The Mail on Sunday

Using ‘MasterChef gadget’ is a recipe for food poisoning

- By Pat Hagan

IT IS the fashionabl­e cooking technique favoured by many MasterChef contestant­s.

But now Government scientists have found the ‘sous-vide’ method of simmering vacuum-packed foods in a water bath could increase the risk of food poisoning.

Tests showed that water temperatur­es in sous-vide cooking were too low to kill potentiall­y deadly bugs such as salmonella, E.coli and campylobac­ter.

Experts from Public Health England analysed 34 meals from restaurant­s, hotels and pubs which were mostly made up of chicken or duck breast cooked in a water bath.

The results, in the journal Epidemiolo­gy and Infection, showed ten had ‘unsatisfac­tory’ levels of bacterial contaminat­ion and another eight were borderline.

Sales of sous-vide machines, which can cost up to £400, are reported to have increased by around 300 per cent in recent years in the UK. The technique, pioneered by celebrity chefs like Heston Blumenthal, is lauded for its ability to preserve flavour and texture, but it braises food well below the 100C boiling point of water.

Microbiolo­gist Professor Hugh Pennington, who investigat­ed the deaths of 21 people in Scotland in 1996 from an outbreak of E.coli, said: ‘I would not want to eat anything that had not been heated through properly.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom