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Een vertaalprobleem melden
Stuff that a lil bit o water ain't gonna harm much.
I do rinse off the koshering salt after making gravlax, and obviously soak my lutefisk in fresh water before cooking.
Not only is it counterproductive to wash meats, as the cooking progress will be destroying germs anyways. It's more likely to spread any germs around the kitchen during the wash.
That's why professionals will have two different cutting boards, one for raw and the other for cooked meats. Never share the same surface for both raw and cooked. You wash the cutting boards afterwards, not the meat itself.
Washing bacon will just get rid of the surface salt. Bacon is high in salts, which leads to a more crispy cook. It should be as dry as possible. Salt helps dry it.
The only benefit of washing bacon is if it was frozen together with ice, to help defrost it and get rid of that ice, before pat drying with a paper towel and re-salting. Most bacon is vacuum sealed in the package, so you wouldn't have that problem anyways.
The thing is, I'm actually concerned about the next time I cook meat (which I actually don't do) and the last thing I want to worry is try to cause bacteria on surfaces or have it spread to other foods or myself.
I've only recently gotten into the habit. Before, I only did it with sushi rice where the free starch level is important to not be too high or low.
For the regular rice in 10-20 pound bags from Costco, I used to just measure it out and put it right in the instant pot. Honestly, I haven't noticed much difference between prerinsing and not.
Exactly... that's why we cook it, there's no other real reason to do so...