Mine isn't nearly as bad, but a couple years ago we were clearing out the freezers and stuff while getting ready to move and found some freezer dinner or something that expired in 2006.
Helped someone clean their pantry out once and this is upsettingly accurate to that experiance. They had food i think was discontinued over a decade ago.
It's a sketch. You can hear him think that's a stretch when he repeats it. I don't think a lot of their lines are written, but improvised mostly. "This is from when our grandparents got married in 1998," he says with enthusiasm. Cut to, "our grandparents got married in 1998," matched with the change of facial expression into a more deadpan stare.
It's the default lighting in unfinished basements, i.e. when doing construction in a windowless room if you don't have all the structure put together yet you put in this kind of light. The reason unfinished basements like this are everywhere is indeed government issued; it's a combination of avoiding tax and zoning regulations associated with having the extra "living" space (a finished basement) in your home
@@yoweedmofo19897 As someone who's paid an irresponsible amount of money to be a leading expert in a really narrow field of educational policy, I really appreciate you sharing this fact. It's really interesting how people skirt what looks like commonsense legislation.
Whenever I stay at my grandparents', I dread going into their medicine cabinet. Like, I have to weigh it out: a migraine or advil that is old enough to rent a car.
"Gran, this can says it expired in 1750." "It's still good, nothing in a can goes bad!" "Canning wasn't even *_invented_* at that point, where did you get this?" - real convo had between a friend and his grandma when cleaning out their pantry.
I hope you didn't throw out perfectly good food. The date on cans is exclusively for store inventory systems. It's easy for a can of sauerkraut to last for a century.
@@runed0s86 I absolutely threw out items over fifty years old…. If you are worried about a food shortage hoarding cans isn’t the way to be prepared (rotating stock is important, nothing over ten years should be in your pantry). Being emergency prepared means having food that is safe to eat and not contaminated with metal from the tin.
In highschool during a random science class I took we had a lab where we had to test the PHs of different liquids. One of the liquids was a bottle of Pepto Bismol which is supposed to be extremely basic, but for some reason the litmus papers weren't giving the proper results. It turns out the Pepto was 8 YEARS overdue and turned into an acid! 💀
I found a 5 gallon sealed bucket of honey that my (then beekeeper) grandfather harvested. It was from the 60’s. Which honey doesn’t go bad, so it was fine
My mom gave me jello.and pudding mix boxes when I had surgery (and had to eat soft foods) in 2016. One of the diet chocolate puddings was dated 1992 and bore one of the Nutrisweet trademark logos from before the patent on asparatime expired. My mother's cupboard also contains some spices that she bought when my parents were first married in 1966. I found 9 or 10 expired jars of instant coffee in the basement, even though my parents used the coffee maker every day. And several unopened A1 steak sauces and jars of mint jelly. That's just the tip of the iceberg. But the one thing I can guarantee is that, with the exception of the Newlywed spices, all of these items were purchased primarily bc they were on sale really really marked down.
"they were really, REALLY marked down when they bought them" we believe the Pharaoh's to be ancient but they must have known of giants who came before.
Unless they seem to be off or smell bad, any of those still airtight sealed should be safe to eat, especially non-acidic canned goods and jams/jellies. Honey will literally never expire, and vacuum-sealed dried goods (done properly) shouldn’t expire until after you do.
After my grandparents died, we cleaned out their house and found cereal that expired in 1993…they’d moved to that house in 2004. so they brought 10yo expired cereal to their new house and kept it there for another 20 years 💀💀
I once found canned peaches in my parents pantry that expired in 2004, in 2012. They’d already moved twice, once cross-country, since ‘04 so I just imagined them being like, “Make sure you pack the peaches!” during each move. 😂
For anyone who wants to hear a yapper… so basically my grandparents keep a big tub of M&Ms in their pantry and they’ve had it for about 5 to 7 years now and every time my grandma goes to the store and she sees like some type of M&Ms on sale she buys them, but they never actually have finished it to the very bottom so the M&Ms at the very bottom probably expired like five years ago. 😂
During Covid, we found very old toilet paper at my grandparents’. Back in the day they used to make colored toilet paper, so we were using green, pink, and yellow rolls that were thin and coarse and I’m pretty sure were older than me. Also yesterday I was making lunch for my grandma. I’d noticed some lunch meat and figured it should get used up, but when I pulled it out the best by date was 10 days earlier. She initially dismissed it when I mentioned it with “oh, it’s fine.” I often don’t care about best by dates, but I know meat should be eaten within a few days, and when I opened it to check (per grandma’s request), it smelled weird. She still wanted to use it, even said to just cut off the growths of bacteria we could see growing around the edges, but I wasn’t about to let my grandma get some painful infection so I threw it away and told her it really wasn’t safe to eat. She loved the sandwich I made with sausage and sauerkraut instead, so it worked out.
