Food Safety for Pork – Part 2
Continued from part 1...
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Sam Vargas2017-08-17T15:40:07+00:00June 16th, 2015|Blog Post, Food Safety|
Continued from part 1...
Sam Vargas2017-08-17T15:40:29+00:00June 2nd, 2015|Blog Post, Food Safety|
If you haven’t tasted pork lately because you are not a red meat fan (or the other white meat), there are a few changes in the nutritional value of pork, the pork cooking temperatures, and the variety of ways we consume it. The amount of pork the average American consumes hovers around 50 pounds a year. Although pork is the number one meat consumed in the world, there are some religious restrictions on consumption of pork. U.S. consumption of pork dropped during the 1970s, largely because its high fat content caused health-conscious Americans to choose leaner meats. Today's hogs have much less fat due to improved genetics, breeding and feeding.
Sam Vargas2021-08-05T18:42:29+00:00November 18th, 2014|Blog Post, Food Safety|
Chicken is the number one species of protein consumed by Americans – we eat about 80 pounds of it per year. Outbreaks of foodborne illness have long been associated with poultry and eggs usually by undercooking it or cross-contamination of other foods by raw poultry. Recent concerns about avian or bird flu put the direct focus on our fowl food with concerns about whether this awful disease can transfer from birds to humans.
Sam Vargas2017-08-17T15:47:36+00:00October 21st, 2014|Blog Post, Food Safety|
The subject of food preparation covers some very broad, basic principles within food safety, with many steps associated with “risk” in some recipes. Certainly, preparation steps are where the most mistakes have occurred if a foodborne illness should occur. Outbreaks usually happen when more than one mistake occurs during prep, but sometimes it only takes one. Cooking is the biggest risk for raw foods, but all foods become ready-to-eat foods at some point in final preparation steps and that’s where the most care is required.
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