Por quanto tempo os ovos podem ser refrigerados antes de se tornarem inseguros para comer?

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Uma amiga minha deixou acidentalmente uma caixa de ovos em seu balcão, sem refrigeração, por três dias. Os ovos foram previamente refrigerados na loja e em casa. Agora ela está planejando fazer um pouco mais de comida que requer ovos, e está se perguntando se ainda é seguro usá-los para assar. Eu acredito que ela está planejando assar biscoitos com eles, então eles seriam assados a temperaturas razoavelmente altas, provavelmente por pelo menos 10 minutos. Isso seria seguro, ou os ovos deixados sem refrigeração por tanto tempo não são seguros para consumo?

    
por nhinkle 14.05.2011 / 06:21

5 respostas

O USDA , geralmente no final muito seguro, mas um pouco paranoico do espectro, diz:

After eggs are refrigerated, they need to stay that way. A cold egg left out at room temperature can sweat, facilitating the movement of bacteria into the egg and increasing the growth of bacteria. Refrigerated eggs should not be left out more than 2 hours.

(Eles também dizem algumas coisas muito tristes sobre a caça aos ovos de Páscoa.)

Então, se você está sendo rigoroso, três dias seriam muito longos. Na realidade, você provavelmente estaria bem. As chances de obter salmonela são definitivamente mais altas, mas presumivelmente ainda são pequenas (embora eu não possa dizer exatamente quão pequena, é claro). Pessoalmente, dado o preço de uma dúzia de ovos, eu provavelmente jogaria pelo seguro.

Outra resposta menciona que no Reino Unido os ovos são armazenados à temperatura ambiente. Isso é verdade em muitos lugares, mas eu suponho que eles evitaram a grande questão do balanço de temperatura mencionado pelo FDA, então se os ovos do seu amigo foram refrigerados na loja, a situação não é a mesma que no Reino Unido. .

    
14.05.2011 / 08:20

Eu nunca refrido os ovos. Eles são marcados para armazenamento em temperatura ambiente no Reino Unido e perfeitamente seguros até (e depois) o uso por data. Três dias não devem ser problema, a menos que você mora em algum lugar realmente quente.

    
14.05.2011 / 07:22
Na Itália, os ovos geralmente são vendidos em corredores não refrigerados e geralmente duram pelo menos duas semanas. Existe, a este respeito, um regulamento da UE que mais ou menos diz o que a FDA americana está dizendo. Ele sugere, no entanto, não refrigerar os ovos antes da venda, de modo que ajuda com bactérias e tal.

Eu não sei se os ovos nos EUA são vendidos refrigerados ou não, mas se eles não são, e seu amigo não os colocou na geladeira, há uma boa chance de que eles possam ser usados sem nenhum problema. .

Tenha em mente, no entanto, que a bactéria salmonela é basicamente neutralizada por altas temperaturas, por isso, se ela planeja fazer biscoitos, não deve haver nenhum problema. De acordo com USDA FSIS , uma temperatura de 160F deve ser suficiente para neutralizar a bactéria.

    
14.05.2011 / 20:00

Um pouco de referências científicas (negrito meu):

Números de Salmonella enteritidis no conteúdo de ovos de galinha naturalmente contaminados.

Over 5700 hens eggs from 15 flocks naturally infected with Salmonella enteritidis were examined individually for the presence of the organism in either egg contents or on shells. Thirty-two eggs (0.6%) were positive in the contents. In the majority, levels of contamination were low. Three eggs, however, were found to contain many thousands of cells. In eggs where it was possible to identify the site of contamination, the albumen was more frequently positive than the yolk. Storage at room temperature had no significant effect on the prevalence of salmonella-positive eggs but those held for more than 21 days were more likely (P less than 0.01) to be heavily contaminated. In batches of eggs where both shells and contents were examined, 1.1% were positive on the former site and 0.9% in the latter.

Contaminação de casca de ovo e conteúdo com Salmonella enteritidis: uma revisão.

