Cape Argus

Runny eggs back on menu in UK 30 years on

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WATCHDOGS have given a clean bill of health to runny eggs, putting them back on the menu for toddlers, the elderly and pregnant women.

The news is a victory for British farmers who have fought for almost 30 years to restore the reputation of their eggs.

Soft-boiled eggs have come with a health warning since 1988, when the-then health minister Edwina Currie warned they could be contaminat­ed with salmonella.

The resulting scare led millions to ditch eggs. But efforts by farmers to eradicate the bug, which include vaccinatin­g hens against salmonella, have effectivel­y eliminated the risk.

It means the Food Standards Agency (FSA) has now lifted the health warning for eggs carrying the British Lion logo. It said: “Infants, children, pregnant women and elderly people can now safely eat raw or lightly-cooked eggs that are produced under the British Lion Code of Practice.”

The change in advice is a result of findings from an expert group set up by the Advisory Committee on the Microbiolo­gical Safety of Food.

Its experts found that the presence of salmonella in UK eggs had been dramatical­ly reduced in recent years, and the risks are “very low” for those produced according to food safety controls applied by the British Lion Code of Practice. More than 90% of UK eggs are produced under this scheme.

FSA chairperso­n Heather Hancock said: “It’s good news that now even vulnerable groups can safely eat UK eggs without needing to hard-boil them, so long as they bear the British Lion mark.”

Andrew Joret, of the British Egg Industry Council which runs the British Lion scheme, said: “We know many people, such as older folk in care homes, would love to enjoy a traditiona­l soft-boiled egg again.” – Daily Mail

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