@@poke-talia268 Depends on what it's growing on. Hard cheese, for instance, you can just cut it off. Too many people who throw away perfectly good cheese...
@@niwa_s my mom is infamous among our extended family for serving moldy cheese 😆 once when I came home for Christmas and had my grandparents there, too (the same frugal grandparents with the toilet paper and bad meat). My mom served up a cream-based dish that tasted funky. It turned out she’d cooked it with spoiled milk, thinking it would cook away whatever was in it, but even my grandma, who grew up in the depression and war and never wasted anything, whispered that it shouldn’t be eaten. Okay last story that comes to mind: when we lived outside city limits, we raised some cows for beef. Then we moved down three states and into suburbs. Time passed, and about 10 years after the move I was home again for Christmas and eating dinner with my family. I thought the meat we were eating was lamb because it had kind of that dark taste (which I’ve never really liked). When I asked, my mom responded evasively at first, but we learned that it was beef-actually the last meat from our cows. They’d been butchered before we moved, and I hadn’t even realized that some of their meat came with us-the drive was 14 hours minimum and not in a heat controlled vehicle (though at least it would’ve been transported in an ice box or something), and I’m sure we didn’t make it all in a day. Plus there had been multiple power outages during the years since that would’ve affected the freezers holding the meat. I share these stories humorously; everyone’s turned out fine and no one’s gotten sick. I love my mom and am grateful for what she taught us about frugality.
My grandfather would make potato salad for a family cookout not only a week early, we’d have to check the mayonnaise because invariably it was expired. Cleaning out his pantry was truly an adventure through time. My aunt and I actually saved some ancient, neat-looking cookie tins for decoration and storage (after getting rid of the three or four remaining cookies that would be inexplicably left in each one). This video is accurate.
This is so accurate my grandparents refuse to throw anything out. I recently found a box of pistachio jello from 2007 and i threw it away and they hollered at me lol
I’m so glad it’s not just my family that does this. Every time my grandparents invites my cousins over we all head into their pantry and try to find the most expired thing. My grandma cleaned out most of the bad stuff so it’s not as fun anymore but we do it anyways. The most expired thing we found was a can of beef from 1973
Want to sprint out of the basement because it’s super creepy and there’s only one light dangling from the middle of the ceiling Ok cool *Turns off light* Run off into the unknown🏃
I freaking found some medicine in my grandmothers bathroom cabinet that was expired the year I was born- nearly twenty one years ago- to which she moved to each house she lived at and never checked what she was moving. 😂😅
I am 48 my wife is 51 the daughter is 33 the granddaughter is 16 and the great grandchildren is due in March........... 26 is still a bit off, going to go with second marriage Mind you we did get married till after our 3rd child in 1997 when I was 21 and she was 24 6 years later became we could not afford it at the time.....so still possible if u likely
I remember when I was like 8-9 I was at my grandparents house and me and my sister decided to go through their pantry. And when we did we found onion juice I’m pretty sure is what it was and it expired the year I was born so when we found it, it had been expired for more than 8 years.
my grandma has marmalade from before i was born in her fridge that she refuses to get rid of. i’ve helped her get a new fridge and install it and when i told her to get rid of it she said “it’s not that old”
My Grammy is a “snow bird” so she goes to Florida for the winter and sometimes we visit her. I wanted some food so I opened the fridge, I found food from 1994..
Ryan is such a cutie. Took me forever to realize they were brothers because I seen them on American highshorts first. But it's so cute seeing all the brother make videos together
I like how the math doesn't maths at all cos the grandparents bought shit that expired in 1912, so they bought it, together, before that year, and put it in in their house, but they didn't got married till 1998
Legit found food coloring in my grandparents pantry that expired in 1999. Now I’m betting food coloring takes a while to expire so it’s probably been in there since 96 or 97 maybe?
