World Food Safety Day 2025 : The Food You Tossed in the Trash Was Probably Fine — What You Missed

Most of us glance at food labels only when we're really trying to be "good." You might check the calories, sugar, or whether it's "natural." But here's something we often miss-the tiny date that quietly decides whether your food is still safe.

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On World Food Safety Day 2025, let's take a closer look at what those dates actually mean-and how they affect both our health and our habits. Because food safety doesn't begin in the kitchen. It begins at the shelf.

Best Before vs Expiry : Not The Same Thing

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) makes a clear distinction:

Best Before : This is about quality. Up to this date, your food will taste, look, and feel the way the manufacturer intended. After it? The texture might change. The flavour may not be the same. But it's still safe to eat.

Expiry Date : This is about safety. After this date, eating the food could actually be harmful.

Still, many people treat both labels the same way-either throwing away perfectly edible items or, worse, taking risks with something that should've been discarded. Knowing the difference can help us avoid waste and stay healthy.

The Other Dates You Shouldn't Ignore

Alongside the best-before or expiry dates, you'll often find:

Manufacturing Date: When the item was produced or packed.

Packaging Date: Useful for knowing how long the product has been on the shelf.

But here's something important: Once a pack is opened, the best-before date is no longer your guide. Storage conditions and how quickly it's consumed matter far more.

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For Food Businesses, It's About Trust

If you run a restaurant, café, home kitchen, or cloud kitchen, food safety isn't just a rule-it's a responsibility.

  • Basic systems like FIFO (First In, First Out) help ensure older stock gets used first. But the real work lies in regularly checking dates, training staff, and understanding what each label truly means.
  • FSSAI's FoSTaC programme (Food Safety Training & Certification) is a great place to start. When your team understands food safety deeply, customers can eat with confidence.

Real Food Doesn't Last Forever

There's something deeply telling about how quickly a food item goes bad. The healthiest foods-fruits, vegetables, fresh dairy, homemade snacks don't last long. And that's not a flaw. That's exactly how nature designed them.

Revant Himatsingka, better known as FoodPharmer, an Indian health and nutrition influencer, puts it simply - "The longer the expiry date, the sooner we expire."

It's a striking thought. Because if something can sit in a cupboard for months or years without changing, maybe it's not the kind of "food" our bodies were built to digest regularly.

Don't Confuse Caution With Waste

A lot of food waste happens because people throw out products the moment they're past their best-before date. But in many cases, these foods are still safe to eat, they've just lost a bit of flavour or crunch. On the other hand, expired foods are a different story. Those do need to go.

So, it's not just about being careful, it's about being informed.

Whether you're cooking at home, picking up snacks for the week, or running a food business, one small step makes a big difference: read the label properly.

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Understanding the difference between best-before and expiry dates helps you eat smarter, shop better, and waste less.

Food safety is all about knowing what you're consuming, and why it matters.

And that starts with a simple habit: checking the date.