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If I left food out of the refrigerator for some period of time, is it still safe? If I left it out too long, can I salvage it by cooking it more?

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    Pro tips: bookmark this so you can find it when you want to close duplicates, and since the answer here is very general, consider adding a comment with specific advice when you vote to close!
    – Cascabel
    Commented Jun 14, 2013 at 6:04

4 Answers 4

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When in Doubt, Throw it Out!

You cannot always see or smell bacterial contamination. Mold that appears to be growing only on the surface may grow invisible roots into softer foods. Do not rely on a visual inspection or "smell test" to tell you whether or not a food is safe. It's not worth the risk - food poisoning can be much, much worse than an upset stomach.

The Danger Zone

  • Per the USDA guidelines, potentially hazardous food that stays in the temperature "danger zone", 40-140 °F (4-60 °C), for more than 2 hours should be discarded. For temperatures above 90°F (32°C), the limit is 1 hour.*

  • Potentially hazardous foods are those foods that spoil most easily, such as unshelled eggs, raw meats, fish, shell fish, dairy products, almost all cooked foods.

  • This time is cumulative, so it includes time bringing the food home from the grocery store, time before cooking, time after cooking, and so on. The reason is that while cooking may destroy bacteria or other pathogens, it doesn't always destroy the toxins that they have produced.

  • In general, regarding perishable foods like meat, most dairy, unshelled eggs and shell eggs (in the US), cooked casseroles, and so on: if the food (or its perishable components) have been at room temperature for more than two hours, you should discard that food.

  • To avoid the danger zone, keep cooked food hot until ready to eat, then refrigerate immediately. Separate large items into smaller containers to help them to cool more quickly. If you’re defrosting something, do it in the fridge or under cold running water.

  • If you can be certain that the food was not in the danger zone, then yes, it is safe. For example, if you left a large chunk of frozen meat out and it is still frozen solid (including the surface) when you come back to it, it was not in the danger zone.

Why is it so strict? / Why didn't I get sick?

These guidelines are about making sure you don't get a foodborne illness, i.e. reducing the risk to where it's so small as to not be an issue. So if you break the rules, e.g. eating food that's been left at room temperature for 8 hours, that doesn't mean you will get sick, just that you're taking a risk.

Why does cooking not completely "reset the clock"?

  • Some bacteria leave behind harmful protein toxins that cannot be "killed" (denatured) by cooking. Cooking food is only effective against live organisms, not their toxic waste products. Spoiled food cannot be cooked back to safety and must be discarded.

  • Cooking is pasteurization, not sterilization. Pasteurization means killing most microbes, so as to render the food safe for human consumption. Sterilization methods (e.g. pressure-canning and irradiation) are the only safe methods for longer-term room-temperature storage. Otherwise, the danger zone rules always apply.

  • Even sterilized food can only remain sterile under an airtight seal, e.g. when properly canned or vacuum-sealed. Once it is opened, it is no longer sterile. Air contains countless bacteria and molds, and their spores, which will readily re-colonize any suitable environment they encounter. Cooked food tends to be an ideal medium for growth.

What can I leave out longer?

For foods that aren't potentially hazardous as described above, there's no solid rule, but things are generally safe for much longer than the 2 hours given above. For example, things which are sold at room temperature (e.g. fresh produce, bread, or cookies) are most likely safe at least all day or overnight if not for days or even months. You can find guidelines for common things at StillTasty.

Regulation and Risks

Follow the guidelines set out by reputable regulatory agencies, especially when serving others. Local organizations include:

Other regulatory sources apply in other parts of the word, but major food safety organizations usually agree in essence (if not in complete detail) on most issues.

Failure to follow reputable guidelines is irresponsible if you are serving guests, and failure to follow your specific local codes is likely to be illegal if you are serving customers.

Health codes tend to be very conservative, to fully protect the community. You have the right to take risks on yourself by ignoring their recommendations, but please do not risk the safety of others.

Again, When in Doubt...

Once again, if you suspect spoilage or contamination, please, throw it out.

* Note: this is the USDA's rule. Other agencies may have variations on it. Additionally, government agencies generally make very conservative recommendations - they're trying to make sure that no one who follows the rules gets sick. Breaking the rules means maybe taking on some risk. That's up to you - just remember, eventually someone gets unlucky, and food poisoning is not fun.

