159 points

Unwashed Chicken is totally safe if you do this one amazing trick.

Cook it properly.

If you don’t know how to do that by sight or touch then buy yourself a instant read thermometer.

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60 points
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Washed chicken won’t be any safer if it’s undercooked, salmonella isn’t a surface only danger, so you can remove the “unwashed” part at the beginning.

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16 points

And by washing it you might spread the salmonella all over the place.

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2 points

Washed chicken is a stupid concept, I was including the unwashed part because that is the default state of uncooked chicken.

Unless you accidentally drop a chicken on the floor and don’t want to waste it, there isn’t a reason to wash it.

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7 points

Do people wash pork chops? steaks? hamburgers?

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4 points

People of West Indian descent often wash meat like pork and beef with a vinegar solution, but not ground meat

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1 point

I often wash my beef and pork with a vinegar mixture called mustard then scrub it with a dry abrasive spice mix before I put it on a smoker for a few hours before searing the outside for a few minutes.

I don’t know how I survived before these meat washing times.

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136 points
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ITT: people who undercook their chicken think that washing is what’s saving them when in reality, washing your chicken only enables a host of cross-contamination issues. Congratulations for turning your sink into a biohazard facility.

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28 points

Rinsing and scrubbing will spread micro droplets a lot further than your sink.

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10 points

i thought it said “than you sink” and that you were making a German coastguard joke

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1 point

Shoutout Cornelis Drebbel

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2 points

This is why I don’t clean the dishes in my sink… Not trying to spread any micro droplets.

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17 points

Red meat can be eaten rare, because even if the inside is raw, it’s not usually contaminated by anything dangerous, while chicken meat has to be throughly cooked because it’s the opposite… So washing the outside is useless.

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7 points

Only if it’s a slab of meat, like a steak. Ground meat mixes up all those contaminants, so unless you grind it yourself from a slab with the outsides cut off (still iffy), cook your ground meat thoroughly (medium well is probably enough). You can get away with a sear on pretty fresh steak though.

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2 points
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And then there are the Germans, eating raw ground pork on a bun.
It seems, you can get away with raw meat, if you buy it freshly ground from the butcher.

Edit: wrong kind of meat

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What kind of regarded shitfuckery is washing chicken? What u washing off the bacteria that will die by the time the chicken reaches a safe temperature? This just seems like a good way to spread salmonella all over ur sink with no advantage.

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34 points

Yeah, I remember seeing some clip of some British science woman and whatever, washing chicken is not only fucking dumv, but a great way to spread bacteria

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7 points

Yea, there was a short series a few years ago with a cute blonde (hey, she gets guys to watch).

She visited a lab and demonstrated very clearly why washing chicken is a bad idea.

And how much difference soap makes when washing your hands, especially after handling something like chicken.

She also covered a bunch of chemical uage from the Victorian era.

Wish I could remember the show name for you.

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4 points

she gets guys to watch

Can confirm, I clicked on NBTV and Eric Talks Money because the girl be cute, and I stayed because the info is good. I’m happily married, and can confirm it absolutely works. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same works on women and people of other genders and sexual orientations with the respective gender.

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7 points

Yeah it potentially splashes salmonella round everywhere.

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-12 points

Don’t you wash your sink?

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50 points

Are you crazy? I’ve been seasoning that thing for years, I don’t want to ruin it by washing it!

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9 points
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it should be almost done marinating now. Can’t wait to put it in the oven, next to the dish rack

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2 points

Ok, you’re oven must be huge!

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8 points

Why wash the chicken then wash the sink and surrounding area when you can just not rinse the chicken and cook it without issue?

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0 points
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Washing the sink is just part of the washing dishes or making food in general. Sink will get dirt anyway. Do you just leave it dirty and grimy all the time?

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7 points

Do you disinfect your sink as often as you make a meat dish?

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-1 points

No I don’t disinfect it just like I don’t disinfect my dishes. I wash my dishes (those that cannot be machine washed) and after I am finished I wash the sink.

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70 points

Lots of people really do.

