• @Valmond@lemmy.world
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    245 days ago

    A friend said there are no parasites (anymore) in European porc so you don’t need to over cook it, gotta try to find a credible source for that. He’s a chef and makes like lots of canned food and more on a semi industrial scale so It’s not nobody, but still I wonder.

    • @Saleh@feddit.org
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      83 days ago

      I can only speak about Germany, but Germany is one of the largest pork producers and consumers.

      There is at least one mayor scandal every year about malpractice, lack of hygiene and/or abuse of workers at industrial animal farms and slaughterhouses. The number of government inspectors only is enough to allow for inspections about once every 20 years or so per business. Also in many cases inspections are done by the local veterinarians, who also have the farmers/slaughter houses as customers and have a clear conflict of interest.

        • @Saleh@feddit.org
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          23 days ago

          I don’t know. As a lack of proper inspections is a key aspect to the issue, i wouldn’t trust it not to be the case.

          • @interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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            2 days ago

            I mean, how often are humans found infected by worms and reported in proportion to all pork eaten ?

            Looks like they are called these names

            Parasite/Disease Type Disease(s) Transmission Prevalence / Meat Contamination Rate
            Trichinella spp. Helminth Trichinosis Undercooked pork/game meat Low in commercial pork; higher in wild game (esp. bear, boar)
            Toxoplasma gondii Protozoa Toxoplasmosis Cat feces, undercooked meat High global exposure; ~30–50% worldwide seroprevalence
            Sarcocystis spp. Protozoa Sarcocystosis Undercooked meat, contaminated food Common in livestock; human infections relatively rare
            Taenia spp. Helminth Taeniasis, Cysticercosis Undercooked beef/pork Moderate; more common in regions with poor meat inspection
    • Ziglin (it/they)
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      23 days ago

      Schweinemet (raw ground pork you spread on rolls) is relatively common in Germany. Kind of gross looking but I think it is quite unlikely to cause problems if you eat it quickly.

    • @Elextra@literature.cafe
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      235 days ago

      In Japan, I’ve also had like medium pork katsu. So pork katsu not fully cooked. I’m sure there are higher quality porks different places. Def not something I will try in US.

    • AwesomeLowlander
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      74 days ago

      I’ve heard that as well. It’s hard to figure out how many of the dissenting opinions are based on fact, and how many are outdated.