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Why You Should Never Wash Raw Chicken—and What to Do Instead
The Evolution of Food Safety Standards
If you look through old cookbooks, you’ll see recipes calling for rinsing chicken as part of the prep process, dating back to the 1960s. Home cooks used to believe this step kept their families safe from harmful pathogens, but in reality, it was spreading bacteria. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) started advising consumers against washing raw poultry in the 1990s, but the myth still persists.
The non-profit Partnership for Food Safety Education (PFSE), Drexel University’s College of Nursing and Health Professions, and New Mexico State University collaborated on an educational program to encourage people to stop washing chicken. They found that some home cooks rinse chicken because they don’t trust poultry processing or simply because they’ve always done it that way.
While fresh fruits and vegetables should be washed with cold water, raw poultry should not. Instead, trust that proper cooking will destroy any bacteria. Cooking chicken to the correct internal temperature is the only way to ensure it’s safe to eat.
The Right Way to Prep Raw Chicken
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