This was my grandparents pantry, but instead it was jars of preserves that had been on the shelves so long the contents had turned the colour of death.
This is a uniquely "male" thing, like being 20 and having only navy sheets, one pillow, and one blanket. Toward the end of my grandmothers life she was bedridden. She always did all the cooking, cleaning, grocery shopping, and basically any other housekeeping things you can think of. All she was eating when her health started getting bad was frozen Walmart food because, again, she was the one that knew how to cook and apparently CANCER isn't enough for my grandpa to start learning. I had to go thru their cabinet and throw away THREE bread loaves, all at different stages of being eaten, that were moldy and featured wildly different expiration dates. It's been almost three years since my grandma passed and my grandpa recently gave my mother and I pancake mix from when she was still alive. Things like this did not happen when my grandmother was alive. I didn't even know theg had these things and if I ever found them when helping in the kitchen, she'd immediately tell me to throw it out. She even imbued a deathly fear of mold and expired food into me by telling me a story about a man who opened a bag of moldy bread and the few spores he breathed in caused his face to rot off LOL.
Literally yesterday at school one of the math teachers (she’s old) gave me and my friends a box of Oreos and they expired on September 5th 2023 and we didn’t know that until we almost finished the box
“When the war is over” 😂
Guess it's still good
@@sokka_pfrtdamn.
@@sokka_pfrt Lololll
Either ww1, ww2, the Cold War proxy conflict, or others
The ai war
Once I found a hot chocolate package I thought it said that it expired 2022 but it was actually 1982. damn.
Mine isn't nearly as bad, but a couple years ago we were clearing out the freezers and stuff while getting ready to move and found some freezer dinner or something that expired in 2006.
Thats an insane misread. Hope you didnt drink that 😭
That food in the freezer is as old as me!
HELP ???
I found a thing of ground tartar that expired in 2003.
Helped someone clean their pantry out once and this is upsettingly accurate to that experiance.
They had food i think was discontinued over a decade ago.
Well that’s… something
@@ChaosandCringe they also had an aunt Jemima syrup bottle that as half full from 2015
2016, oh that's just 4, I mean 8 years ago.
S tier comment
@@bread8465 thanks lol
Bro I hit my phone with the thousand yard stare after realizing that
So true 😮
*horror*
My aunt gave me a bottle of cayenne pepper flakes that had a price tag from 1983. I didn’t notice it until I used it and it was pure sawdust.
Lmfao
Lol😂😂😂😂
Lol 😂 How did that go?
@@catsnchess Says it right in the comment. No flavor, just sawdust.
It's always the spice cabinet. My parents are close to 80 and they have one of those little red and white metal boxes of McCormick Nutmeg-- from 1977.
RYANS HAIR IS ACTUALLY GORGEOUS LIKE WHAT
(edit) no because why tf do yall care so much if i say someone has nice hair
THATS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS THINKING😭🙏
@@nourr.el-a FRR LIKE WHAT 😭
Bruh fr
Glaze maxing
Down bad
No way your grandparents got married in '98 my sister was born that year
Could be a step grandparent situation
Same
It’s a sketch?!
no way your sister was born that year, MY sister was born that year
It's a sketch. You can hear him think that's a stretch when he repeats it. I don't think a lot of their lines are written, but improvised mostly. "This is from when our grandparents got married in 1998," he says with enthusiasm. Cut to, "our grandparents got married in 1998," matched with the change of facial expression into a more deadpan stare.
"What? No it doesn't." great improv partner right there 😂
YES AND
@@CardboardIsweirdOMG YES
@@violets_are_violetand*
LMAO
"Our grandparents got married in 1998" bro my parents got married in 1996 💀💀💀
Remarried😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲
My momma and daddy got married in ‘93. I’m only 14. What year was you born, 2053
@@SouthernFellerhow old are your parents? Just asking
@@SouthernFeller so you're 14 rn?
@@vincentzamora2578 Yup
"for the serial code is just...one" HAD ME ROLLING
that shit was not funny
@@clidioustheprogamer6791 that's sad
How tf does that make u "rolling"??!!!
@@sheepketchup9059 how lmao😭😭
🤖
I once ate peanut butter that I didn't know had expired 4 years earlier. I've never tasted wood but I imagine the experience would be similar
I have also eaten expired peanut butter. I perfectly understand.
