I have a tin of Coleman's in my pantry right now with a best by date
of March 2013. It doesn't have much of an aroma, but I tasted a tiny
bit and it was quite potent.
It's always tasted OK in anything I've cooked with it.
Doris