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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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![]() "Al Fresco" > wrote in message ... > I plan to smoke a turducken. Before cooking, I want to brine the birds > for at least 8 hours in a 16:1 salt solution. > > Can I put them in the same brine, or will I be asking for a deadly case > of cross-contamination? First, at least one of them would have to contaminated. Secondly, aren't you going to nest them, one in the other, eventually anyway? Finally, even if they are contaminated with bacteria, cooking them would kill the bacteria. |
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I plan to smoke a turducken. Before cooking, I want to brine the birds
for at least 8 hours in a 16:1 salt solution. Can I put them in the same brine, or will I be asking for a deadly case of cross-contamination? |
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In article >,
Bubbabob > wrote: > Yes, but cooking does little to nullify the toxins that the bacteria have > already excreted. > > To be on the safe side, boil the brine for a minute or two between the > birds. I probably wouldn't bother, myself. Toxins aren't usually an issue with poultry, and boiling the brine wouldn't help if they were the problem. The most common concerns are Salmonella and Camphylobacter, which both cause infections (i.e., bacterial growth in the stomach). There have also been cases illnesses from Staph. Aureus, a a toxin producer. This toxin is heat stabile and can survive 6 hours of boiling without any reduction in toxicity. Though more frequently associated with beef, c. perfingens has been known to infect poultry. It is also a toxin producer. There have even been extremely rare cases of botulism in tightly stuffed poultry where an oxygen reduced environment was created inside the poultry cavity. Not an issue when brining, and a quick boil wouldn't help, either. -- to respond (OT only), change "spamless.invalid" to "optonline.net" <http://www.thecoffeefaq.com/> |
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On Fri, 28 Jan 2005 23:02:07 -0000, Bubbabob
> wrote: >"Vox Humana" > wrote: > >> Finally, even >> if they are contaminated with bacteria, cooking them would kill the >> bacteria. >> > >Yes, but cooking does little to nullify the toxins that the bacteria have >already excreted. > >To be on the safe side, boil the brine for a minute or two between the >birds. I probably wouldn't bother, myself. In the case of salmonella, illness is caused by the little bugs entering one's digestive tract and infecting the walls of the gut. There they produce an enterotoxin (SP?) that makes one heave and shit chili. Toxins in the birds I don't know about, but as long as the meat isn't noticeably spoiled, I'd not be concerned. I'm no fan of turducken (echoes of Calvin Trillin's "stuff stuff with heavy"), but were I to brine such a concoction, I'd bone out the foul, brine them individually or together (I can't see any difference) and then do the stuffing. If it were a commercially stuffed avian assemblage (how's that for a synonym for turducken?), I'd not brine it because odds are it's been injected with one or another "patented solution" of food industry standard salt water. OBStuffing stuff: I know a guy whose Thanksgiving dinner revolved around a shot of Bourbon inside a bottle of pinot grigio inside a keg of Shiner Bock. Something about the presidential election, as I understand it. modom "Dallas is a rich man with a death wish in his eyes." -- Jimmie Dale Gilmore |
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![]() "Bubbabob" > wrote in message > > To be on the safe side, boil the brine for a minute or two between the > birds. I probably wouldn't bother, myself. How do you boil between them when they are in the same container at the same time? |
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![]() > OBStuffing stuff: I know a guy whose Thanksgiving dinner revolved > around a shot of Bourbon inside a bottle of pinot grigio inside a keg > of Shiner Bock. Something about the presidential election, as I > understand it. > > modom > That is so freakin' funny. I don't really get it, but I think that is so funny!!!!! Elisa |
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In rec.food.cooking, Al Fresco > wrote:
> Can I put them in the same brine, or will I be asking for a deadly case > of cross-contamination? If yo do this, you will surely die. -- In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. -- Dwight David Eisenhower |
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Al Fresco wrote:
> I plan to smoke a turducken. Before cooking, I want to brine the birds > for at least 8 hours in a 16:1 salt solution. > > Can I put them in the same brine, or will I be asking for a deadly case > of cross-contamination? I don't see a major problem. While brining a bird is not a way of preserving it, the high salt should inhibit bacteria growth. The birds should be kept refrigerated while brining. |
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I brined them together and smoked them until the internal temperature
hit 185. It was amazing, and so far, no one has died. Dave Smith wrote: > Al Fresco wrote: > > >>I plan to smoke a turducken. Before cooking, I want to brine the birds >>for at least 8 hours in a 16:1 salt solution. >> >>Can I put them in the same brine, or will I be asking for a deadly case >>of cross-contamination? > > > I don't see a major problem. While brining a bird is not a way of > preserving it, the high salt should inhibit bacteria growth. The birds > should be kept refrigerated while brining. > |
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