Cheese is a milk-based product that is deliberately "spoiled" and is full of bacteria. That's primarily what gives cheese its distinctive flavour and aroma. However, cheese has a much longer shelf-life than the milk from which it is derived. Indeed, certain varieties that are encased in a protective rind and can take years to fully mature. And yet manufacturers will insist it must be eaten in 2 to 5 days of opening! This is sheer nonsense and is only a legal precaution.
The actual duration a cheese will "keep" varies according to the type of cheese. Once exposed to air, the bacteria begin to rapidly multiply, producing a visible green-blue mold. However, many cheese are visibly moldy by design, so any additional mold is unlikely to do you any harm. If the cheese is not intentionally moldy, people will often scrape or cut away the mold, but it is perfectly edible. The only real difference is a stronger taste and aroma.
Eventually, though, cheese will spoil for real. The first visible sign of spoiling is a darkening of the colour, a result of the cheese drying out. However, the interior of the cheese may be perfectly fine; you can simply cut away the harder protective exterior. The only reason to throw away cheese is when it has completely dried out. At that point, it can be said to have fully spoiled. It may well taste fine, but it is unpalatable. If there's no moisture left then it cannot even be melted at cooking temperature.
tastes like spoiled tuna
it taste really bad.
It does not taste like fish more like spoiled fish
Because acorns taste nasty just like lemons!
It doesn't who told u it did ? BTW it taste's nice :P
To calm down the nutmeg taste in butternut squash soup try adding sugar or more pureed butternut squash.
I think you mean patty pan squash. Pattypan squash is a quick growing summer squash variety with a slightly nutty taste. In terms of their delicacy, they are more like zucchini, straight neck or crook neck squash -- they certainly aren't as hardy as acorn or spaghetti squash. You can steam, poach or saute them, much like zucchini.
It smells like rotten cheese or spoiled milk.
no but they do look and taste the same
Reheated too much, or it's going off. Chuck it.
Lemonade or vinegar are examples of foods that have a sour taste.
For taste, old, dirty, unwashed jockstrap. For texture I would try Yellow and green squash. If you are doing something like lasagna, slice the squash thick and longways.