Comment by Cthulhu_

Comment by Cthulhu_ 10 months ago

7 replies

How's that? I know American eggs get cleaned and bleached, but that doesn't happen in Europe yet salmonella is not a huge issue.

(cleaning eggs also removes some of its natural barriers, making it mandatory to refrigerate them to keep them edible)

rscho 10 months ago

Industrial eggs are tightly controlled. Homemade eggs are far more susceptible to infection. AFAIK, scrubbing eggs like in the US is generally a bad idea, and results in the need to refrigerate them.

  • JumpCrisscross 10 months ago

    > Homemade eggs are far more susceptible to infection

    Source? I buy small-farm eggs all the time. The industrial ones need sanitisation because of the literally shit condition the birds are kept in.

  • jagged-chisel 10 months ago

    This doesn’t explain the lack of salmonella from eggs in Europe

    • rscho 10 months ago

      Huh ? Yes, it does. Same reason as in the US: industrial eggs are tightly controlled.

thaawyy33432434 10 months ago

lack of bleaching force owners to keep high standard (hygiene and vaccinations)

If you wash your eggs before using them, you will never get salmonella.

  • 9dev 10 months ago

    But you will get rotten eggs easily.

    In thirty years in Europe, I’ve had a single incidence of salmonella infection when I handled egg shells badly while doing a Carbonara (which requires raw eggs to be spread right over the plate). This really, really isn’t a problem if you follow minimal hygiene when cooking (don’t touch food after touching shells without washing your hands in between.