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harrylabsj

Food Expiry Tracker

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install food-expiry-tracker
Description
Tracks perishable food items with purchase dates, expiry windows, storage tips, FIFO rotation reminders, and safe-to-eat decision guides.
README (SKILL.md)

Food Expiry Tracker

Safety Boundary

This skill offers practical guidance for tracking perishable foods and reducing waste. It does not provide guaranteed food-safety advice. Temperature, handling, and storage conditions vary. Always follow official guidelines from your national food safety authority (e.g., FDA, EFSA, FSA). When in doubt, throw it out.

When to Use / When Not to Use

Use this skill when you want to:

  • Keep a simple inventory of perishable items and their use-by dates.
  • Apply FIFO (First In, First Out) rotation to your fridge and pantry.
  • Learn general storage tips for common food categories.
  • Make informed "keep or toss" decisions based on date labels and sensory checks.

Do not use this skill to:

  • Determine safety for compromised or mishandled food (power outage, broken cold chain, visible spoilage).
  • Replace official food safety regulations or professional advice.
  • Make guarantees about food safety.

Understanding Date Labels

Label Meaning Action
Use By Safety threshold. Do not eat after this date. Strictly follow.
Best Before Quality threshold. Food may be safe but lose flavor/texture. Sensory check; often fine shortly after.
Sell By Retail stock rotation. Not a safety date for consumers. Use within reasonable time after purchase.
Packaged On / Julian Date Production date. Common on meats and eggs. Calculate based on recommended storage window.

Quick-Start Inventory Template

Track items immediately after shopping. Update when consumed or discarded.

Item Category Purchase Date Use-By / Best-Before Storage Location Status
Chicken breast Meat 2026-05-09 2026-05-11 Fridge (coldest shelf) Fresh
Milk 2L Dairy 2026-05-09 2026-05-14 Fridge door Fresh
Spinach Produce 2026-05-09 2026-05-12 Crisper drawer Fresh
Greek yogurt Dairy 2026-05-05 2026-05-20 Fridge Fresh
Ground beef Meat 2026-05-07 2026-05-10 Fridge (coldest shelf) Use soon

Category Storage Guidelines

Meat & Poultry

  • Store at ≤ 4°C (40°F) on the coldest refrigerator shelf.
  • Use within 1–2 days of purchase for fresh cuts; 1 day for ground meat.
  • Freeze if not using within safe window. Label with freeze date.

Fish & Seafood

  • Use within 1–2 days of purchase.
  • Store on ice in the coldest part of the fridge if cooking same day.
  • Freeze immediately if plans change.

Dairy & Eggs

  • Milk: check carton date; keep on a shelf, not the door (temperature fluctuates).
  • Hard cheeses: often safe weeks past best-before; discard if moldy beyond surface.
  • Soft cheeses: follow use-by dates closely.
  • Eggs: store in carton on a shelf; float test indicates age, not safety alone.

Produce

  • Leafy greens: 3–7 days in crisper; discard if slimy or foul-smelling.
  • Root vegetables: weeks to months in cool, dark place.
  • Berries: 2–5 days; do not wash until ready to eat.
  • Bananas: counter until ripe; fridge to slow over-ripening (skin darkens, fruit is fine).

Cooked Leftovers

  • Refrigerate within 2 hours of cooking.
  • Most cooked foods: 3–4 days maximum in fridge.
  • Label with cooked-on date.
  • Reheat to internal temperature ≥ 74°C (165°F).

FIFO Rotation Method

First In, First Out — use oldest items before newer ones.

Pantry FIFO

  1. Place new items behind existing ones.
  2. Move items nearing expiry to a "Use First" bin.
  3. Check the bin weekly before meal planning.

Fridge FIFO

  1. Dedicate one shelf or zone for "Eat Soon" items.
  2. Move items with 1–2 days remaining to that zone.
  3. Plan meals around that zone before opening new items.

