Power Outage Fridge Safety Log

Create a printable fridge and freezer safety timeline after a power outage with thermometer readings, door-open notes, keep/discard decisions, cleanup, and restock list.

Audits

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Install

openclaw skills install power-outage-fridge-safety-log

Power Outage Fridge Safety Log

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a power outage, tripped breaker, unplugged appliance, failed refrigerator, or uncertain temperature history makes fridge or freezer food safety unclear. The deliverable is a printable fridge and freezer timeline with thermometer readings, door-open notes, a keep/cook/discard checklist, cleanup tasks, and a restock list.

This skill helps organize conservative food safety decisions. It does not provide medical advice, guarantee food safety, or override local public health guidance. When time or temperature is unknown, recommend discarding risky perishables.

Safety Boundary

Use conservative public-health thresholds. A refrigerator may keep food safe for about 4 hours if the door stays closed. Perishable refrigerated food should generally be discarded if it has been at or above 40 F / 4 C for more than 2 hours, or if the time and temperature history is unknown. A full freezer may keep food cold for about 48 hours if the door stays closed; a half-full freezer may keep food cold for about 24 hours. Food that still has ice crystals or is 40 F / 4 C or below may usually be refrozen or cooked, but quality may suffer.

Never advise tasting food to decide safety. Discard food with unusual odor, color, texture, leaking packages, contamination, or unknown history. Tell the user to follow local public health guidance, manufacturer instructions, and medical guidance for infants, pregnancy, older adults, immunocompromised people, or anyone at higher risk from foodborne illness.

When to Use

Use this skill when:

  • Power has been out and the user is unsure what fridge or freezer food is safe.
  • A refrigerator or freezer was off, unplugged, left open, tripped, failed, or warmed unexpectedly.
  • The user needs a printable timeline for insurance, landlord, reimbursement, or household records.
  • The user wants to sort food by appliance, category, and keep/cook/discard status.

Do not use it for diagnosing appliance faults, repairing electrical systems, medical treatment, or preserving food that already has unsafe time or temperature history.

Required Inputs

Ask for practical details the user knows:

  • Outage start time, discovery time, power return time, and whether times are exact or estimated.
  • Appliance types: refrigerator, freezer compartment, chest freezer, upright freezer, garage fridge, mini fridge, or cooler.
  • Thermometer readings with time, location, and whether the thermometer is appliance or food based.
  • Door openings: when opened, how long, and why.
  • Appliance fullness and whether doors stayed closed.
  • Food categories: meat, poultry, seafood, dairy, eggs, cooked leftovers, cut produce, condiments, beverages, frozen meals, baked goods, ice cream, breast milk, medication, or special diet foods.
  • Visible signs: ice crystals, thawing, leaks, warm packages, odor, discoloration, or spoiled items.
  • Household risk factors that call for extra caution, if the user volunteers them.

Mark unknowns clearly and apply the conservative discard rule for risky perishables.

Workflow

  1. Record outage timing. Capture outage start, discovery, power return, appliance restart, and whether each time is exact or estimated.
  2. Log temperatures. Build a table of fridge, freezer, and food thermometer readings with time, location, and notes.
  3. Note door openings. Record each door opening, duration, reason, and whether doors otherwise stayed closed.
  4. Sort by appliance and category. Group food by refrigerator, freezer, second appliance, cooler, and category.
  5. Apply conservative decisions. Mark each category keep, cook soon, refreeze, discard, or unknown-discard using time and temperature thresholds.
  6. Create cleanup checklist. Include bagging discarded food, cleaning leaks, sanitizing surfaces if needed, and documenting disposal photos if useful.
  7. Build restock list. List discarded staples and priority replacements by meal need, dietary need, medication or infant need, and budget priority.
  8. Add documentation notes. Include photos, receipts, insurance or landlord notes, and reimbursement records if relevant.

Decision Guidance

Use these defaults unless local public health guidance is stricter:

  • Refrigerator food is safer when the appliance stayed at or below 40 F / 4 C.
  • Discard risky refrigerated perishables if they were at or above 40 F / 4 C for more than 2 hours.
  • If the outage duration, door-open history, or temperature is unknown, discard risky perishables.
  • Frozen food with ice crystals or a measured temperature at or below 40 F / 4 C can usually be refrozen or cooked.
  • Discard thawed frozen food that warmed at or above 40 F / 4 C for more than 2 hours.
  • Discard melted ice cream, leaking packages, food contaminated by raw meat juices, and anything with unusual odor, color, texture, or unknown safety.
  • Condiments, hard cheeses, whole uncut produce, bread, and shelf-stable items may have different risk profiles, but uncertain or vulnerable-household cases should be handled conservatively.

Output Format

Return a printable safety log with these sections:

  1. Outage Snapshot
    • Outage start time
    • Discovery time
    • Power return time
    • Appliance restart time
    • Exact or estimated times
    • Household risk notes if volunteered
  2. Appliance Timeline
    • Appliance name and location
    • Door stayed closed or openings logged
    • Full, half-full, or lightly filled
    • Thermometer readings by time
    • Current status and any uncertainty
  3. Door-Open Notes
    • Time opened
    • Duration
    • Reason
    • Food removed or inspected
    • Notes affecting temperature confidence
  4. Thermometer Reading Table
    • Time
    • Appliance or food item
    • Reading in F and C if available
    • Thermometer type
    • Location inside appliance
    • Action taken
  5. Keep, Cook Soon, Refreeze, or Discard Checklist
    • Appliance
    • Food category or item
    • Evidence: time, temperature, ice crystals, sealed package, or unknown
    • Decision
    • Reason
    • Deadline for cooking or disposal if applicable
  6. High-Risk Discard Review
    • Meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, milk, soft cheese, cooked leftovers, cut produce, opened deli foods, infant foods, and medically important items
    • Unknown time or temperature items marked discard
  7. Cleanup Checklist
    • Photograph discarded food if needed for records
    • Bag and remove spoiled food
    • Clean spills and leaked packages
    • Wash hands, bins, shelves, and drawers as needed
    • Note odors or appliance issues for follow-up
  8. Restock List
    • Priority essentials
    • Meals for next 24 to 72 hours
    • Special diet, infant, medication, or household needs
    • Receipts or reimbursement notes
  9. Safety Note
    • Do not taste food to test safety. When in doubt, throw it out, especially when time or temperature is unknown or a household member is at higher risk.

Example Prompts

  • "Power was out for 6 hours overnight. Help me decide what fridge and freezer food is still safe."
  • "My refrigerator door was left open for 3 hours. Create a keep-or-discard checklist."
  • "The freezer stopped working and stuff started thawing. Build a safety timeline with temperature readings."

Quality Bar

A strong result makes the food safety decision visible and conservative. It should separate known facts from estimates, show why each food category was kept or discarded, and produce a practical cleanup and restock plan without appliance repair or medical instructions.