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How stable is shelf stable bacon


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  • #1280890
    Ike Jutkowitz
    BPL Member

    @ike

    Locale: Central Michigan

    All of the shelf stable bacon and bacon bits I can find at my supermarket advise "refrigerate after opening". How long can this stuff sit out after the bag or jar is opened?

    #1792931
    Joe Clement
    BPL Member

    @skinewmexico

    Locale: Southwest

    Test it, and let us know. Have some antibiotics on hand though.

    #1792941
    Bob Gross
    BPL Member

    @b-g-2-2

    Locale: Silicon Valley

    I've never had a problem with it over a few days.

    I will carry a 3-oz package of bacon pieces, open it, use half with one meal, then save the other half for another meal after a day or two.

    –B.G.–

    #1792962
    Doug Parker
    Member

    @buffaloskipper

    Locale: Gulf Coast

    Some folks overlook the temperature. If you are out in 40° weather, it will keep longer than if you are hiking in the 70s. And of course, avoid it being in the direct sun. Many of the bacon bit packaging options are heavy zipper lock bags. Get all the air out and seal the package and it will be much less likely to spoil, especially if it is only open for a minute while you take out the portion you need.

    My 2¢.

    #1792977
    Sarah Kirkconnell
    BPL Member

    @sarbar

    Locale: Homesteading On An Island In The PNW

    There are two types – the bag stuff and the jar stuff. The jar stuff is considerably more shelf stable once opened. The bags I buy in the smallest amount (no matter HOW tempting the big bags at Costco are!). I aim for using half at dinner and half at breakfast. In summer you really want to be careful with it, winter you could slide days on it.

    Overall though it has a good shelf life due to all the preservatives galore in it.

    As for bacon bits, those things have a half nuclear life to say the least…….

    #1792982
    Eric Lundquist
    BPL Member

    @cobberman

    Locale: Northern Colorado

    It might depend on the brand/style of bacon bits/pieces you purchase. My first bag was smaller and seemed to be little pieces with more fat on them. The second bag was a fine shred of bacon with very little fat. I would imagine the one with less fat will last longer in the field.

    #1792986
    Bob Gross
    BPL Member

    @b-g-2-2

    Locale: Silicon Valley

    Yes, there are different bacon products. Some are bits, and some are pieces. Don't ask me which is which. Some appear to be devoid of visible fat, but the invisible fat is still there. Try Hormel.

    –B.G.–

    #1793000
    Ike Jutkowitz
    BPL Member

    @ike

    Locale: Central Michigan

    Thanks guys. My supermarket has the Hormel stuff and a few that are similar. Thinks are cooling down here pretty quickly in MI, but I'll try and use it in the first couple of days. (along with some fresh cheese).

    #1793043
    j lan
    Member

    @justaddfuel

    Locale: MN

    I have had it for a week in the boundary waters in mid summer. Not super hot, but still.
    The brand we had was from costco and was a large re-sealable bag. Delicious.

    #1793062
    Tohru Ohnuki
    Member

    @erdferkel

    Locale: S. California

    I've done 3-4 days in the desert with those. Bacon bits and dehydrated potatoes is a great meal. As long as the bacon bits are dry they won't spoil, similar to jerky. You can probably make your own by frying up some bacon until it's crispy and then crumbling it.

    I remember reading somewhere that in order for stuff to grow there needs to be a minimum moisture content, thus the reason twinkies are shelf stable…

    #1793084
    Roger Caffin
    BPL Member

    @rcaffin

    Locale: Wollemi & Kosciusko NPs, Europe

    > there needs to be a minimum moisture content, thus the reason twinkies are shelf stable…

    Yeah, but we are talking about food here. Twinkies (and Cheezles) aren't.

    Cheers

    #1793124
    Sarah Kirkconnell
    BPL Member

    @sarbar

    Locale: Homesteading On An Island In The PNW

    Not sure if I'd consider shelf stable bacon real food though :-P It is a mastery of chemicals that it even exists.

    And like Twinkies is tasty beyond belief. So are Cheetos. Not good for you, but tasty.

    #1793132
    Bob Gross
    BPL Member

    @b-g-2-2

    Locale: Silicon Valley

    The only good thing about Cheetos is that with a handful you will get your minimum daily requirement of yellow dye #2.

    –B.G.–

    #1793143
    Tom Clark
    BPL Member

    @tomclark

    Locale: East Coast

    I work in the food industry and am responsible for maintaining the quality of our food products during their shelf life.

    Two big factors in keeping bacon bits and beef jerky fresh is low moisture (limits microbial growth) and low oxygen (reduces rancidity).

    Moist slices of beef would get moldy because there are always mold spores floating around. Although some beef jerky is more moist than others, it is still lower moisture (or water activity) than the steak you would eat at home. Water activity is a measure of how tightly water is bound by food…or salt. Some jerky might have added salt or something else to maintain a low water activity while keeping the jerky at a higher moisture level, which feels softer when chewed.

    The package is either flushed with nitrogen or vacuum packed. The plastic package that these come in have individual layers for moisture and oxygen barrier. There are often oxygen scavengers (i.e., the little perforated foil sachets that have ground Fe to consume any oxygen that leaks/permeates into the package).

    Here is added information…
    http://www.meathaccp.wisc.edu/validation/assets/CL%20Jerky%20Staph%20&%20LM.pdf

    I understand the comments about real food, but if we are talking about a weekend or week of backpacking, I say eat what tastes good and doesn't spoiled. I don't encourage people to eat poorly every day. Also, if you smoke or drink to excess, I wouldn't throw stones, but this is an open forum so I just want to provide some food for thought!

    Tom

    #1793148
    Tom Clark
    BPL Member

    @tomclark

    Locale: East Coast

    Ike,
    To your original question…I don't know. I would say that if you don't see mold growing on it and it doesn't taste rancid (e.g., cardboardy, painty, nasty) then it's OK. If it gets wet/moist, then it's not going to stay very long, otherwise I would expect it to get rancid or dry out first…neither one is dangerous.

    But as the others said…let us know how it works.
    Tom

    #1793214
    Tohru Ohnuki
    Member

    @erdferkel

    Locale: S. California

    "…if you don't see mold growing on it and it doesn't taste rancid (e.g., cardboardy, painty, nasty) then it's OK."

    Once, in my former career in radio, there was a poster of Elvis in the air studio with a powered donut stuck where the mouth was. It had been there for a few years, the grease from the donut had worked its way into the paper making a dark circle bigger than a foot across. Right before we moved and left that facility forever, one of the morning show jocks dared another to eat the donut, which he did to much disgust, but no ill effect.

    #1794186
    Eric Blumensaadt
    BPL Member

    @danepacker

    Locale: Mojave Desert

    I've taken microwaved turkey bacon on my last several backpacking trips to crumble and mix with scrambled eggs or just eat separately or for sandwiches. It keeps in a snack size Ziploc for over a week with no problem.

    I've found Oscar Meyer turkey bacon tastes best.

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