40 would be better but I used to have a fridge that wouldn't go below 50... cooking will kill bacteria anyway.
Also when people age wild game birds some hang pheasants at 50f undressed.
I own a restaurant and without going into the food science part of it there are several bacteria resultant toxins that are
not killed from cooking, once they're there they're there and no amount of cooking renders them safe.
So please don't make your family sick believing that cooking something makes it safe. I agree with the Pheasant comment and I do quail too but always guts out and as I stated below 50F basically stops growth. Wild game birds are different than poultry however; as a deer is different from a pig.
Thanks for the all the replies.
Well after 12 hours I wondered if more ice was needed. I opened the cooler to see plenty of ice but no water... Yikes.. so I added water and checked temps of some birds.. I really think I got lucky by stuffing the cavities with ice.
I will most certainly remember the water next time for sure.
I will cook 1 tonight that I let rest in the fridge. I sure hope it taste good.
Almost all bacteria growth is a function of time and temp and dealing with in both cooling ( 12 hours at 110-75 degrees is much worse than 12 hours at 60-47 degrees) and Cooking.
I will eat black bear meat (which is known for Trichinosis) cooked Sous vide at 130 degrees for 3 hours. It takes approx. 1 hour of 130 degree heat to kill it vs 1 second at 150 degrees. and the same principal is true for salmonella from the chickens and turkey I raise here I will eat cooked at 138-140 for 2 hours.
Basically if you told me your chickens were 47 degrees for 2 days after passing from 80-60 in 4 hours, I would have no problem eating them as bacteria growth basically stops at 50F but the Govmt recommends 40F for long term storage. But if you told me they were like that for 7 days welllllll….I would also be more concerned if you were puncturing guts or had crap on them while cleaning but if your processing was clean then no worries at all from my end!
In the end you learned a lesson and I will echo what several others have said re Ice, water and bit of salt to bring temp down some and it makes a nicer bird that has been pre-brined IMO. The ice water serves the same function as a fan in moving the "warm" more rapidly from the surface by covering 100% of the surface with 30F temp vs ice only touching 10% of the surface.
If you and your son did 20 birds in 3 hours my hat is off to you
