Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 18 submissions in the queue.
posted by cmn32480 on Saturday April 01 2017, @08:03PM   Printer-friendly
from the if-I-lick-it,-it-belongs-to-me dept.

Food that has been dropped on the floor is usually safe to eat under the so-called "five-second rule", a scientist has said.

Germ expert Professor Anthony Hilton, from Aston University, said that although retrieving these morsels can never be completely without risk, there is little to be concerned about if the food is only there momentarily.

Professor Hilton will be demonstrating how the five-second rule works at The Big Bang Fair – a celebration of science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) for young people – which opens on Wednesday at the NEC in Birmingham.

He said: "Eating food that has spent a few moments on the floor can never be entirely risk-free. Obviously, food covered in visible dirt shouldn't be eaten, but as long as it's not obviously contaminated, the science shows that food is unlikely to have picked up harmful bacteria from a few seconds spent on an indoor floor."


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 1, Offtopic) by VLM on Sunday April 02 2017, @06:21PM (2 children)

    by VLM (445) on Sunday April 02 2017, @06:21PM (#487986)

    And for chicken and turkey in particular

    The tasteless styrofoams of the meat world. May as well go vegan rather than eat that stuff.

    There are exceptions with careful treatment when cooking, a nice deeply citrus marinated chicken fajita meat is pretty good, it'll take awhile to boil the marinade down to a sauce then a crust but the flavor intensity is mindblowing, and since you're boiling the chicken in the marinate for like 10 minutes the internal temp is probably 212 but its so delicious no one cares. Also stir fries for chicken where the chicken is flavorless protein and really you're eating the flavors of broccoli and carrot and a few other veg. I've also made "smothered potatoe chicken" using chicken instead of potatoe as a low carb substitute, pretty tasty and it can't dry out because its in a casserole surrounded by ranch dressing (admittedly a mystery meat substance of its own) and cheese and bacon and all that delicious stuff put on potatoes to make them edible. I've also found dried almost crispy chicken is good as a bbq. Chicken BBQ with the sauce basted at the end so its practically crystallized (but not incinerated) when served is pretty delicious. Like the most amazing smoky chicken jerky ever. And I've slow cooked chicken and shredded it with a homemade BBQ spice mix (go light on the cayenne pepper) and its pretty tasty.

    But yeah, mostly as cooked most of the time the styrofoam butchers packing plate has more flavor than the chicken, which is a shame. Which makes it even more ironic depressing when digestive systems explode over something with the flavor profile of cardboard.

    Pork cuts have their own dangers where theres this inedible range from like 150-200 degrees where its legally/technically safe to eat, but I can't eat it. Its USDA approved to eat pork chops at 145 but the collagen hasn't broken down so its like jerky unless you get it to 200 for like 8 hours slow cook and the meat shreds apart and is fork tender. Likewise beef is USDA OK at 145 but I think medium is too low and you get more fat flavor at medium-well around 153-ish. Pork chops are tough until I got a thermometer I couldn't make edible chops, for decades I'd overshoot on temp and make jerky and undershoot on time so it's not slow cooked fork tender. I like to saute some shallots and white wine and some raw apple slices (well OK a couple apples worth) and essentially poach my chops until like 150F but seriously like one degree over and its jerky time.

    Nothing revolutionizes cooking like a good calibrated or otherwise accurate digital thermometer. Boil some water, if you're around sea level that should be about 212F. Kinda like microwave revolutionized the boomer kitchen my kitchen is revolutionized by ACCURATE thermometer.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Moderation   -1  
       Offtopic=1, Total=1
    Extra 'Offtopic' Modifier   0  
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   1  
  • (Score: 2) by schad on Monday April 03 2017, @03:43AM (1 child)

    by schad (2398) on Monday April 03 2017, @03:43AM (#488091)

    Yeah, it seems like years of "bigger and faster" have bred the taste out of poultry just as surely as it did from tomatoes. Your tofu mention is a good one, I think, because tofu is also a largely tasteless protein that absorbs flavors like a sponge. Chicken does great both with big flavors and delicate ones, but not really anything in between.

    Corn-fed beef is pretty damn tasteless too. A lot of people prefer the (absence of) taste, though. That makes me think that the blandness of poultry and everything else might actually not be an accident.

    • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Monday April 03 2017, @08:27AM

      by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Monday April 03 2017, @08:27AM (#488139) Homepage
      Because of its blandness, the maillard reaction is very noticeable, so I like me a bit of grilled chicken breast.

      Of course, a nice spicy coating, and the skin cooked till it's crispy and all the fat has rendered down, is also delicious. There's a local pub here where one of the bar snacks is crispy chicken skin - lovely!
      --
      Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves