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by DanBC
4155 days ago
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What country are you in? Eggs are handled differently in the EU and US meaning safe handling at home is different. Eggs last maybe 5 weeks after sell by date. It's great that you haven't had any problems, but don't forget that salmonella will be more severe for children or old people. Salmonella can, rarely, kill vulnerable people. "salmonellosis continues to be an important cause of preventable death [...]" http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/20617938/ CDC estimated in 2005 that there were maybe 1.4m to 4m infections in the US, with about 500 to 600 deaths. http://www.cfsph.iastate.edu/Factsheets/pdfs/nontyphoidal_sa... |
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> Eggs are handled differently in the EU and US meaning safe handling at home is different.
Not exactly. The chickens are handled differently. In the EU they immunize them from salmonella. (But in most other countries in the world they don't, and they don't refrigerate either.)
The whole washing the egg part is a red herring in a very nice article - but it actually makes no difference.
To deal with salmonella just cook the eggs. And I would not use a raw egg even if it was refrigerated. If I wanted raw egg for a dish I would get pasteurized eggs.
> Eggs last maybe 5 weeks after sell by date.
No, they last for several months. As in they don't spoil. The egg is lower quality though, but that only matter for some dishes.