The Mail on Sunday

As health chiefs ditch 30 years of advice on runny eggs... ‘DANGER’ foods that are SAFE after all

... and the ones that are far riskier than you thought

- By Angela Dowden NUTRITIONI­ST

SOFT boiled eggs, souffles and proper tiramisu are back on the menu for everyone – after official 30-year-old UK advice that pregnant women, the elderly and young children should only eat well-cooked eggs was finally overturned.

The controvers­y dates back to 1988, when a scare over the presence of the food poisoning bacteria salmonella in eggs led to warnings for vulnerable groups to avoid eating them if they were raw or runny. The junior health minister of the time, Edwina Currie, declared: ‘Most egg production in this country, sadly, is now affected with salmonella.’

By the 1990s, producers started a vaccinatio­n programme and today the risk is considered negligible.

But what about all the other food safety rules we often follow, like never serving pork pink or washing a chicken before cooking – should they be given an overhaul too?

Here we examine the sometimes surprising truths about how to keep your food safe….

RUNNY EGGS ARE OK FOR EVERYONE

SINCE the salmonella scare, the Government had advised that pregnant women, young children and elderly people should avoid eating eggs that were not fully cooked.

But for UK-produced eggs with the Lion stamp on the shell – that’s virtually all eggs sold in supermarke­ts – the ban on dippy eggs for vulnerable groups has been lifted.

The advice follows a year-long risk assessment by the Advisory Committee on the Microbiolo­gical Safety of Food which found that measures by the egg industry, from vaccinatio­n of hens through to improved hygiene on farms and better transporta­tion, had dramatical­ly reduced salmonella levels in UK hens.

Salmonella is not killed by heating, and can cause vomiting, diarrhoea and cramps. It’s worth noting that if eggs don’t have the Lion stamp, or are from ducks, geese or quails, they should still be cooked thoroughly for vulnerable groups.

PINK BEEFBURGER­S ARE NEVER SAFE

MINCING meat spreads bugs such as E.coli, a food poisoning bacteria that lives on the food surfaces and can end up inside, say, a burger. So mincing creates a risk that cooking a rare steak doesn’t, as searing a steak kills off surface bacteria.

Poorly cooked burgers are responsibl­e for more than 800 cases of food poisoning each year. However food experts claim that hygiene controls imposed on restaurant­s with pink burgers on t he menu mean you’re less likely to fall ill eating one out than you are if you make them yourself.

‘ Restaurant­s are able to put in strict controls right from the start of the process to prevent or reduce contaminat­ion on the meat they use for burgers,’ a Food Standards Agency (FSA) spokesman explained.

Even so, rare burgers can still be a risk for pregnant women, the young and old, and these groups are also advised to avoid steak, due to the small risk of a nasty infection called toxoplasmo­sis.

WHY YOU SHOULD NEVER WASH A CHICKEN

MANY of us still do it, but this is regarded as outdated and unsafe by experts. That’s because splashing water over a chicken can spread bacteria such as campylobac­ter – which can cause gastric illness – around your kitchen. The only way to successful­ly get rid of bacteria on poultry is to cook it thoroughly until the meat is not pink and the juices run clear. Public Health England reported that between July 2015 to March 2016, 61 per cent of fresh whole chickens were contaminat­ed with campylobac­ter, which is responsibl­e for more cases of food poisoning than E.coli, listeria and salmon ella put together. In 2014, the FSA ran a ‘don’t wash your chicken’ campaign to protect people from the bug.

DON’T STORE SPUDS IN THE FRIDGE IF YOU’RE GOING TO ROAST THEM

ACRYLAMIDE is a probable carcinogen (a substance that pro- motes cancerous cells in the body) that forms when high-starch foods, such as potatoes and bread are cooked at over 120C by frying, roasting or baking.

The FSA has launched a campaign urging us to ‘go for gold’ – meaning don’t bake, toast or roast starchy foods like potatoes, root vegetables and bread too brown – as this will minimise acrylamide formation.

But what’s less well-known is that you can minimise the amount in homemade chips and roasties by not refrigerat­ing potatoes. ‘Storing potatoes in the fridge may lead to the formation of more free sugars, and can increase overall acrylamide levels when the potatoes are fried, roasted or baked,’ says an FSA spokesman.

‘ Store raw potatoes in a dark, cool place at temperatur­es above 6C if you intend to cook them at high temperatur­es.’

Parboiling before roasting also helps as the process removes free sugars from potatoes.

EAT PEANUTS WHEN PREGNANT … AND GIVE THEM TO YOUR BABY

I T WAS once thought that children were more likely to develop a potentiall­y fatal peanut allergy if f exposed to them in the womb or in infancy, but the reverse may be true. Government advice is that

pregnant women with a family history of allergy can safely eat peanuts unless they are allergic, but still states that babies shouldn’t consume peanuts until six months, and then only if there’s no family history of food allergy. However, Gideon Lack, Professor of Paediatric Allergy at King’s College, London, says: ‘There is strong evidence that, from four months of age, frequent consumptio­n of foods rich in peanuts will reduce the developmen­t of peanut allergy.’

SUSHI (AND SALAMI) MAY NOT BE AS SAFE AS YOU THINK

THERE’S a reason most supermarke­t sushi only uses cooked fish: raw seafood can never be guaranteed totally safe. Shell fish can be contaminat­ed with viruses, including norovirus, so vulnerable groups such as pregnant women and over 65s should always eat it cooked.

With raw salmon sushi you’re on a safer footing, as food hygiene legislatio­n dictates that fishery products for raw consumptio­n ( and which aren’t from certified parasite- free farms or waters) must have been frozen, which destroys tiny stomach- upsetting worms, called anisakis.

Freezing salami, Parma ham and chorizo, which are raw cured meats, can also kill any stray toxoplasmo­sis-causing parasites –which can cause miscarriag­e.

IT’S OK TO EAT A PINK PORK CHOP (OR SO THE AMERICANS SAY)

GUIDANCE from the FSA is that pork roasting joints and chops should be cooked until the meat is no longer pink and juices run clear. The advice stems from when trichinell­a – a parasite infection – was common in pork, but no cases have been reported for more than 30 years.

In America, the Department of Agricultur­e says whole cuts of pork, such as roasts and chops, are safe when cooked to 63C followed by a three-minute rest time, allowing the pork to be cooked medium and just slightly pink.

However, independen­t food safety consultant Sarah Howarth says: ‘Cook your roast or minced pork at home until the centre is no longer pink and the juices run clear.’

YOU CAN EAT TOO MUCH FISH

OILY fish can harbour fat-soluble dioxins and PCB chemicals, which have been linked with cancer and low birth weight.

For women who are trying to get pregnant, the limit is just two portions a week, and for men it is four portions.

But it’s not just salmon, sardines and mackerel that are at issue – some white fish contains similar levels of PCBs as oily fish.

If sea bass, sea bream, halibut, turbot and rock salmon (dogfish), are your regulars, you should look for alternativ­es.

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