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The science of BBQ
LImp Brisket
Posts: 115
We’ve all heard that all meats have dangerous bacteria in them, and that unless we eat our meat “well done,” we could be in trouble. Is that really true? Do the bacteria live ON the meat, or IN the meat? Check this out, player.php?videoRef=LS_100629_BBQ-Meat-Safe
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I couldn't locate the link.
Bacteria live both ON and IN every living thing. The 100 trillion cells of a human have at least 10x as many individual bacteria that make us who we are.
EDIT: I agree with them that the problem from food contamination comes from external bacteria... -
Sorry, see if this works...[/url]http://www.livescience.com/common/media/video/player.php?videoRef=LS_100629_BBQ-Meat-Safe
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As the video stated, the insides of intact muscles are sterile unless you pierce them with a knife or temperature probe, etc. The surface is what can be contaminated.
They suggest you boil your ribs, sigh. But they do recommend against cooking any meats beyond medium. Interesting video.The Naked Whiz -
i've gotten quite a bit of grief over the years for saying as much re: bacteria inside or outside. basically, that the uncompromised interior of meat is virtually free of bacteria
the bacteria we're talking about (worried about) are those in the digestive tract, which can only get spilled ON to meat during slaughter.
there are other bacteria that can be found in muscle, just not the gastro-intestinal stuff we are concerned with.
any worries about introducing bacteria by puncturing the meat with a temp probe are a little over the top, but can be completely avoided by not bothering to monitor the meat until after it hits the 140+ zone.
rinse your meat, salt it a little even (likely salt in the rub anyway), and clean your probe. the temp probe is probably less safe than the meat i'd wager, in many kitchens -
Thanks Whiz, one of these days I'm gonna get my nephew to show me how to use this site. No way I'm gonna boil my ribs BTW. :ohmy:
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I did find a BBQ video there but not about bacteria. It was about the Maillard reaction (browning reaction) and charring of food.
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Did you watch the whole video? I saw the bit about the bacteria.The Naked Whiz
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