T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3745.2 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Feb 24 1993 20:29 | 18 |
| Well, I think the cutting-board stuff ought to be moved to its own
note, considering how long I spent looking for the darned thing in the
index. (And never once thought to look under "Mayonnaise". Silly me.)
Anyway, there's another article about the study in today's paper. Seems
that it isn't just a matter of the wooden boards having fewer live
bacteria than the plastic ones - they have almost no bacteria at all,
live or dead...
As the researcher said, "Eventually, somebody has to follow those
critters down into the wood pores and find out what happened to them.
We don't know that <the bacteria are> dead, but we know that they don't
come back to the surface. The fact that they disappeared, never to
return, is not a satisfying conclusion to the study."
_I_ think it's a hoot.
-b
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3745.4 | Cutting boards | TNPUBS::STEINHART | | Mon Jan 24 1994 09:07 | 18 |
| <Mods: Didn't find a topic on cutting boards, so please forgive for
starting a new one. Move if you see fit.>
ABOUT WOODEN BOARDS:
I have a wooden cutting board and have questions about its care.
First, I know you're not supposed to wash it, but I have been doing so
anyway. It just seems gross to only wipe it for messy stuff like meat.
How do you clean your wooden boards?
Second, how do you get the onion smell out? Mine is pretty rank,
despite washing and wiping with lemon peel.
Third, what kind of oil should I get to season it? I need an oil that
won't poison me. ;-) It has a small crack already. Time to act!
L
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3745.5 | Works for me... | OKFINE::KENAH | The Man with the Child in his eyes | Mon Jan 24 1994 09:30 | 4 |
| I scrub my wooden cutting board with a little water and a lot of baking
soda to remove onion smell.
andrew
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3745.6 | | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Mon Jan 24 1994 10:46 | 5 |
|
I just read that one uses mineral oil for wooden boards.
justme....jacqui
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3745.7 | dir/title=board .... gives 3745 | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Mon Jan 24 1994 13:08 | 14 |
| Maybe this note and that one could be consolidated by the moderator into a
generic cutting board note.
My wood board gets washed with soap when it needs it. I also scrub it with a
nylon net pot scrubber, and it takes some of the "dead wood" surface off, which
gets rid of a lot of odor. From time to time, I also put lemon juice on the
surface, and let it sit a few minutes. This removes stains and ALL odors.
Once in a blue moon, I put mineral oil on it.
The best thing I ever did for it was to buy a large plastic board the same size
for cutting chicken, and a few small plastic boards for garlic and onions. I
set the boards right on top of the wood one when needed in order to get the
extra 1.5" counter height my wood board provides.
|
3745.8 | note moved ... '.0' means '.4' | GEMGRP::WINALSKI | | Mon Jan 24 1994 13:22 | 7 |
| RE: .0
You should ALWAYS wash a cutting board, regardless of what material
it's made of, ESPECIALLY if it's been used for cutting meat or poultry.
You are asking for a case of salmonella food poisoning if you don't.
--PSW
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3745.9 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Jan 24 1994 14:41 | 5 |
| See also the "Cutting Board" section of the "Mayonnaise" note, 2431.
[No, I'm not kidding; all the best stuff about cutting boards is in
there. ;-)]
-b
|
3745.10 | scrub & salt | MSBCS::MORGENSTEIN | Something inoffensive | Mon Jan 24 1994 17:01 | 6 |
| We scrub it with a green scrubby pad & hot water.
After cutting meat (esp. raw meat) we salt it and then
wash the salt off later.
Ruth
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3745.3 | moderator reply and pointer | NOVA::FISHER | US Patent 5225833 | Tue Jan 25 1994 05:11 | 8 |
| please see also the cutting board replies under the mayonnaise note
#2431. It's pretty well interwoven there so I chickened out and didn't
move anything. (Also, set note/note_id has caused a few flaky notes
files lately :-) ).
The following replies were moved here from a more recent note.
ed, COOKS comoderator
|