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Safety of Refrigerated Foods After a Power Outage, #9003 All chopped meats, poultry and seafood sandwich
fillings should not be left without refrigeration for more than two hours. If
you have to leave your home without an ice chest containing ice, take cold
ingredients to mix and eat as soon as you arrive. If any is left over, throw it
away.
Do not trust your sense
of smell. Food may be unsafe, even if it doesn't smell bad.
You can extend your food supply by cooking
all unspoiled meat immediately. Cooked meat needs to be kept above 140
degrees F if it cannot be cooled below 40 degrees F within two hours. A food
thermometer will help you check food temperatures.
Here are some tips on popular perishable
foods.
- Large, solid, unbound pieces of
fresh beef or lamb, such as rump roast or leg of lamb, are
least susceptible to quick spoilage.
- Uncured sausage is
vulnerable to contamination because it is free of preservatives. Keep it
frozen as long as possible, then cook before it completely thaws.
- Raw chopped meats, like hamburger,
spoil quickly. Pork, fish and poultry spoil quickly, too. Dispose of
these foods if they have been in a well-insulated, good working
refrigerator without power for 12 hours or more. Do not trust
your sense of smell. Food may be unsafe, even if it doesn't
smell bad.
- Hard cheese usually keeps
well at room temperatures. Other cheeses, such as cream cheese, opened
containers of cheese spreads and cottage cheese, spoil quickly. Throw
them out when an off-flavor or unusual mold develops.
- Milk spoils quickly
without refrigeration. Throw out spoiled milk. Soured milk may be used
in baking.
- Custard, gravies, creamed foods,
chopped meats, poultry and seafood sandwich fillings spoil
quickly when unrefrigerated. They are ideal growing places for organisms
that can make you sick. Dispose of these foods if they have warmed to
over 40 degrees or room temperatures. Spoilage is hard to detect since
they may not smell or taste bad.
Custard, gravies,
creamed foods, chopped meats, poultry and seafood sandwich fillings
spoil quickly when unrefrigerated. They are ideal growing places for
organisms that can make you sick.
- Commercially made baked goods with
cream fillings are not safe if unrefrigerated. Keep them cold,
and eat as quickly as possible.
- Accidentally frozen canned goods
can present health problems. If they are merely swollen—and you are sure
the swelling was caused by freezing—the cans may still be usable. Let
the can thaw in the refrigerator before opening it. If the product does
not look or smell normal, throw it out. Do not taste it!
However, if the food does look and smell normal, thoroughly cook it by
boiling for 10 to 20 minutes right away. But if the seams have rusted or
burst, throw the cans out immediately.
Return to Emergency Response
Fact Sheets table of contents
Source: "Safety of Refrigerated Foods
After a Power Failure," University of Florida Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences, 1997.
Prepared by: Mahmoud El-Begearmi,
Extension specialist, nutrition and food safety.
For more information on emergency
preparedness, contact your
county UMaine Extension office.
©
1998
Published and distributed in furtherance of Acts of Congress of May 8 and
June 30, 1914, by the University of Maine Cooperative Extension, the Land
Grant University of the state of Maine and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture cooperating. Cooperative Extension and other agencies of the
U.S.D.A. provide equal opportunities in programs and employment.
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