Safe-to-Eat Decision Guide

Ask in this order:

  1. Date check — Is it past "Use By"? If yes, discard.
  2. Storage check — Was it continuously refrigerated or frozen? If cold chain broken, discard.
  3. Visual check — Mold, discoloration, or unusual texture? If yes, discard.
  4. Smell check — Off, sour, or ammonia odor? If yes, discard.
  5. Taste check (last resort) — If all above pass, a tiny taste; spit if odd. Only for best-before items, not high-risk foods (meat, dairy, eggs).

High-risk foods: raw meat, poultry, fish, eggs, soft cheeses, prepared salads, deli meats. Be extra cautious.

Weekly Fridge Audit Prompt

Every week, spend 5 minutes:

  1. Scan all items and note anything within 2 days of expiry.
  2. Move "use soon" items to the designated zone.
  3. Discard anything past use-by or showing spoilage signs.
  4. Wipe spills and check temperature (fridge should be ≤ 4°C / 40°F).
  5. Plan next week's meals around "use soon" items.

Reducing Waste Tips

  • Shop with a list tied to a meal plan.
  • Freeze halves — bread, meat, herbs in oil can be frozen.
  • Understand your fridge zones — door is warmest; bottom shelf is coldest.
  • Keep it visible — opaque containers hide forgotten food.
  • One in, one out — finish an open jar before opening a new one.

When to Throw It Out (No Exceptions)

  • Bulging or leaking cans.
  • Unusual odors from canned goods upon opening.
  • Visible mold on soft foods (bread, yogurt, soft cheese, jams).
  • Any food left in the "danger zone" (4–60°C / 40–140°F) for more than 2 hours.
  • Food after a known power outage where fridge temperature exceeded 4°C for 4+ hours.

Regional Resources

Consult your local food safety authority for detailed guidelines:

  • United States: FDA (fda.gov) and USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service
  • United Kingdom: Food Standards Agency (food.gov.uk)
  • European Union: EFSA (efsa.europa.eu)
  • Australia / New Zealand: Food Standards Australia New Zealand (foodstandards.gov.au)
  • Canada: Canadian Food Inspection Agency (inspection.canada.ca)

Differentiation: Focuses on manual tracking and FIFO habits rather than app-based barcode scanning. Includes decision-guide framework and clear safety boundaries.

Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to install from an agentic-security perspective. Treat its food-safety advice as general guidance only, and follow official food safety sources or discard food when uncertain.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: food-expiry-tracker Version: 1.0.0 The 'food-expiry-tracker' skill is a purely informational document-only bundle designed to help users manage food inventory and safety. It contains no executable code, network requests, or requests for sensitive information, and it includes appropriate health and safety disclaimers regarding food consumption.
Capability Tags
cryptocan-make-purchases
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The artifacts consistently describe food expiry tracking, FIFO rotation, storage tips, and general food-safety guidance, with clear disclaimers that it does not guarantee food safety.
Instruction Scope
The instructions are limited to user-facing household inventory and safety guidance; they do not redirect goals, override user intent, or request unsafe autonomous actions.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no executable code; skill.json declares contentType as document-only and hasExecutableCode as false.
Credentials
No required binaries, environment variables, credentials, config paths, network calls, barcode integrations, or local file access are declared.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill suggests manual inventory tracking and weekly audits, but the artifacts show no persistent background process, privilege request, account access, or credential handling.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install food-expiry-tracker
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /food-expiry-tracker
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of Food Expiry Tracker – Version 1.0.0 - Track perishable food items with purchase and expiry dates. - Get storage tips by food category and FIFO rotation reminders. - Access a simple inventory template for easy manual tracking. - Use a safe-to-eat decision guide for “keep or toss” choices. - Weekly fridge audit checklist and waste reduction tips included. - Emphasizes safety boundaries and offers links to official food safety resources.
Metadata
Slug food-expiry-tracker
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Food Expiry Tracker?

Tracks perishable food items with purchase dates, expiry windows, storage tips, FIFO rotation reminders, and safe-to-eat decision guides. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 23 downloads so far.

How do I install Food Expiry Tracker?

Run "/install food-expiry-tracker" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Food Expiry Tracker free?

Yes, Food Expiry Tracker is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Food Expiry Tracker support?

Food Expiry Tracker is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Food Expiry Tracker?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.

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