Question:

Does Baileys Irish Cream Liquor go out of date after opening?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

Do you have to finish bottle before a certain time after opening?

 Tags:

   Report

13 ANSWERS


  1. Dairy products have a limited life


  2. It has a total shelf life of 24 months (2 years).  You don't have to store it in the fridge after opening it.

  3. i tend to keep mine AGES. may go a bit crusty round the lid but certainly is consumable

  4. yes

  5. Yep - as it has cream in it. I keep mine in the fridge.........Yum - is it too early for one?

  6. According to wikipedia it has a shelf life of 24 months and should be stored between 0 - 25 degrees celcius/32 - 37degrees fahrenheit.

  7. I keep mine in the fridge and I think it stays good

  8. You must keep it in a fridge after it's been opened. It can go off quite quickly if you leave it out at room temperature.

  9. Blimey!

    I never had a bottle that lasted longer than an evening!

  10. yes, you do have to drink it fairly soon. all in one night is best!

  11. Baileys says it is good for 2 years unopened for best quality and to refrigerate once opened and consume within six months.

  12. Why would anyone want to leave any in the bottle to go off ????

  13. instead of Bailey's try E J Cask n Cream I find it way better than all the other Irish Creams on the market. Also varying temperature changes will spoil the dairy part and it curdles (ugly) and bad tasting too. I make a drink called a milkshake.

    Mix :

    three parts Irish Cream

    one part southern comfort

    one part capt. Morgans rum

    one part Kahlua

    and lastly a mixture evenly in two parts of vanilla rum butterscotch schnapps and a bottle of Starbucks dark chocolate frappucino.

    (makes one bottle of 750 ml)

    It is grand   :)  being all alcohol serve no more than 7 ounces to anyone. at 14 ounces the room spins

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 13 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.