@zoeoeoe333 do it
I haven’t eaten expired peanut butter but I’ve eaten wood so I don’t feel left out.
I've eaten expired peanut butter and wood so I feel like a purple dragon
Peanut butter expires?
The running part is so real. I was always afraid that when the lights were off, a demon would come out of the tv, drag me, and kill me.
Recently cleaned out my grandparents fridge and found salad cream sitting in the fridge dated 1991. That salad cream has survived several house moves
The USSR was still around when that salad cream expired
Is it still good?
You want him to try?😂@@runed0s86
@@runed0s86💀
@Leeloo_the_foxI'll do it!
"For the serial code its 'one' "
Too funny 😂😂
whats funny abt it, i mean like i get it but its not THAT funny
Fr. Parents went through grandparents pantry, I helped a little, said they actually had things that they remember from their childhood
I was gifted a box of tea by my grandpa a few years back. I turned it over and saw: "Produced in West Germany" on the bottom.
On the plus side, it probably hasn’t gone bad yet
How ungrateful. Do you know how many people died you that tea? At least 6 million.
@@christophercostello696 i think you got a few dates mixed up
@haru2322 How? West germany was the territory the allies took following WW2. No WW2, no west germany
@@christophercostello696 this is incomprehensible
The kids or grandkids have to occasionally sneak spoiled food out. It's like Mission Impossible trying to stop them food poisoning themselves.
IKR omagash i cant believe this is a common occurrence.
IKRRRRRR oh my god i feel like a fugitive trying to sneak a 10 year old tea to a trash can lmao
Literally me
"nah this apple with mold on it is perfectly edible"
Me but with my grandparents sunscreen. They think that factor 15 once in the morning is good, ONLY ONCE, IN PORTUGAL
So true with the light and the running upstairs
“It just says a while ago!”
"no it doesn't"
The dangling light at your grandparents has to be government issued. It’s everywhere
It's the default lighting in unfinished basements, i.e. when doing construction in a windowless room if you don't have all the structure put together yet you put in this kind of light. The reason unfinished basements like this are everywhere is indeed government issued; it's a combination of avoiding tax and zoning regulations associated with having the extra "living" space (a finished basement) in your home
@@yoweedmofo19897 That would explain why my basement has one. My basement has been left unfinished since even before my parents moved into our house
It's in all my closets..
Lmao so true
@@yoweedmofo19897
As someone who's paid an irresponsible amount of money to be a leading expert in a really narrow field of educational policy, I really appreciate you sharing this fact. It's really interesting how people skirt what looks like commonsense legislation.
This gives off the energy of a family guy cutaway gag
“When the war is over” Got me dying 😂
Probably was talking about the first Ptolemaic-Seleucid War.
Same Cordelius
Whenever I stay at my grandparents', I dread going into their medicine cabinet. Like, I have to weigh it out: a migraine or advil that is old enough to rent a car.
I always go to the gas station on the way to my grandparents for advil and snacks bcs of this
Most medicines only get less effective as they degrade.
Thank you for the laugh omg 😂
@@runed0s86yeah but if the Advil is 25, it’s time to throw it out
Old enough to rent a car lolll
"Gran, this can says it expired in 1750."
"It's still good, nothing in a can goes bad!"
"Canning wasn't even *_invented_* at that point, where did you get this?"
- real convo had between a friend and his grandma when cleaning out their pantry.
"The serial code is literally 1" 😂
Cleaning out my grandpas pantry we found stuff from the 1950’s 😂
I hope you didn't throw out perfectly good food.
The date on cans is exclusively for store inventory systems. It's easy for a can of sauerkraut to last for a century.
@@runed0s86 I absolutely threw out items over fifty years old…. If you are worried about a food shortage hoarding cans isn’t the way to be prepared (rotating stock is important, nothing over ten years should be in your pantry). Being emergency prepared means having food that is safe to eat and not contaminated with metal from the tin.
In highschool during a random science class I took we had a lab where we had to test the PHs of different liquids. One of the liquids was a bottle of Pepto Bismol which is supposed to be extremely basic, but for some reason the litmus papers weren't giving the proper results. It turns out the Pepto was 8 YEARS overdue and turned into an acid! 💀
That sprinting out of the basement joke is a vibe.
