I'm paranoid and never let leftovers go longer than 3 days. I'm concious to always keep track of how long something has been in my fridge and if I can't eat it by the 4th day I throw it out... better safe than sorry is my moto. However, since smoke is a natural preservative, would it be safe to allow things like smoked brisket, butt or ribs go longer than the three days recommeneded? If so, what would be the max length it could stay in the fridge and still be safetly eaten? (without freezing of course).
Well this is just me and I have never poisoned myself, but I go up to 5 days on leftovers. If it looks like it will go longer than that on the 4th day I will throw it in the freezer. And then when I take it out I will eat it right away. I treat all foods the same, that said chicken only stays as leftovers for 4 days no matter what. I have had a lot of....umm... funny experiences with food storage in my lifetime. As a kid we had a lot of very lean times so we didn't throw anything away. I also spent a lot of time on extended boating on the boat my dad built from scratch which we spent our weekends and one month of the summer on. I also worked on the commercial trollers where we used up the food in order of how fast it would spoil, like the chicken went first hamburger next steaks and roasts last and it all depended on how often we eat fresh caught salmon. So we ate some pretty dicey food and never had any troubles with food poisoning. So I tend to be slightly liberal with leftovers, but I don't think I take any unneccessary chances. I know some of the guys on here will be aghast at this but I figure if I can live threw eating at mcdonalds where 60% of the time I get poisoned I must be doing something right.
Thanks for sharing Q.
I know some folks who when you go over you have to be very careful about what they're serving because you have no idea how long it's been sitting. I've learned to "smell" before I eat ;D
Doesn't vac seal allow longer leftovers in fridge?
if it is growing hair....throw it out ;D I have stuff that has been cooked up keep for well over a week. Now that it is just my wife and I we do tend to throw stuff out more because I make too much....still cooking for a family of 4. Chicken is not something I will mess around with. 3 days and it is gone no matter what.
I'm with you Sailor, chicken no way. Left over bad thoughts from working at KFC in high school. Beef, butt I have used at 7 days no problems.
Leftovers? What's that?
The three day rule will probably keep you safe without having to do much thinking - it's a good safe step that I doubt anyone will argue against. Smoke probably does help, but it is not in itself a solution, Smoking as preservation should probably be viewed as part of a process. Most of the smoke to preserve processes I am familiar with included "curing" either with salt alone or with salt in combination with nitrite. Part of the curing process is to reduce water and another part is to kill and inhibit spoilage bacteria.
If you want to be more daring than the surefire 3-day rule would allow it helps to understand spoilage mechanisms and some microbiology. Depending on what the food is I regularly use refrigerated leftovers for up to 7 days. Properly cooked meats and fowl (including chicken) that were taken to proper temp are no problem so long as good hygiene and sanitation practices were maintained thought the preparation. That includes not only the heating up period, but holding and then cooling for storage. Simple guidelines - remember the 40's -- hold hot foods at 140 ° and above and cold foods at 40° or below. For perishable foods max room temp time is 2 hrs, which goes down to 1 hr at 90° (think about that mayonnaise or salad with mayonnaise now that summer is here). I give soups and stews or foods with high liquid proportions three days max unless reheated to the boiling point; if you reheat every other day and rapidly cool from holding to storage you can keep soups and stocks for a week. Sauces depend upon pH - highly acidic (low pH) can be kept a long time without problem.
An important point that most folks miss is the sanitation and hygiene part in handling. You can start with a safe, clean piece of cooked meat and contaminate it easily because of poor sanitation or hygiene. One of the most common in the restaurant industry is contamination of cooked food products from handling raw chicken. One case I know well involved a worker who had been cutting raw chicken and in a rush went on the line making tacos without any sanitation break. About 20 customers ended up in the hospital the next day, Keeping it clean is a big part of safe prep and preservation.
Now, let me emphasize that I got my old CB handle Cow Patty Daddy for good reason. And I do not recommend this to anyone! And I have a cast iron stomach, even when traveling to a lot of places you don't drink the water. I think I've eaten too many jalapenos in my life for any "nasties" to live in my gut. You've heard of acidophilus to help with digestion, well I grew up with japalophilus!! It is not unusual for me to gnaw on ribs or brisket that were cooked 7 days or more prior. Of course, I generally don't eat it if it is fuzzy, smells bad, or covered in bright colors! Momma taught me better than that! I confess I have eaten potato salad left out overnight with no ill effects - two weeks ago for instance - or decades ago at my grandmothers who had but a tiny ice chest and left most things out. But to be safe, BLSH has ya covered.
I'm in the Caney Camp. We go a week sometimes.
Wow, some great information here, I appreciate the replies. I was about to eat some brisket that had gone well past my 3 day rule but it looked and smelled fine. I threw it out anyway to be safe and then decided to get other opinions. Thanks again.
Throw that 3 day ole brisket my way! ;D
When I was single I use to make the girl leave after three days!
Quote from: classicrockgriller on June 09, 2010, 10:01:18 PM
Throw that 3 day ole brisket my way! ;D
My arm isn't quiet that good.
I may switch over to the no fuzz rule ;D
I find no scientific basis for the "leftover police" three day rule, even with chicken. It is COOKED after all.
Leftover pulled pork is just getting "happy" at that point.
Like Habs said, proper handling before and after cooking goes a long way.
I'm with CS and FLBR. If it's been properly refrigerated, a week wouldn't bother me. Throwing 3 day old brisket away is a sin.
With properly cooked stuff the issue isn't what was on or in it before it was cooked, it's usually contamination after the fact.
If it still smells good I eat it.
I know it was handled properly cause I did it and I dont cut any corners.
Use the "sniff and smell" method.
If it doesn't smell like what you thought you were going to eat ...
then don't eat it.
I broke my rule tonight. I still had some of the pulled beef I did smoke last Saturday. Warmed it up and it tasted great... almost better than the day I cooked it. I normally would have thrown out.
How you feeling this mornin ? ;D
Darq,
I've found that most smoked foods taste better at least the day after it has been smoked. Seems it gives the smoke time to evenly distribute. I had pastrami sandwiches from pastrami that had been thin sliced, vac sealed and frozen. Heated a pan of water to just below boiling, put the bag in for 30-35 minutes. I guarantee you that pastrami was better than when it came out of the smoker!
LOVE pastrami.
Quote from: OU812 on June 11, 2010, 07:12:06 AM
How you feeling this mornin ? ;D
I'm feeling like having the last bit of that pulled beef ;D
Quote from: KyNola on June 11, 2010, 07:16:56 AM
Darq,
I've found that most smoked foods taste better at least the day after it has been smoked. Seems it gives the smoke time to evenly distribute. I had pastrami sandwiches from pastrami that had been thin sliced, vac sealed and frozen. Heated a pan of water to just below boiling, put the bag in for 30-35 minutes. I guarantee you that pastrami was better than when it came out of the smoker!
LOVE pastrami.
I LOVE pastrami too. That's another thing on my gotta learn to do it list....
I'll tell ya the pastrami I made awhile ago was the best darned stuff I have ever eaten and everyone who tried it said the same. It is easy to make and you should all try making some.
When I do pastrami, it spends a couple days in the fridge Vac sealed before slicing. Not too sure why, but it does make a diff.
Yes it was better after a couple of days of course I only did one corned beef so it didn't last much longer than that either. I will save my pennies till I can afford 2 briskets and make it from scratch this time. I may get orders placed for others too. Between that and the CBB I made it was more fun to make considering the finished product was so awesome.