Psycho-Babble Health Thread 364574

Shown: posts 1 to 5 of 5. This is the beginning of the thread.

 

Refrigerator temperature

Posted by KaraS on July 9, 2004, at 22:51:43

This might sound like a silly question but here goes anyway:

I know that refrigerators should be maintained between 30-40 degrees F. I've been having some trouble lately with mine as it was in the low 50s for 2-3 days. Now I'm wondering what food I should throw out. I'm on a very limited budget right now so I don't want to just throw everything out but I don't want to risk eating anything bad either. Should I toss the milk, soymilk, mozzarella cheese, dried parmesan cheese, Trader Joe's light mayo? What about canola oil or olive oil? I have some frozen shrimp, turkey and chicken in the freezer that I'm thinking are probably ok. Still I'm kind of afraid to try them... If anyone has more experience or knowledge about this kind of thing, I would really appreciate the advice.

 

Re: Refrigerator temperature » KaraS

Posted by Larry Hoover on July 10, 2004, at 8:26:30

In reply to Refrigerator temperature, posted by KaraS on July 9, 2004, at 22:51:43

> This might sound like a silly question but here goes anyway:
>
> I know that refrigerators should be maintained between 30-40 degrees F.

30 is too cold. Tender produce (e.g. lettuce) will be damaged at 30 degrees. 36 is about the minimum.

> I've been having some trouble lately with mine as it was in the low 50s for 2-3 days. Now I'm wondering what food I should throw out. I'm on a very limited budget right now so I don't want to just throw everything out but I don't want to risk eating anything bad either. Should I toss the milk,

Your nose is a good judge of milk quality. If you're worried, pitch it.

> soymilk, mozzarella cheese,

A tiny bit of increased concern, but they should be fine.

> dried parmesan cheese, Trader Joe's light mayo? What about canola oil or olive oil?

Totally safe.

> I have some frozen shrimp, turkey and chicken in the freezer that I'm thinking are probably ok. Still I'm kind of afraid to try them...

If they didn't thaw past the point of losing ice crystals, they're fine. You might have lost a little in the texture department (surface drying), but that's cosmetic.

> If anyone has more experience or knowledge about this kind of thing, I would really appreciate the advice.

My comments are generalizations. If you have doubts, trust your intuition. Notwithstanding that, I think it's always good to remember that the spice trade 400 years ago was prompted by the desire to cover up the tastes and smells of decomposing food. Cheese develops its flavour from bacterial decomposition of milk curd. Sorry for the yucky part of the truth, but I think people get the wrong idea about food poisoning and such. The big problem is cross-contamination (e.g salmonella on the cutting board). The next biggest is eating contaminated raw foods (e.g. E. coli in lettuce). Proper cooking takes care of both of those, but most people don't cook lettuce. Spoilage is not even close to being in the same risk category.

Lar

 

Re: Horrible Refrigerator - don't buy SEARS

Posted by KaraS on July 11, 2004, at 17:45:32

In reply to Re: Refrigerator temperature » KaraS, posted by Larry Hoover on July 10, 2004, at 8:26:30

Thanks for bothering to answer that. I have one more question. If the minimum optimal temperature is 36 degrees, then what is the maximum optimal temperature that frig should be set at?

(I have had nothing but problems with this Sears refrigerator and they won't even take or return my calls. To add insult to injury, it's hard to find repair people who will service Sears. You have to use their service people at twice the rate and their service desk has a horrible rating with the Better Business Bureau. I'll never buy ANYTHING there again!)

 

Re: Horrible Refrigerator - don't buy SEARS » KaraS

Posted by Larry Hoover on July 12, 2004, at 7:43:12

In reply to Re: Horrible Refrigerator - don't buy SEARS, posted by KaraS on July 11, 2004, at 17:45:32

> Thanks for bothering to answer that. I have one more question. If the minimum optimal temperature is 36 degrees, then what is the maximum optimal temperature that frig should be set at?

40

> (I have had nothing but problems with this Sears refrigerator and they won't even take or return my calls. To add insult to injury, it's hard to find repair people who will service Sears. You have to use their service people at twice the rate and their service desk has a horrible rating with the Better Business Bureau. I'll never buy ANYTHING there again!)

I'm sorry you're having this frustrating experience. Sometimes small independent repair people are less picky about what they fix.

Lar

 

Re: Horrible Refrigerator - don't buy SEARS

Posted by KaraS on July 12, 2004, at 8:38:06

In reply to Re: Horrible Refrigerator - don't buy SEARS » KaraS, posted by Larry Hoover on July 12, 2004, at 7:43:12

> > Thanks for bothering to answer that. I have one more question. If the minimum optimal temperature is 36 degrees, then what is the maximum optimal temperature that frig should be set at?
>
> 40
>
Isn't it difficult to keep it within those 4 degrees? Wish I could actually set mine for a specific degree rather than trying to set it guage it with a level.


> > (I have had nothing but problems with this Sears refrigerator and they won't even take or return my calls. To add insult to injury, it's hard to find repair people who will service Sears. You have to use their service people at twice the rate and their service desk has a horrible rating with the Better Business Bureau. I'll never buy ANYTHING there again!)
>
> I'm sorry you're having this frustrating experience. Sometimes small independent repair people are less picky about what they fix.
>
> Lar

Thanks. I feel less frustrated now that I've gotten the word out about Sears.

Kara


This is the end of the thread.


Show another thread

URL of post in thread:


Psycho-Babble Health | Extras | FAQ


[dr. bob] Dr. Bob is Robert Hsiung, MD, bob@dr-bob.org

Script revised: February 4, 2008
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/cgi-bin/pb/mget.pl
Copyright 2006-17 Robert Hsiung.
Owned and operated by Dr. Bob LLC and not the University of Chicago.