Helpful Resources

Further Reading/Frequently Asked

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    It's also a good idea to keep a thermometer in your fridge. They typically don't have built-in temperature readings, and you may be inadvertently endangering yourself and your guests. The appropriate temperatures are discussed here: cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/12013/…
    – Steve
    Commented Jun 14, 2013 at 4:35
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    I strongly disagree on dairy. In many European countries cheeses are sold at room temperature and are absolutely fine to eat, and you can definitely keep it out of the fridge for more than two hours with no issue whatsoever. Preserved meat (salami, ham and in general Charcuterie) can be kept in a cool place outside of the fridge for months with no problem. In summary, you cannot generalize.
    – nico
    Commented Jun 14, 2013 at 6:24
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    @Steve absolutely! My fridge went on the blink last month, but it didn't stop working it just sneakily got warmer. Our first clue was milk kept spoiling. I now own two fridge thermometers, for fridge and freezer. ~$5 each, well worth it.
    – Mark Allen
    Commented Oct 15, 2013 at 20:27
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    Perhaps this answer should be clarified to point out that the "danger zone" applies to the food's temperature and not to the ambient temp around the food. For instance, if you set some frozen meat out to defrost at room temperature, it hasn't gone bad after sitting for two hours. It's probably still frozen solid at that point. The "danger zone" timer is only ticking when the food's internal temperature is between 40 and 140°F. Similarly, putting warm food in a fridge/freezer doesn't immediately stop the clock, as it takes some time for the food's internal temperature to drop.
    – aroth
    Commented Sep 12, 2015 at 12:30
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    Rules like this are devoted to big distribution, food industry, public restaurants etc. That a bowl soup is dangerous after a couple of hours in my kitchen is ridiculous. They are kinda laws and have regulatory purpose. It is not a kitchen book. Still the answer is good as for it provides guidelines. But it should be taken with one, even two, grains of salt.
    – Alchimista
    Commented Dec 23, 2018 at 8:52
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The question was: "If I left food out of the refrigerator for some period of time, is it still safe? If I left it out too long, can I salvage it by cooking it more?"

Answer: It depends ...

  • How long did you leave it outside the fridge?
  • What kind of food are we talking about?
  • What is the moisture content of the food and the humidity of the air in the room?
  • Is the air reasonably clean. Did you put it on a clean or contaminated surface?
  • Is it raw or cooked food?

These are just a couple of questions so you get the general idea that it really is impossible to give a generalized answer to the question.

Considering that only a surprisingly small percentage of the worlds population actually has access to refrigerators and people still eat I think it might be obvious that refrigeration is really not the only way to store food for later consumption.

For a more in depth study of the topic I recommend:
Food Safety: The Science of Keeping Food Safe By Ian C. Shaw

As a more general tip I would stick to common sense. e.g. any food containing raw eggs (Mayonnaise) or food that must by its nature be considered contaminated (store bought raw chicken / raw meat) needs to be handled in a reasonable matter (you should be able to find the correct advise about handling these kinds of foods in any good cookbook) to avoid colonisation to an unhealthy (when eaten - even after cooking) point. On the other end of the spectrum leafy vegetables or fruit bought fresh from a farmers market actually comes with its own protection in the form of beneficial bacteria on the skin and is therefore less likely to be easily (meaning in a short time) colonized by pathogenetic organisms. Learn about your food and learn how to cook and you probably will be safe.

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    Anecdotally, I routinely leave (vegetarian) dishes out, not just for two hours but overnight, and have observed that they're always fine. Unless they've been exposed to human saliva, in which case they're furry in the morning, or it's the middle of summer and the house isn't cooled, my observations lead me to believe that a lot of dishes are fine sitting out to cool. (I developed this habit when I had a fussy and ancient fridge, which would labor whenever hot foods were placed in it.) I would never leave, say, fresh homemade mayonnaise out, but a pot of curried chickpeas? No problem.
    – goblinbox
    Commented Jun 24, 2015 at 21:12
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If I left food out of the refrigerator for some period of time, is it still safe?

It all depends on measures you have taken to prevent spoiling. There a fair few types of charcuterie that is aged for anywhere from a week to several months. So in a general sense yes CERTAIN foods can be safe to eat even when not refrigerated. The thing is these foods have been prepared in a manner that prevents harmful bacteria from growing.

Salami for instance uses salt to cure the sausage and then also adds further acidity to the environment by the addition of wine. This ensure that harmful bacteria is unlikely to grow.

Biltong and to a lesser extent Jerky as well is pieces of meat that is cured in salt and then to remove the salt a vinegar bath is used to also add further acidity and reduce water content of the meat.

These examples seem to be the exception though as it seems you want to know if food that is not specifically prepared for long term curing is safe to leave outside and to that I would say a resounding NO.

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(in reply to a closed question:

I left two bags of groceries in the car overnight. A beef shoulder roast, a pork loin, pack of ground beef and some smoked sausage. They were cold to the touch. That was our food for the week. Not sure what I should do.

The rule of thumb (and of the USDA) is: after two hours in the "danger zone" - temperatures between 5-60c/40-140f - the food has to go. That's the official answer and the only responsible one.

But it's indeed a one-size-fits-all-play-it-safe rule. Bacteria's growth rate rises with temperature until they start dying around 60c/140f. Two hours in a humid 40c/105f will turn fresh meat into a small civilization. But under 10c/50f there'll hardly be a change.

So as Kate Gregory wrote, the question is where you are, and how cold is it over there. If your food was left covered in cold "storage" temperatures, and in the morning felt cold and firm to the touch and smelled fine, it has stayed unspoiled. Problem is: you can't know. I still might be unsafe. Not all food spoilage shows or smells.

Still, if you consider taking the risk, you should always throw away the ground beef. Bacteria grows on the surface of foods. According to common sense, you can make a wholesome piece of meat safe by cooking it and sterilize its surface (only that here you need to be guided not by common sense but by a health expert). But either way - in ground meat the outside and the inside are mixed, and any contamination on the meat was spread all across it before the fearful night. So give up the ground meat and

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