Influence of Rapid Cooking Methods on the Survival of Trichinella spiralis in Pork Chops from Experimentally Infected Pigs

Authors


  • This study was supported in part by the National Live Stock and Meat Board.

  • Mention of brand names does not imply endorsement by the United States Government.

ABSTRACT

Pork chops (1.3, 2.5 or 3.8 cm thick) cooked to an internal temperature of 17 or 77°C by conventional oven, convection oven or flat grill contained no motile trichinae, whereas chops cooked to 66°C sometimes contained motile trichinae. Chops cooked by either charbroil or deep fat fry and pretreated in a microwave oven sometimes had motile trichinae even after cooking to an end point of 77°C. Chops, which had been frozen for 18 hr at -23°C and were thawed by microwave to 0°C then deep fat fried to an end point temperature, sometimes had infectious trichinae as confirmed by tests with rats and mice. Additional research is underway to verify the thermal death times and temperatures for T. spiralis larvae.

Ancillary