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Food & Drink > Recipes > Cooked Pork Temperature Lowered
 

Cooked Pork Temperature Lowered

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has lowered the recommended safe cooked temperature for pork.

"USDA is lowering the recommended safe cooking temperature for whole cuts of pork from 160°F to 145°F and adding a three-minute rest time. The safe temperature for cuts of beef, veal, and lamb remains unchanged at 145°F, but the department is adding a three-minute rest time as part of its cooking recommendations," a statement on the website reads.

"Cooking raw pork, steaks, roasts, and chops to 145°F with the addition of a three-minute rest time will result in a product that is both microbiologically safe and at its best quality," it continues.

USDA News

The various meats:

USDA Recommended Safe Minimum Internal Temperatures
Steaks & Roasts - 145 °F
Fish - 145 °F
Pork - 145 °F
Ground Beef - 160 °F
Egg Dishes - 160 °F
Chicken Breasts - 165 °F
Whole Poultry - 165 °F

More from the USDA:
Why the Rest Time is Important

A "rest time" is the amount of time the product remains at the final temperature, after it has been removed from a grill, oven, or other heat source. During the three minutes after meat is removed from the heat source, its temperature remains constant or continues to rise, which destroys pathogens. USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) has determined that it is just as safe to cook cuts of pork to 145 °F with a three minute rest time as it is to cook them to 160 °F, the previously recommended temperature, with no rest time. The new cooking suggestions reflect the same standards that the agency uses for cooked meat products produced in federally inspected meat establishments, which rely on the rest time of three minutes to achieve safe pathogen reduction.

posted on May 24, 2011 12:38 PM ()

Comments:

comment by marta on May 25, 2011 7:12 AM ()
I saw this somewhere: "Pork - the other pink meat."
reply by kitchentales on May 25, 2011 9:03 AM ()
I will have to try this with the next tenderloin of pork.
comment by elderjane on May 25, 2011 6:35 AM ()
Here I've been cooking all my pork to rubber bands, so now I am going to give this a try. We had really good pork chops the other night: I breaded them with seasoned flour and put them in my cast iron skillet with some bacon grease and browned them a little bit, then roasted them in the oven.
reply by kitchentales on May 25, 2011 9:02 AM ()

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