Me and my cousin did this but we made it a game to find the oldest thing, and lo and behold, we found a can of beans from the 1920s.
I found a 5 gallon sealed bucket of honey that my (then beekeeper) grandfather harvested. It was from the 60’s. Which honey doesn’t go bad, so it was fine
Hey, my grampa was born in 1925
Found*
@@the14thbananaking thanks, one of those type and ghost comments
Found butter in the freezer from 1999
i also sprint out of the creepy basement at my grandma’s house 😂
“The serial code is 1” I’m gone 💀
“How does this expire?” (Toilet paper) had me chocking on my water 🤣🤣
my grandparents vacation house has tea bags from the 80s.
edit: i firgot about the 2 boxes of pure asbestos
O_o
:0
Do not confuse them.
firgot vs forgor
Who wins?
Same found a soy sauce from 1988 in a random cabinet when we made vietnamese food
My mom gave me jello.and pudding mix boxes when I had surgery (and had to eat soft foods) in 2016. One of the diet chocolate puddings was dated 1992 and bore one of the Nutrisweet trademark logos from before the patent on asparatime expired. My mother's cupboard also contains some spices that she bought when my parents were first married in 1966. I found 9 or 10 expired jars of instant coffee in the basement, even though my parents used the coffee maker every day. And several unopened A1 steak sauces and jars of mint jelly. That's just the tip of the iceberg. But the one thing I can guarantee is that, with the exception of the Newlywed spices, all of these items were purchased primarily bc they were on sale really really marked down.
Several of those are probably still good.
"they were really, REALLY marked down when they bought them" we believe the Pharaoh's to be ancient but they must have known of giants who came before.
Unless they seem to be off or smell bad, any of those still airtight sealed should be safe to eat, especially non-acidic canned goods and jams/jellies. Honey will literally never expire, and vacuum-sealed dried goods (done properly) shouldn’t expire until after you do.
After my grandparents died, we cleaned out their house and found cereal that expired in 1993…they’d moved to that house in 2004. so they brought 10yo expired cereal to their new house and kept it there for another 20 years 💀💀
I once found canned peaches in my parents pantry that expired in 2004, in 2012. They’d already moved twice, once cross-country, since ‘04 so I just imagined them being like, “Make sure you pack the peaches!” during each move. 😂
As long as the can isn't rusted or bulging, they're still good to eat.
Mine did this with prunes
I have eaten older preserves.
Lol at my house we have an energy drink in the fridge from 2004 and it’s become tradition to just bring it with us when we move and never drink it
Sounds like your parents wanted to enjoy the fermented peaches. My dad was the same way also
Grace is so dedicated ❤❤
wrong channel, buddy
@crumblywhosthat idk if this is a joke but what I said was a joke
Nah, cus whys bros hair soo majestic??😭😭
On a side note Ryan's hair looks really good
"Our grandparents got married in 1998" has just made me feel ancient, thanks.
For anyone who wants to hear a yapper… so basically my grandparents keep a big tub of M&Ms in their pantry and they’ve had it for about 5 to 7 years now and every time my grandma goes to the store and she sees like some type of M&Ms on sale she buys them, but they never actually have finished it to the very bottom so the M&Ms at the very bottom probably expired like five years ago. 😂
During Covid, we found very old toilet paper at my grandparents’. Back in the day they used to make colored toilet paper, so we were using green, pink, and yellow rolls that were thin and coarse and I’m pretty sure were older than me.
Also yesterday I was making lunch for my grandma. I’d noticed some lunch meat and figured it should get used up, but when I pulled it out the best by date was 10 days earlier. She initially dismissed it when I mentioned it with “oh, it’s fine.” I often don’t care about best by dates, but I know meat should be eaten within a few days, and when I opened it to check (per grandma’s request), it smelled weird. She still wanted to use it, even said to just cut off the growths of bacteria we could see growing around the edges, but I wasn’t about to let my grandma get some painful infection so I threw it away and told her it really wasn’t safe to eat. She loved the sandwich I made with sausage and sauerkraut instead, so it worked out.
Good executive decison
If you can see mold, there's a lot more you can't. It needs to go.
If it looks or smells off, then it is. if the bag of pepperoni says 1926, but still smells and looks like pepperoni, it's probably fine.
