Quit washing your chicken: it just sprays germs everywhere
Generations of American cooks are wrong. They learned their wrongity wrongity wrong habits from their parents, or from public television’s Julia Child. Their terrible, filthy habit is rinsing poultry before cooking. Public health experts estimate that as many as 90% of Americans do it, and they want us to cut it out.
Poultry-washing makes intuitive sense: you don’t know where that bird has been or what kind of bacteria are crawling on the outside. Julia Child herself admitted that washing a chicken before roasting it felt cleaner, even if the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the government agency in charge of making sure that our meat doesn’t kill us, said that there are no bacteria on the outside of a chicken that roasting won’t kill.
Trying to get the word out, food-safety researchers have produced fotonovelas (like comics, but with photos) and mini domestic dramas spreading the message that washing chicken is bad and shouldn’t be done.
Should you wash your hands after you handle raw poultry and get it in to cook? Yes, definitely, with hot water and soap. But don’t worry about bathing the chicken.
For more on this story go to:
http://consumerist.com/2013/08/26/quit-washing-your-chicken-it-just-sprays-germs-everywhere/