My wife loves buying the whole chickens but only wants to eat the breast. I am constantly trying to eat the oldest chicken.

  • unexposedhazard
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    4 個月前

    6 hours? Thats a stupidly short amount of time. Nothing is going to spoil to an inedible degree in 6h.

    • No_Eponym@lemmy.ca
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      4 個月前

      Is this comic american? Given their ever declining food safety, maybe it had a head start…

    • HubertManne@piefed.socialOP
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      4 個月前

      6 hours is pretty long but it really depends on the food. Bacteria grows expontentially so the amount 6 hours compared to 4 hours is not a third more but more like 50x more. Your always eating some bacteria but its a question of how much you consume with your food. Most food poisoning is toxicity and not disease which is why you just feel aweful for a day or so. Its also why heating it massively will not necessarily make it safe at that point.

      • Scipitie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 個月前

        But what kind of food do you have that six hours are an issue? I can leave my home made Bolognese outside over night and it’s not an issue to eat. Cheese? Not an issue. The only thing I would be hesitant is Joghurt …

        6 hours should be nothing for most prepared foods that are not milk or raw egg based.

        • HubertManne@piefed.socialOP
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          4 個月前

          I would not be comfortable with cheese but like peanut butter and jelly in a sealed container would be fine. I guess it depends on how soft the cheese is.

          • Scipitie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            4 個月前

            Good point my association is the hard cheese where you can even cut mold away should there be any on top because it’s impossible for it to go deep.

    • 51dusty@lemmy.world
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      4 個月前

      right?

      we had pizzas unrefrigerated for 2-3 days in college, with no ill effects. fridge was full of beer…

      • sakuraba@lemmy.ml
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        4 個月前

        it depends on the food, pizzas are usually low on moisture / high on fats and salt so bacteria needs a lot more time to grow there

  • AceFuzzLord@lemmy.zip
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    4 個月前

    Yeah, I have never gotten sick from doing that kind of stuff, so I’mma continue doing it until I get sick.

  • Semester3383@lemmy.world
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    4 個月前

    Here’s the fun thing: before we had the ability to refrigerate everything, eating like that was normal. Most people didn’t have the luxury of refusing to eat food that wasn’t clearly, obviously spoiled.

  • rcbrk@lemmy.ml
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    4 個月前

    TL;DR: probably fine, but it depends.

    Rules of thumb in the food industry in Australia:

    • Danger zone is 5-60°C. (Temperatures are internal).
    • 2hr/4hr rule: Potentially hazardous food can be served only if cumulative <4hrs in the danger zone; can be refrigerated only if cumulative <2hrs in danger zone.
    • Food is considered cooked at ≥75°C, and this resets the clock for the 2hr/4hr rule. (Many exceptions apply permitting lower temperature processes for specific cases).
    • To refrigerate cooked food – <2hrs @ 21-60°C + <4hrs @ 5-21°C. Typically refrigerate ≤5 days, some things like lighty cooked eggs <24hrs. (2hr/4hr rule above starts only when removed from this refrigeration).
    • Some foods can be fridged for >5 days, and should be reheated to ≥90°C in this case.

    https://www.foodstandards.gov.au/business/food-safety

    So, the above is for food businesses so is very risk-averse and does have some safety margin built-in — if a customer buys a takeaway curry which has been on display at 50°C for 3h55m they aren’t expected to eat it in 5 mins!

    If you contaminate cooked food with uncooked ingredients or unclean equipment then the rules are out the window. Same goes if it’s something like a stir-fry where some veggies were added at the end and not fully cooked.