Tuesday, 15 September 2015

Identify Spoiled Meat

Protect yourself from the dangers of spoiled meat.


Food-borne illnesses such as E. coli and salmonella are responsible for millions of cases of food poisoning a year, just in the United States. The majority of these cases are the result of eating spoiled meat. While even fresh meat can be infected, your chances of becoming sick from a food-borne illness increases exponentially the older the meat is. Knowing tell when your meat has passed its prime can keep you from experiencing the unpleasant effects of food poisoning.


Instructions


1. Check the sell-by or use-by date on the package. Believe it or not, selling meat after the sell-by date isn't always illegal. If the meat is past its sell-by date, don't buy it, no matter how low the price per pound.


2. Check the color of the meat. It doesn't have to be past its expiration date to be spoiled, nor does an off-color meat mean that it is bad. Good poultry meat can be anywhere from bluish-white to yellow in color. Optimally, raw pork is grayish-pink. Ground beef can be tricky. Most people associate the freshest ground beef with a bright red color. However, this reddish color is not the natural color of fresh beef, but occurs due to the meat's exposure to the air. If fresh ground beef could be vacuum-packed and kept from oxygen, its color would be a purplish-red. Contrary to popular belief, just because ground beef has turned brown does not mean that it's bad. Meat from older animals will be darker than that of younger animals. In addition, sometimes the store's lighting can cause a reaction with the meat, turning it a brownish-red.


3. Smell the meat. This is probably the easiest way to tell whether meat is bad. Whatever the kind of meat, if it smells rancid or unpleasant, it's not good to eat. You may run across ground beef in the store that appears to be fresh but has a slight odor to it. This could mean that the meat is just beginning to go bad, or that the store used carbon monoxide when it packaged the meat to keep it that pretty red color even after spoilage. Either way, you shouldn't take the risk. Raw poultry has a more distinctive odor when it starts going bad--a putrid smell that should discourage even those with an iron stomach from eating it.


4. Take the time to inspect the meat. Spoiled meat often has a slimy texture to it, which is a sign that bacteria has begun to multiply on its surface. Bad meat, especially poultry, might also become tacky or sticky. If you see any kind of growth on the meat, or if there are areas that are black or green, mold has begun to grow.

Tags: mean that, food poisoning, ground beef, ground beef, sell-by date