Power Outage: What You Need to Know
Using the same criteria as before, let’s take a look at how cheese, eggs and dairy fare during a power outage. Soft cheeses like mozzarella, cottage cheese, blue cheese, ricotta and cream should be thrown out. Low-fat and shredded cheeses should also be tossed. Processed cheeses, hard cheeses like Provolone, Romano, Swiss, cheddar, Colby, and grated parmesan should all be safe to keep, however. Most items that contain eggs are not safe to keep, including fresh eggs, quiches, puddings, custards, and hardboiled eggs. As for dairy, you can keep margarine and butter. But any opened baby formula, milk, sour cream, buttermilk, yogurt, soy milk and eggnog should be thrown away.
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Review Date:
February 18, 2016Citation:
Image courtesy of Demerzel21 | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Accessony | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Andres Rodriguez | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Stanzi11 | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Lucas Sevilla Garcia | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Hlphoto | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Elenabsl | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Sean Macdiarmid | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Marcel Van Den Bos | Dreamstime Image courtesy of Oleg Dudko | Dreamstime Refrigerated Food and Power Outages: When to Save and When to Throw Out. Foodsafety.Gov Website. Power Outage Safety. American Red Cross Website. Power Outages. Ready.Gov website. Safe Drug Use After a Natural Disaster. FDA Website.
Last Updated:
February 18, 2016