How long is it safe to marinate meat?
I started marinating some almost-thawed chicken and skirt steak in the refrigerator on Monday. It's Saturday, and I still haven't gotten around to cooking the meat. Is the meat still safe to cook and eat?
I made several different marinades consisting of lime juice, red wine vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, and pepper. I'm not sure if that makes a difference.
Best Answer
I can't see any reason for the marinating itself to make any difference. If it's safe to leave the (un-marinated) meat in the same conditions for the same length of time, then it's safe to marinate it for that long.
Five days in the refrigerator is definitely stretching it for chicken - usually no more than a few days is recommended, and that's assuming it was fresh when you bought it (not a day before the sell-by date). Even if it's safe, it's not going to be very good. I've accidentally left raw chicken in the refrigerator and forgotten about it before, and it started to smell "off" after about 4 days. I hate to say it, but I wouldn't use it at this point.
As for the steak, you're probably okay, because you only have surface bacteria, but I would cook it well and right away. Again, most cooks I know will recommend no more than a few days in the fridge.
P.S. I've heard people say that weak acids such as lime juice "preserve" the meat, but never from a reliable source; even if it worked, every marinade is different and it would be nearly impossible to predict the exact amount of time it preserves for. You have no idea how much bacteria existed at the outset, and even if the marinade somehow helped to inhibit growth of new bacteria, the "spoiled-ness" of raw meat doesn't come from the bacteria itself but from the toxins they leave behind. It's not a requirement for the bacteria to multiply in order for the food to spoil, if enough existed in the first place.
Unless somebody has it on good authority that marinating makes any significant difference, I refuse to put any stock in that bit of folk wisdom and recommend that others be equally skeptical.
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Quick Answer about "How long is it safe to marinate meat?"
Information. Most recipes for marinating meat and poultry recommend six hours up to 24 hours. It is safe to keep the food in the marinade longer, but after two days it is possible that the marinade can start to break down the fibers of the meat, causing it to become mushy.Can you marinate meat for too long?
With both acid and enzyme marination, be careful not to over-marinate meat, as prolonged exposure to acid can cause it to become tough, or especially in the case of seafood, break down entirely.How long can marinated meat stay in the fridge?
According to USDA, the most recommended time frame to keep beef marinated in the refrigerator is 6 \u2013 24 hours. While the marinated beef can stay safely in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. But if you are using strong marinades, after 2 days, it may start disintegrating the meat fibers, making them soft and mushy.How long can you let meat marinate before it goes bad?
Long story short, you shouldn't marinate meat for longer than 24 hours \u2014 less if you are marinating small pieces.Can you marinate meat for 7 days?
Answer: You can safely leave marinated steak in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. But while leaving marinated steak in the fridge for 5 days may be fine from a safety standpoint, many marinade recipes are designed to work much faster than that.How long is too long to MARINATE? | Kitchen review show
More answers regarding how long is it safe to marinate meat?
Answer 2
While health concerns for storing meat are very real, in the scope of this question it's actually not an issue. No amount of time you are going to marinate something that will yield a good result is going to pose a health hazard unless your meat is near expiration to begin with. Consider the following:
For most marinades, you will get very little difference flavor-wise from 20 minutes or several hours. In fact, you will get the most flavor by doing a short marinating right before cooking, then reapplying a coating of the marinade just before the food is done cooking.
For marinades that are meant to soak for more than a few hours, they generally call for about 24 hours. This is not an unsafe length of time. Longer than 24 hours is going to have no positive effects on your food...
UNLESS you happen to be brining the meat. For brining you may be leaving your meat sitting for much longer, but it is in solution specifically designed to preserve the meat and kill bacteria.
So all in all, as long as you follow general health and safety principles with your food, you'll be just fine.
Answer 3
You can store marinated poultry in your refrigerator for 2 days. Beef, veal, pork, and lamb roasts, chops, and steaks may be marinated up to 5 days. (From http://www.foodsafety.gov/blog/marinades.html)
Answer 4
if you have too much soy sauce then the salt in it will start to preserve the meat, and if you marinate it for too long it will end up like eating peat bog man. I've had this just overnight from a soy and ginger marinade with beef.
In general though I would think that the beef will be ok, but I would be less certain about the chicken. It probably depends on how fresh the meat was in the first place.
Smell it and look at it. If it looks and smells ok, then its probably good. Any doubts and bin it.
Answer 5
You were keeping your meat cold in a high-salt, high-acid environment, so I wouldn't be too worried about pathogens. This doesn't mean you're absolutely safe -- there are no absolutes in food safety, even with fresh-killed meat. But, given the conditions you described, it should be safe.
However, I cannot imagine that meat would be any good after marinating for 5 whole days. After 24 hours, the marinade will really start to ruin the texture of your meat.
Answer 6
I just left the butcher shop and he told me that you can marinate beef for 27 days in allegro which I do not belive
Answer 7
Chicken =2 days...meats such as steaks, lamb, pork = 5 days. Here's the link to Food safety.gov, you can find the definite answers you seek on this page :) http://www.foodsafety.gov/blog/marinades.html
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