Growing up I loved baking with my Mom and my Grandmas. It was just something that brought happiness to our family. I continue that with my kids now but as we know more food safety rules than we did in the 80s my kids do not consume the cake batter and they aren’t encouraged to “lick the beater” as I was. Today, we dive into why you shouldn’t eat cake batter and find out the real reasons.
Cake batter– obviously the essential part of baking a cake. Whether you bake them from the box mix or you go all hands in and bake from scratch the same rules apply. Just in the past years E. coli infections were linked to the consumption of cake batter. Outbreaks from flour, a raw ingredient in cake mix, have happened before. In 2016 and 2019, CDC investigated E. coli outbreaks linked to flour that led to more than 80 people getting sick and 20 people being hospitalized.
While flour might not look like raw food, most flour is raw. That means it hasn’t been treated to kill germs that cause food poisoning.
These harmful germs can contaminate grain while it’s still in the field or flour while it’s being made. Steps like grinding grain and bleaching flour don’t kill harmful germs—and these germs can end up in flour or baking mixes you buy at the store. You can get sick if you eat unbaked dough or batter made with flour containing germs. Germs are killed only when flour is baked or cooked.
Raw eggs are another ingredient in dough and batter that can make you or your loved ones sick. Raw and lightly cooked eggs can contain Salmonella, a germ that causes food poisoning.
E. coli can affect anyone who is exposed to the bacteria. But some people are more likely to develop problems than are others. Risk factors include:
Here at Make Food Safe we love to see family traditions continue and thrive, but want to make sure you know the best safe practices to keep you and your family safe, happy and healthy.
By: Samatha Cooper
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