Why Refrigerate?
Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2017 12:08 am
This will tell you about just how high class are the places where I usually eat out. There is always a ketchup container, along with the salt and pepper, and the fake-and-real sugar packets and usually a mustard container.
I use a lot of ketchup 'at home. I like brown mustard with BLT sandwiches an a few other things. I just noticed the container for both of them at home stated 'refrigerate after opening". Now the county health department around here is very active with its restaurant inspections. I have never heard of a problem with 'bad' ketchup or mustard in a restaurant. I know it is common practice to fill the containers the customers use from big bulk containers. That is one of the jobs for servers during the slow periods, along with filling the salt and pepper shakers. Who knows how old the ketchup really is in the bottom of that container at the end of my table.
So why should I refrigerate the stuff at home? I hate putting cold ketchup on a really good, just off the grill hamburger.
snailgate
I use a lot of ketchup 'at home. I like brown mustard with BLT sandwiches an a few other things. I just noticed the container for both of them at home stated 'refrigerate after opening". Now the county health department around here is very active with its restaurant inspections. I have never heard of a problem with 'bad' ketchup or mustard in a restaurant. I know it is common practice to fill the containers the customers use from big bulk containers. That is one of the jobs for servers during the slow periods, along with filling the salt and pepper shakers. Who knows how old the ketchup really is in the bottom of that container at the end of my table.
So why should I refrigerate the stuff at home? I hate putting cold ketchup on a really good, just off the grill hamburger.
snailgate