@@poke-talia268 Depends on what it's growing on. Hard cheese, for instance, you can just cut it off. Too many people who throw away perfectly good cheese...
@@niwa_s my mom is infamous among our extended family for serving moldy cheese 😆 once when I came home for Christmas and had my grandparents there, too (the same frugal grandparents with the toilet paper and bad meat). My mom served up a cream-based dish that tasted funky. It turned out she’d cooked it with spoiled milk, thinking it would cook away whatever was in it, but even my grandma, who grew up in the depression and war and never wasted anything, whispered that it shouldn’t be eaten.
Okay last story that comes to mind: when we lived outside city limits, we raised some cows for beef. Then we moved down three states and into suburbs. Time passed, and about 10 years after the move I was home again for Christmas and eating dinner with my family. I thought the meat we were eating was lamb because it had kind of that dark taste (which I’ve never really liked). When I asked, my mom responded evasively at first, but we learned that it was beef-actually the last meat from our cows. They’d been butchered before we moved, and I hadn’t even realized that some of their meat came with us-the drive was 14 hours minimum and not in a heat controlled vehicle (though at least it would’ve been transported in an ice box or something), and I’m sure we didn’t make it all in a day. Plus there had been multiple power outages during the years since that would’ve affected the freezers holding the meat.
I share these stories humorously; everyone’s turned out fine and no one’s gotten sick. I love my mom and am grateful for what she taught us about frugality.
My grandfather would make potato salad for a family cookout not only a week early, we’d have to check the mayonnaise because invariably it was expired. Cleaning out his pantry was truly an adventure through time. My aunt and I actually saved some ancient, neat-looking cookie tins for decoration and storage (after getting rid of the three or four remaining cookies that would be inexplicably left in each one). This video is accurate.
It's a fun experience because you can share old stories during the adventure through time! :D
One time I poured myself a bowl of cereal at my grandparents house and there were alive ants in it 😭
A few years back, I found a still sealed thing of yams from the year I was born. 😂
This is so accurate my grandparents refuse to throw anything out. I recently found a box of pistachio jello from 2007 and i threw it away and they hollered at me lol
No it's brownies killed me why are yall of Ryan's lines always so funny😂
I’m so glad it’s not just my family that does this. Every time my grandparents invites my cousins over we all head into their pantry and try to find the most expired thing. My grandma cleaned out most of the bad stuff so it’s not as fun anymore but we do it anyways.
The most expired thing we found was a can of beef from 1973
I accidentally ate 9 year old applesauce. Taste was more or less fine but there was something accumulating at the bottom.
That was The Sauce
Possibly layers seperating?
Want to sprint out of the basement because it’s super creepy and there’s only one light dangling from the middle of the ceiling
Ok cool *Turns off light*
Run off into the unknown🏃
And you know they be like, It'S fIiIiNe!
Found a bottle of ear piercing disinfectant from Claire's from 2003 in my cabinet
“It does have an instagram giveaway on the back” 🤣💀
“It’s just says a while ago” might be the best sentence ever
dangling light joke was delivered like a family guy gag
I love the changing of clothes in the middle of it😂
I freaking found some medicine in my grandmothers bathroom cabinet that was expired the year I was born- nearly twenty one years ago- to which she moved to each house she lived at and never checked what she was moving. 😂😅
Nah cause my grandma had 10 year old ginger ale in her fridge and it tasted rancid 😭😭
girl why did you drink it
@@perpetualsick cause I didn’t see the expiration date until after. Also I was like 6 💀💀
His grandparents getting married a year after my parents,,, and I'm 20
“It does have an instagram giveaway on it” sent me flying man
My brother, older sister, and I went through our grandmother's pantry and this is 100% accurate
I had a moment panicking that it's possible for someone's grandparents to marry in 98.
I am 48 my wife is 51 the daughter is 33 the granddaughter is 16 and the great grandchildren is due in March...........
