Top Five Foods To Avoid for Food Safety
While we often recommend our safe food-handling practices like using clean utensils and storing foods properly to help reduce the risk of foodborne illness, we thought for this year’s Food Safety Month (September) it would be good to highlight five foods that can be “food safety foes” all year round. One key term you will see used is the word “raw.” Cooking foods to their proper temperatures and not consuming foods that are not meant to be eaten uncooked certainly go a long way in keeping meals safe. These tips will arm you even more in the fight against foodborne illness. 1. Raw cookie dough Skipping raw cookie dough, no matter how tempting it is and even if you have eaten it the past, is best. Cookie dough contains both raw flour and raw eggs, both of which can harbor bacteria. Flour is an agricultural food product that is designed to be cooked before it is consumed. This means that some bacterial contaminants from the grains used to produce the flour can remain in the product before it is cooked, namely Escherichia coli (E. coli). Consumption of harmful strains of E. coli can cause diarrhea, urinary tract infections, respiratory illness, pneumonia and other illnesses as well.Raw eggs can harbor Salmonella bacteria. Salmonella infections can cause many symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea and gastrointestinal pain. Typically, symptoms occur within six to 48 hours after eating contaminated food. While most people can recover from Salmonella infections without antibiotics, children, older adults and others with weaker immune systems may need medical attention. Check out these food safety tips from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to help during your next baking bash. 2. Raw chicken It may be surprising to some, but there has been a past popular “delicacy” trend of […]
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