Salmonella enteritidis can contaminate the contents of clean, intact shell eggs as a result of infections of the reproductive tissue of laying hens. The principal site of infection would appear to be the upper oviduct. In egg contents the most important sites of contamination are either the outside of the vitelline membrane or the albumen surrounding it. In fresh eggs, only few salmonellas are present and as albumen is an iron-restricted environment, growth will only occur once storage-related changes to vitelline membrane permeability, which allow salmonellas to invade yolk contents, have taken place. When this happens high populations are achieved in both yolk contents and albumen. Some eggs from naturally infected hens have been found to contain large numbers of S. enteritidis. The rate of change in membrane permeability is temperature-dependent. In eggs stored at 20 degrees C, yolk invasion is uncommon until eggs have been stored for 3 weeks. In stimulated kitchen conditions where temperatures reached 30 degrees C, salmonellas could grow rapidly after a few days.

De Para um melhor controle da contaminação por Salmonella, aproveitando o sistema de auto-defesa do ovo: uma revisão.

Storage Storage conditions present issues in contamination with focus on duration, temperature, and environmental hygiene. Different countries have different regulations. Storage limits for table eggs in the United Kingdom were 3 wk at 8 °C (Kinderlerer 1994), while in Israel 3 mo for refrigerated eggs and 16 d at room temperature (Lublin and Sela 2008). In many countries, eggs are required to be stored at low temperatures to restrict microbial growth. In Germany, legislation required that egg cooling be applied at 5 to 8 °C for 18 d maximum post lay (EFSA 2009). And in the United States, either shell eggs packed for consumers or eggs that receive a treatment from egg producers were required to be kept at 45 °F (7.2 °C) no later than 36 h after the eggs are laid during storage and transportation (FDA 2010). In this scenario, it is more advisable to apply low-temperature storage in order to minimize the possibility that eggs infected with S. Enteritidis are transmitted to humans. This recommendation is supported by the study of Gast and Holt (2000), which showed that low temperatures were more effective for controlling S. Enteritidis multiplication in the yolk when high concentration of S. Enteritidis was artificially introduced into egg contents. (Gast and Holt 2000). On the other hand, low temperature can slow down the process of penetration (Chousalkar and others2010). However, Kang and others (2006) suggested that it is preferable to store eggs at 37 °C for a certain period of time first, instead of 4 °C directly, to allow the endogenous bactericidal activity of egg albumen to kill the contaminating S. Enteritidis. This reasoning is valid especially when most eggs are infected through trans-shell contamination. While in the case of vertical transmission, this application awaits more research. Further studies show that, although low preservation temperature for table eggs will limit the multiplication of Salmonella, it does not reduce the existing Salmonella concentration. It may indeed prolong the survival of Salmonella because Salmonella may be increased by low storage temperature (Baker and Balch 1962; Radkowski 2002; Messens and others 2006) and reduced with higher temperature (Rizk and others 1996).

Em uma nota lateral, eles também abordam o ponto de lavar ovos

The use of egg washing is a continuous debate despite its broad commercial application. Current concerns focus on whether egg washing increases the internal microbial load. Within the European Union, egg washing is prohibited except in Sweden and parts of the Netherlands. The reason offered is that egg-washing procedures may damage the quality of the cuticle enhancing the opportunity for bacterial invasion (Peebles and Brake 1986; Bialka and others 2004; EFSA 2005). Factors related to cuticle damage caused by egg washing include presence of water on the eggshell, presence of iron in the wash water, physical brushing damage, and high pressure (Commission of European Communities, 2003). These are the reasons that class A eggs for human consumption are not eligible for the practice of egg washing by European Union legislation and eggs will be downgraded if any forms of disinfection are used. However, this reasoning is at odds with research that showed the washing procedure did not appear to affect the incidence of open pores and the overall cuticle quality. Meanwhile, it was also indicated that brown eggs in general were of better quality in terms of their cuticle scores than the white eggs when 4 standards, such as mechanical damage, debris, open pores, and cuticle coverage, were considered (Messens 2009). And the use of egg washing is yet authorized in Canada, America, Japan, Australia, Russia, and Mexico for the reason that egg washing can reduce the total microbial load on the surface of sanitized eggs by approximately 2 to above 5 log units (Hutchison and others 2004; Rodríguez Romo 2004).
Given the controversy on the advantages and disadvantages of egg washing, other procedures are being evaluated.

    
02.04.2012 / 23:53

Mother Earth News fez um teste bastante abrangente de armazenamento de ovos métodos em 1977. Os ovos à temperatura ambiente duraram bem mais de um mês antes de começarem a degradar-se.

    
02.04.2012 / 20:56