Ground beef and ground beef patties affected by the recall were sent to distributors in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Michigan

An Illinois meat wholesaler has recalled more than 6,700 pounds of beef over fears of a possible E. coli contamination.

Valley Meats and the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced the recall on New Year’s Eve.

The recall affected packages of ground beef and ground beef patties shipped to distributors in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, and Michigan. The products were then shipped to restaurants and retail stores. A full list of affected products is on the FSIS website.

  • @[email protected]
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    341 year ago

    Oops, guess the 12 year olds the meat industry uses as labor weren’t paying close enough attention during the food safety course.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    Wait wait wait. You mean that the pink slime STILL contained e-coli from carcasses that were poorly washed clean of fecal matter, even after the ammonia wash treatment? I’m shocked, this is only the unpteenth time this kind of thing has happened.

    Ground beef should have comparable cost to stewing steak (which should also cost more, but that’s another topic). These dangerous shortcuts kill people, but hey they’ve undergone regulatory capture for a while now so don’t worry - your government says it’s fine 👍

  • @gmtom
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    51 year ago

    But is the sky beef still okay?

  • @someguy3
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    41 year ago

    Doesn’t cooking kill e.coli?

    • IHeartBadCode
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      171 year ago

      If cooked well done yes. That means a uniform 160° in the meat or hotter.

      A lot of places do not do this with their meat, especially hamburgers. Thus, they rely on low population of the virus that can be mostly killed at a uniform 145°.

      If the population of the virus is high uncooked, not enough is killed at 145° to be deemed safe to eat.

      This is also why immunocompromised people must eat well done burgers. There is no population of the virus above zero that’s safe for them.

      • RBG
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        11 year ago

        E. Coli is a bacterium and not a virus. Otherwise you are probably correct. I assume you mean Fahrenheit and not Celsius.

    • DeepFriedDresden
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      111 year ago

      Yes, but people who order a burger medium can still get sick. Not to mention heightened risk of cross contamination with ready to eat foods.

      It’s just safer to not use meat from a source known to have food-borne bacteria. Food safety is designed with many layers of protection, if you already know the first layer has failed, an unsafe source of food, then you’re now counting on kitchen staff to protect you.

      Not to say kitchen staff are inherenrly unreliable, but during a weekend dinner rush with low pay and high pressure, things can go wrong, so it’s just best to take out food that is already a risk.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Welcome to fewd saftea, I am your course teacher Paul Poorhighjeans.

    Maybe. I know nothing and I’m dumb.

    • @andrewta
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      11 year ago

      That took me longer then it should have to get that joke. Well done my friend