The reason i ask this is due to the fact nothing on the bacon packaging indicates it can or cannot be eaten 'raw' and in general eating raw meat is a bad idea. My kids helped unpack groceries last night and left a bag of uncooked pork chops in the original packaging out overnight 3 i've been experimenting cooking bacon on the george foreman grill
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I'm trying it out a little less cooked and was wondering, how do i know if it's cooked enough to be safe to eat
Recently i've tried coating the bacon in maple syrup and it really makes it difficult to see when the bacon starts to brown.
Put some bacon in the oven with some brown sugar on it Used a fork to flip the bacon half way through Then used the same fork to take the cooked bacon out of the pan and on to a rack When do i need to worry about contamination on my cooking utensils
What is sufficient to make the utensil safe again? This question was prompted by this one on how to clean tools to prevent cross contamination I wanted to ask it in the comments but realized it might be better as a separate question You can choose how large you want your bacon chunks to be
The bacon is raw, and wrapped around a patty
If you wrap it well (with lots of overlap), the bacon stays in place Be careful, as bacon can shrink a whole lot If you want to be extra safe, you can use a toothpick to hold everything in place. This residue forms a sticky film on the pan that burns if not scraped off during co.
Will it last longer before it must be disposed of All i've found is that vacuum sealed food should not be left at room temperature indefinitely, but no comment on its safe limit Perhaps it's also 2 hours, but i would like to confirm that explicitly The consumer rep advised me to toss the bacon because it must have been compromised
She said that it would not be safe to eat and offered a coupon to replace another package.