Dear All,
Interesting post. This is surely one of the more frequent (unofficial) activities carried out by consumers including myself

. Didn't realise it was a typical production level scenario also but perhaps I should hv guessed.
Presumably in theory, if a "chilled" food has been "properly" time/temp stored, its microbiological characteristics etc should still be within defined specifications and any freezing step will not make things worse. The "properly" is sort of discussed here -
http://www.hi-tm.com...ts/Chillfd.htmlFrankly, I would hv thought that the subsequent effect on permitted labelling dates wud hv been legally covered somewhere for large scale production aspects. ??
I did a short google on this general issue and there is (to me) surprisingly few comments of any kind. However I did notice one caveat in this (2009) South African publication -
http://www.foodfacts...s/ColdChain.aspAre chilled foods marked "use-by" or "best before"? Don't use food beyond this date. If there is a possibility that food will not be used before this date, rather freeze the product if marked "suitable for home freezing".
Unfortunately no idea what that means in practice (only a non-safety oriented comment perhaps) or if utilised by other countries. Couldn't see any official advice on the FSA site except for milk.
Rgds / Charles.C