26 is still a bit off, going to go with second marriage
Mind you we did get married till after our 3rd child in 1997 when I was 21 and she was 24 6 years later became we could not afford it at the time.....so still possible if u likely
once found a completely black bottle of heinz ketchup in my grandmother's pantry. the expiration date was older than i was
I was half expecting to see someone standing behind him after he turned off the light
His hair is so beautiful
That’s literally all I could pay attention to like I didn’t hear a thing he said😭
The sprint was everything
This reminds me of a certain jar of relish from 1976 we recovered from my grandparents’ fridge
The basement sprint is real
I remember when I was like 8-9 I was at my grandparents house and me and my sister decided to go through their pantry. And when we did we found onion juice I’m pretty sure is what it was and it expired the year I was born so when we found it, it had been expired for more than 8 years.
my grandma has marmalade from before i was born in her fridge that she refuses to get rid of. i’ve helped her get a new fridge and install it and when i told her to get rid of it she said “it’s not that old”
Found baking soda in my grandma’s pantry that had a coupon for a free 2002 calendar lmao
Did it still work
There's only 12 unique calendars so you could use the 2002 one in 2030, 2041, 2047, 2058, 2069, 2075, 2086, and 2097
Me and my friends found a box of grapes that expired in 2015. It was yesterday when we found that.
If ur grandparents were born in 1998 something is seriously wrong
there's smth in my friend's house that expired in like 2011 or 2012. the thing is older than their youngest sister
Lol and it’s still there because you found it and didnt throw it away or…? ahaha
@@KeilaBevins
i didn't find it, my friend did. it's still there
Lol its a relic now @@gaspshichat
My Grammy is a “snow bird” so she goes to Florida for the winter and sometimes we visit her. I wanted some food so I opened the fridge, I found food from 1994..
This is actual irl family guy💀💀💀
Omg…. my grandparent’s closet literally looks the same as that one-
This is part of history thats so funny for me 😂😂😂😂
i had to be the one to throw away the ten year old bottle of ranch from my parents' fridge. this is not only a grandparent problem 💀
Just now realizing they are 2 diffrent people
Is no one gonna talk about how to grandparents were born 1998! Like that's young
Not Joking, went into my grandparents pantry found one from 1999 it was a can of sauce 😭
my parents were married in '98, this hurts my brain
Idk why but the “is it zuck bites, no its brownies” got me
i was in my grandparents fridge and found whipcream from 1978 😅
@Wasbewy idk ill have to check
no what you found was the leftover container that's been being used since 1978
Ryan is such a cutie. Took me forever to realize they were brothers because I seen them on American highshorts first. But it's so cute seeing all the brother make videos together
I like how the math doesn't maths at all cos the grandparents bought shit that expired in 1912, so they bought it, together, before that year, and put it in in their house, but they didn't got married till 1998
"the serial code is one"
this one got me
it reminds me of the soundsmith video saying his address is four
Legit found food coloring in my grandparents pantry that expired in 1999. Now I’m betting food coloring takes a while to expire so it’s probably been in there since 96 or 97 maybe?
This was my grandparents pantry, but instead it was jars of preserves that had been on the shelves so long the contents had turned the colour of death.
When the war is over “ritz…”
This is a uniquely "male" thing, like being 20 and having only navy sheets, one pillow, and one blanket.
Toward the end of my grandmothers life she was bedridden. She always did all the cooking, cleaning, grocery shopping, and basically any other housekeeping things you can think of. All she was eating when her health started getting bad was frozen Walmart food because, again, she was the one that knew how to cook and apparently CANCER isn't enough for my grandpa to start learning. I had to go thru their cabinet and throw away THREE bread loaves, all at different stages of being eaten, that were moldy and featured wildly different expiration dates. It's been almost three years since my grandma passed and my grandpa recently gave my mother and I pancake mix from when she was still alive. Things like this did not happen when my grandmother was alive. I didn't even know theg had these things and if I ever found them when helping in the kitchen, she'd immediately tell me to throw it out. She even imbued a deathly fear of mold and expired food into me by telling me a story about a man who opened a bag of moldy bread and the few spores he breathed in caused his face to rot off LOL.
Fr i know someone this 💀she gave me 2 snacks to take snd they're both outdated, i could prob sell her food to a museum and get rich 💀💀
nice
😮😊😂
The end tied it all together SO WELL
this is so real
Literally yesterday at school one of the math teachers (she’s old) gave me and my friends a box of Oreos and they expired on September 5th 2023 and we didn’t know that until we almost finished the box
“Oh it does have an Instagram give away on the back”😂😂😂
“It just says ‘a while ago’”😂