That should be enough to kill any harmful bacteria...
The key point (which they don't do a very good job of pointing out in that article) is that there is no safety difference between whole cuts of pork and beef - rare steak is just as risky as a rare pork chop (which is to say, not very)
What's the likelihood of illness from eating either? 5%? 1%? 30%?
If you cook a pork loin anywhere beyond 145 you'll end up with pork jerky. Pink pork's perfect.
Pink pork's perfect.
Good read if you want more detail (for even more detail, shell out for Modernist Cuisine):http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=complex-origins-food-safety-rules
In my opinion, the best way is to cook sous vide at 135-137 long enough to pasteurize - best of both worlds. With loin you are probably better off brining first as well.
I like to grill pull my pork. It's definitely part science, part art when you grill pull using unpredictable carbon motion, but once you get a decent idea of what the various stages of a pile of burning carbon mean you can control what you're doing fairly well.
If you don't brine loin or shoulder U FOO.I know that sous vide is a fancy way to say "boil." I like to grill my pork. It's definitely part science, part art when you grill using unpredictable carbon, but once you get a decent idea of what the various stages of a pile of burning carbon mean you can control what you're doing fairly well.
I am probably 50-50 on grilling and boiling as my main cooking methods
This is why I can't take you seriously.
Sous vide just doesn't look right.
Cook it a bit less than done then brown it, though my wife thinks the uniform pinkness of sous vided beef is spooky.
Look right while cooking or the finished product?My guess is if you made a list of the top 30 high-end restaurants in the US, you couldn't find one of them not using SV. You wouldn't necessarily know it to eat there (unless you realized that a protein was cooked to a better doneness than you've ever had) but it is almost certainly being used. Hell, I had a steak at the Capital Grille the other day that I am fairly certain was cooked SV (it makes service for a steakhouse much easier if you have the temps perfect and just have to sear them off to order).
Yes, I think you are pretty much cooking meat on a stick you carved yourself over a fire you started from rubbing two sticks together or you are cheating.
I don't need said stick to prepare eggs of the hard-boiled variety, but then again.... I haven't tried it either.