Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my first job out of college I knew this German guy who was kind of hyperactive and opinionated. At one point, he had a huge, weekend-long party at his group house where they served mayonnaise-based salads like potato salad, etc. They just left them out on the table for the entire length of the party. I found it completely gross, but he thought it was completely normal. Nobody got sick. He used to laugh about Americans' paranoia about mayonnaise-containing foods.
No bearing on your situation at all. But I'd eat the squash. It's a non-animal product and so would not be expected to harbor much bacteria to begin with, and then was baked at a temperature that would kill anything. So you wouldn't expect many pathogenic bacteria to be growing.
On this note, my first au pair opened a new jar of mayo and put it back on the pantry shelf...I only found it after it was 1/2 gone, no harm done. We had a good laugh over it, but she said they don't refrigerate mayo at all!
I've read that the celery and onions in potato salad are often the source of salmonella -- not the mayonnaise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my first job out of college I knew this German guy who was kind of hyperactive and opinionated. At one point, he had a huge, weekend-long party at his group house where they served mayonnaise-based salads like potato salad, etc. They just left them out on the table for the entire length of the party. I found it completely gross, but he thought it was completely normal. Nobody got sick. He used to laugh about Americans' paranoia about mayonnaise-containing foods.
No bearing on your situation at all. But I'd eat the squash. It's a non-animal product and so would not be expected to harbor much bacteria to begin with, and then was baked at a temperature that would kill anything. So you wouldn't expect many pathogenic bacteria to be growing.
On this note, my first au pair opened a new jar of mayo and put it back on the pantry shelf...I only found it after it was 1/2 gone, no harm done. We had a good laugh over it, but she said they don't refrigerate mayo at all!
Anonymous wrote:In my first job out of college I knew this German guy who was kind of hyperactive and opinionated. At one point, he had a huge, weekend-long party at his group house where they served mayonnaise-based salads like potato salad, etc. They just left them out on the table for the entire length of the party. I found it completely gross, but he thought it was completely normal. Nobody got sick. He used to laugh about Americans' paranoia about mayonnaise-containing foods.
No bearing on your situation at all. But I'd eat the squash. It's a non-animal product and so would not be expected to harbor much bacteria to begin with, and then was baked at a temperature that would kill anything. So you wouldn't expect many pathogenic bacteria to be growing.