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  • Licking the spoon is the best part

  • of baking cookies.

  • But it's a bad idea.

  • Because eating raw cookie dough really can make you sick,

  • and not just because it contains raw eggs.

  • In 2009, over 77 people

  • across 30 states got food poisoning

  • after eating prepackaged raw cookie dough.

  • Many experienced vomiting and bloody diarrhea,

  • and some had severe kidney damage.

  • In the end, Nestlé had to recall 3.6 million packages

  • of its refrigerated cookie dough.

  • And in 2016, another group got sick

  • after eating raw homemade cookie dough

  • made from General Mills products.

  • But despite what you'd expect,

  • the culprit wasn't salmonella in the eggs.

  • It was a shiga toxin-producing E. coli in the flour,

  • the same type that sometimes finds its way

  • into romaine lettuce and hamburger meat.

  • In fact, the CDC estimates it's responsible

  • for 265,000 illnesses,

  • 3,600 hospitalizations,

  • and 30 deaths in the United States every year.

  • Now, normally E. coli likes to bunker down in moist places.

  • That's why scientists were surprised

  • when it turned up in flour.

  • And even today, it's a mystery

  • as to how the E. coli got there in the first place,

  • or how it survived in the flour's dry environment.

  • The problem is that the bacteria could have infiltrated

  • the flour during any step of the manufacturing process.

  • It might have snuck onto the wheat from animal poop,

  • or jumped to the flour from a contaminated

  • processing equipment.

  • There's really no way to know for sure.

  • Now, just to be clear, although flour was the culprit

  • in this case, raw eggs can still be just as dangerous.

  • In fact, the FDA estimates that every year

  • contaminated eggs cause 79,000 food-borne illnesses

  • and 30 deaths in the United States.

  • With that in mind, the CDC warns

  • against eating any raw cookie dough.

  • But, there's good news.

  • Although, yes, there's a risk your cookie dough

  • is contaminated, it's a pretty minimal one.

  • Many bakers, for example, taste test all the time,

  • no worse for wear.

  • Plus, a study found that over half of college students

  • ate unbaked cookie dough, and they lived to tell the tale.

  • Even better, the risk is lower today than ever before,

  • at least when it comes to store-bought varieties.

  • Because, after the 2009 outbreak,

  • companies like Nestlé and Pillsbury

  • have started including heat-treated flour

  • and pasteurized eggs in their dough.

  • By heating flour to 71 degrees Celsius,

  • you kill off any E. coli.

  • And the pasteurization process heats eggs just enough

  • to kill off bacteria without cooking the egg.

  • Heat-treated flour and pasteurized eggs

  • also explain why the sort of cookie dough

  • you find in ice cream is harmless.

  • But if you insist on making your chocolate chip cookies

  • from scratch, there's a DIY way to sterilize

  • your own ingredients: bake the cookie!

  • It'll still taste good.

Licking the spoon is the best part

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