Cargando…

Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens

About one third of foodborne illness outbreaks in Europe are acquired in the home and eating undercooked poultry is among consumption practices associated with illness. The aim of this study was to investigate whether actual and recommended practices for monitoring chicken doneness are safe. Seventy...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Langsrud, Solveig, Sørheim, Oddvin, Skuland, Silje Elisabeth, Almli, Valérie Lengard, Jensen, Merete Rusås, Grøvlen, Magnhild Seim, Ueland, Øydis, Møretrø, Trond
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7313536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32348316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230928
_version_ 1783549959301234688
author Langsrud, Solveig
Sørheim, Oddvin
Skuland, Silje Elisabeth
Almli, Valérie Lengard
Jensen, Merete Rusås
Grøvlen, Magnhild Seim
Ueland, Øydis
Møretrø, Trond
author_facet Langsrud, Solveig
Sørheim, Oddvin
Skuland, Silje Elisabeth
Almli, Valérie Lengard
Jensen, Merete Rusås
Grøvlen, Magnhild Seim
Ueland, Øydis
Møretrø, Trond
author_sort Langsrud, Solveig
collection PubMed
description About one third of foodborne illness outbreaks in Europe are acquired in the home and eating undercooked poultry is among consumption practices associated with illness. The aim of this study was to investigate whether actual and recommended practices for monitoring chicken doneness are safe. Seventy-five European households from five European countries were interviewed and videoed while cooking chicken in their private kitchens, including young single men, families with infants/in pregnancy and elderly over seventy years. A cross-national web-survey collected cooking practices for chicken from 3969 households. In a laboratory kitchen, chicken breast fillets were injected with cocktails of Salmonella and Campylobacter and cooked to core temperatures between 55 and 70°C. Microbial survival in the core and surface of the meat were determined. In a parallel experiment, core colour, colour of juice and texture were recorded. Finally, a range of cooking thermometers from the consumer market were evaluated. The field study identified nine practical approaches for deciding if the chicken was properly cooked. Among these, checking the colour of the meat was commonly used and perceived as a way of mitigating risks among the consumers. Meanwhile, chicken was perceived as hedonically vulnerable to long cooking time. The quantitative survey revealed that households prevalently check cooking status from the inside colour (49.6%) and/or inside texture (39.2%) of the meat. Young men rely more often on the outside colour of the meat (34.7%) and less often on the juices (16.5%) than the elderly (>65 years old; 25.8% and 24.6%, respectively). The lab study showed that colour change of chicken meat happened below 60°C, corresponding to less than 3 log reduction of Salmonella and Campylobacter. At a core temperature of 70°C, pathogens survived on the fillet surface not in contact with the frying pan. No correlation between meat texture and microbial inactivation was found. A minority of respondents used a food thermometer, and a challenge with cooking thermometers for home use was long response time. In conclusion, the recommendations from the authorities on monitoring doneness of chicken and current consumer practices do not ensure reduction of pathogens to safe levels. For the domestic cook, determining doneness is both a question of avoiding potential harm and achieving a pleasurable meal. It is discussed how lack of an easy “rule-of-thumb” or tools to check safe cooking at consumer level, as well as national differences in contamination levels, food culture and economy make it difficult to develop international recommendations that are both safe and easily implemented.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7313536
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-73135362020-06-26 Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens Langsrud, Solveig Sørheim, Oddvin Skuland, Silje Elisabeth Almli, Valérie Lengard Jensen, Merete Rusås Grøvlen, Magnhild Seim Ueland, Øydis Møretrø, Trond PLoS One Research Article About one third of foodborne illness outbreaks in Europe are acquired in the home and eating undercooked poultry is among consumption practices associated with illness. The aim of this study was to investigate whether actual and recommended practices for monitoring chicken doneness are safe. Seventy-five European households from five European countries were interviewed and videoed while cooking chicken in their private kitchens, including young single men, families with infants/in pregnancy and elderly over seventy years. A cross-national web-survey collected cooking practices for chicken from 3969 households. In a laboratory kitchen, chicken breast fillets were injected with cocktails of Salmonella and Campylobacter and cooked to core temperatures between 55 and 70°C. Microbial survival in the core and surface of the meat were determined. In a parallel experiment, core colour, colour of juice and texture were recorded. Finally, a range of cooking thermometers from the consumer market were evaluated. The field study identified nine practical approaches for deciding if the chicken was properly cooked. Among these, checking the colour of the meat was commonly used and perceived as a way of mitigating risks among the consumers. Meanwhile, chicken was perceived as hedonically vulnerable to long cooking time. The quantitative survey revealed that households prevalently check cooking status from the inside colour (49.6%) and/or inside texture (39.2%) of the meat. Young men rely more often on the outside colour of the meat (34.7%) and less often on the juices (16.5%) than the elderly (>65 years old; 25.8% and 24.6%, respectively). The lab study showed that colour change of chicken meat happened below 60°C, corresponding to less than 3 log reduction of Salmonella and Campylobacter. At a core temperature of 70°C, pathogens survived on the fillet surface not in contact with the frying pan. No correlation between meat texture and microbial inactivation was found. A minority of respondents used a food thermometer, and a challenge with cooking thermometers for home use was long response time. In conclusion, the recommendations from the authorities on monitoring doneness of chicken and current consumer practices do not ensure reduction of pathogens to safe levels. For the domestic cook, determining doneness is both a question of avoiding potential harm and achieving a pleasurable meal. It is discussed how lack of an easy “rule-of-thumb” or tools to check safe cooking at consumer level, as well as national differences in contamination levels, food culture and economy make it difficult to develop international recommendations that are both safe and easily implemented. Public Library of Science 2020-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7313536/ /pubmed/32348316 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230928 Text en © 2020 Langsrud et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Langsrud, Solveig
Sørheim, Oddvin
Skuland, Silje Elisabeth
Almli, Valérie Lengard
Jensen, Merete Rusås
Grøvlen, Magnhild Seim
Ueland, Øydis
Møretrø, Trond
Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title_full Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title_fullStr Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title_full_unstemmed Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title_short Cooking chicken at home: Common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
title_sort cooking chicken at home: common or recommended approaches to judge doneness may not assure sufficient inactivation of pathogens
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7313536/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32348316
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230928
work_keys_str_mv AT langsrudsolveig cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT sørheimoddvin cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT skulandsiljeelisabeth cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT almlivalerielengard cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT jensenmereterusas cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT grøvlenmagnhildseim cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT uelandøydis cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens
AT møretrøtrond cookingchickenathomecommonorrecommendedapproachestojudgedonenessmaynotassuresufficientinactivationofpathogens