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It depends upon how cold your freezer is. (And it may have already been 2 years old when you bought it, as we discovered when the Missus worked for Waitrose and confirmed when she worked at Tesco.)
Personally, I'd get it cooked and eaten and buy another one for Xmas. But then, we keep our freezer set to its "Alien Cryogenic" setting.
It depends upon how cold your freezer is. (And it may have already been 2 years old when you bought it, as we discovered when the Missus worked for Waitrose and confirmed when she worked at Tesco.)
Personally, I'd get it cooked and eaten and buy another one for Xmas. But then, we keep our freezer set to its "Alien Cryogenic" setting.
Now that's cold. Brrrrrrrr. I suppose every time you go for an ice lolly you have to be quick in case "it" wakes.
(And it may have already been 2 years old when you bought it, as we discovered when the Missus worked for Waitrose and confirmed when she worked at Tesco.)
Thats a very good point!
Don't think we'll bother taking the risk.
Frozen supermarket turkey should be safe for years, given the way they pump it full of brine under high pressure, to increase its weight (*), and reduce the risk of food poisoning for people who leave the cooked turkey lying around for days over Christmas.
Damn, reminds me, I haven't got round to ordering my goose yet. It's probably too late now.
(*) The supermarkets claim the brine treatment is designed to make it more juicy.
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