this post was submitted on 13 Oct 2025
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I wonder if this is an US/the rest thing or maybe a meat eater / vegetarian thing. For exact scientific evaluation, please tell in which groups you fit in when commenting.

When the topic food is brought up here or there is always this guy saying "omg you can't leave your food for 30 minutes on the counter because bacteria you know" (exaggerated) and I don't get where that sentiment comes from. Many people agree and say you will get food poisoning from that.

First of all, let me tell you I am not an idiot (at least I hope so) and I know how microbiology works - bacteria is everywhere. I don't doubt your food on the counter will get populated by bacteria, probably more than it would be in the fridge. The question is, is this bad for you?

Now, where I live (central Europe) people are not so fast with that and I wonder why this is. We have a temperate climate which could play a role, so a large portion of the year the temperature is pretty moderate, compared to let's say south US. But apart from that I don't really know.

I am a vegetarian, mostly vegan. I am pretty sure it's not a good idea to leave animal parts out of the fridge, as they are already populated with bad bacteria when you buy them. But for vegetables? Pasta, soup, lasagna? To be honest, I have no shame to leave that stuff on the counter the whole day and even take a spoon from time to time without reheating. Over night I put it of course in the fridge, and in summer when we have 35°C it's also a different thing. But in general I don't really care. I know I cannot extrapolate on humanity, only because ai never felt bad after doing this. But honestly, am I an idiot? Or are you just a bit sensitive? Do you assume everybody eats meats?

Really interested in your ideas. Don't forget to tell the region you are coming from and your diet preferences.

Thank you so much my respected lemmings and pie people

(page 3) 23 comments
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[–] drmoose@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Ants are everywhere in south east asia so I'd never or build a little tower with a water bowl underneath it.

[–] BonesOfTheMoon@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

I keep my lunch in my work bag all day, not in the fridge, unless it's salad where it should be crisp.

I did the European thing where I kept eggs on the counter. It's best that way. Real unwashed farm eggs, not shit from the grocery store.

[–] HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 1 points 1 week ago

From the USA, it is important to understand that FDA guidelines are generally geared to ensure a near impossibility for food-bourne illness. That includes people with compromised immune systems and gets applied to all food even if the odds are minimal that something will happen. For instance, a lot of fine dining chefs will forgo minimum cooking temperatures for some ingredients in order to provide a different product.

So, in a private setting and with healthy people, the FDA guidelines are likely overkill

[–] BeefHouse@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I'll leave sauces and soups out overnight without worrying because they've been cooked for long periods of time and have a lid on.

But anything fresh especially salads and lightly cooked veggies I'll want in the fridge immediately, because those few hours out of the fridge make them limp and reduces their long term life.

But I'll happily open a container of leftover pasta that's been in the fridge 2 weeks! I know that wasn't the question but I'm dying to know how long people keep leftovers in the fridge. Vegan btw.

[–] electric_nan@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I'm vegan. Generally speaking, whatever we cook for dinner gets left out overnight. I'll chuck the pan in the oven so the cats don't lick it, but unless it's hot/summer then food is usually fine at room temp for 24hrs. Been doing this for 20+ years.

[–] chillhelm@lemmy.world 0 points 1 week ago

I am the same. Vegetarian.

Unless the food contains uncooked dairy (milk, cream etc) or eggs (home made mayo) it can usually stay in a covered dish over night without refrigeration. It was the same at my parents house, except for fish and meat dishes.

Never had a food borne illness from my own cooking, my parents' or the left overs.

[–] NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net 0 points 1 week ago

Ive left excess pasta on the stove overnight, I've left pizza open on the counter and eaten it the day after (though if there's only a couple slices they stay in the microwave on a cutout of the box ready to be nuked in the morning/next days lunch)

Still alive, still haven't given myself food poisoning

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