Comment on Chickenslap
head_socj@midwest.social 1 week agoTechnically false. Taenia saginata (beef tapeworm) embeds itself in a cystic form in the skeletal muscle of cattle and is transmitted to humans through consumption of undercooked, contaminated beef. Not very common in North America, and relatively easy to catch during inspection, but youre wrong that undercooked beef is safe to eat, strictly from technical standpoint.
Also, can you provide evidence of your claim that pathogens only infect the ‘surface’ of beef, but penetrate chicken and pork?
That being said, I will always order beef tartare from a reputable restaurant if it’s offered. yolo
frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 week ago
It’s commonly known among sous vide cooking. The internal temp for sous vide beef is often <60C, and that makes some people nervous. However,
https://www.americastestkitchen.com/articles/1131-is-sous-vide-safe
This may not be true with techniques like blade tenderization. That can transfer pathogens from the surface to the internals.
Taenia saginata will die in only 5 minutes at 56C, which is quite a low temp even for sous vide. In fact, most beef jerky recipes will typically set the dehydrator’s temperature higher than that. It’s typical that slightly lower temps will work if it’s done for longer–jerky usually takes several hours–but I don’t have a chart handy for taenia saginata specifically.
head_socj@midwest.social 1 week ago
Fascinating! Thank you for being informative. Truly appreciate it.