Losing taste is one thing, but it can actually be dangerous by spreading salmonella&friends.

Adam Regusea going into detail

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-50 points
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Didn’t watch the video, but I have a degree in this field. We were taught to always wash chicken, in a separate room. I was given an earful one time when I was working at the kindergarten kitchen when I forgot to wash chicken thoroughly.

Edit: I should notice, all my comments apply to a factory setting and business grade kitchens. Multiple people corrected me that cooking at home is different and you should not wash your chicken at home kitchen.

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65 points

You’ll have to be more specific about what “this field” is. Restaurant sanitation? Food safety? Chicken washing? Microbiology?

Whatever your degree, it’s not the recommended practice.
https://ask.usda.gov/s/article/Should-I-wash-chicken-or-other-poultry-before-cooking.

You render meat safe to eat by killing the bacteria with fire, commonly called “cooking it”.

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-21 points

Degree is in Food production technology. Sanitation, safety of preparation and storage. Before cooking, meat can go all over working place, and it can contaminate it if not washed.

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19 points

You were taught wrong. You don’t wash chicken. It only spreads germs.

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-25 points

I’m inclined to trust my professors that had years of experience, rather than someone off the internet.

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19 points

always wash chicken, in a separate room

Oh dang, I’ll have to move to a bigger house. My current home is lacking a chicken washing room.

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6 points

personally I just use the bull de-horning room for this purpose

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16 points

Hang on. You’re telling me, all kindergartens in your area have a separate room, just for washing chicken? Like"Here’s where the kids keep their bags, here’s the toilets, this is the chicken washing room, and over there we keep the crafts."

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-24 points

There a multiple compartments to every kitchen, at least should be to adhere to sanitary documentation. A separate room for washing dishes, a separate room for cleaning vegetables, a separate room for cleaning meat and a separate room for cooking. The cooking room has separated workplaces for different kinds of food to reduce contamination.

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14 points

I dunno who taught you that, or what dipshit was running a school that allowed it, but the bare fact that it is not only unnecessary, but potentially dangerous, has been known for decades.

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10 points

Having worked in restaurants for years and been to multiple health and safety classes in multiple states, I call bullshit.

Washing chicken spreads bacteria all over everything wherever it’s done: the walls, floor, ceiling. Do you sanitize the ceiling after you do this?

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-8 points

Listen mate, you can call bullshit all you want, I’m citing official documentation of my country that worked for years, specifically this one “СП 2.3.6.1079-01”, under part VIII, 8.9.

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1 point

What degree do you have?

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68 points

It’s recommended you DON’T wash your chicken because that just throws bacteria around your kitchen.

Cook it thorougly. Use a meat thermometer to be sure and you’ll be fine.

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11 points

I remember hearing the same thing.

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-1 points

No you don’t.

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3 points
*

I believe that’s a myth. If you cook thoroughly, you don’t need to worry about bacteria. Why would it matter if its being moved around then?
There sure are plenty of ‘under no circumstances’ articles and testimonials parroting each other.

Washing removes the gooey protein film on the surface, which otherwise ends up cooking into a egg-white-like membrane.

You can also wipe it with a paper towel to accomplish the same.
You should, at the very least, always dry your chicken to allow the surface to brown properly. Otherwise you end up with the hospital patient pale white.

  • reading around, it’s spreading the bacteria from the chicken to the environment thats the problem, so I was wrong there. Paper towel it is from now on.
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20 points
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It’s recommended you DON’T wash your chicken because that just throws bacteria around your kitchen.

I believe that’s a myth. If you cook thoroughly, you don’t need to worry about bacteria. Why would it matter if its being moved around then?

I think they mean that if you wash the chicken before cooking you might propel the not-yet-dead bacteria around your kitchen, which is worse than putting it all in the oven together to kill it.

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8 points

Yep, you nailed it in your edit. We do exactly that - dry it off with a few paper towels, then roast. As long as you can resist devouring the paper towels or dragging them all over the house (I’m looking at my sleeping dogs as I type this), it’s safe.

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