Hamburger Habits: Is Medium Safe?

Posted: April 11th, 2008 - 5:49pm by Amy Hubbell

I’m a reformed medium-rare hamburger eater. Before I met Doug, I always wanted my hamburgers pink in the middle and frankly had no clue that this was a potentially risky habit. Now that I’ve learned hamburger needs to be cooked to 160 F to be safe, however, I rarely eat hamburger unless Doug cooks it at home. That’s the only way I can assure that the cook is using a meat thermometer and knows how to properly do so.

Tonight, though, I’m in Buffalo, NY and I had dinner with two British friends in a rowdy Irish pub. While I intended to order salad, the pickings were few on the menu and I settled on a cheeseburger with fries. The waitress asked me, “How do you want that cooked.” Somewhat startled and without my food safety arsenal beside me, I said, “Medium.” I hate well-done hamburger because of the texture, but I wanted my burger safe. How could I tell her that?

My burger came and was very medium rare looking … very pink in the middle and done on the outside. I ate it. The whole thing. And it tasted good. And now I’m thinking about my foolish behavior and wondering if I’ll get e. coli. I know that color is a lousy indicator and I know it’s not likely I’ll get sick. But without the thermometer, how can you be sure?



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Comments

erik says:

I know. I know. Most restaurants don't even cook medium rare anymore. But I sooo live on the edge with this one. I swear I LOVE medium rare burgers. I do. I can't help it. So I just close my eyes and dive in about once a month.Of course when I drop dead, I'll have no one to blame but myself ... but my tummy will be happy.

Posted on April 11th, 2008 - 10:27pm

Bryan Severns says:

Amy and erik, if you get sick eating that medium rare burger, do you take responibility for your illness, or is it the fault of the restaurant/distributor/producer of said burger? Is there consummer responsibility in the food consumption chain?(I too like mediium rare meats, unpasturized cider and raw milk dairy products).Bryan the Omnivore

Posted on April 24th, 2008 - 12:47pm

pat putnam says:

Not all hamburger contains E-coli.

Posted on June 27th, 2008 - 6:07pm

Daniel says:

I have been on this earth some 60 plus years when I was young I ate med rare Burgers and at home I still eat Med rare Hamburgers, at restaurants I demand no more than med rare and if they won't do it I won't eat it..... the real problem is that inferior meat is mass produce and served to the public, if it is a quality product it should be able to be serve med rare to rare even.

Posted on March 22nd, 2009 - 2:36pm

Alex80 says:

Temperature or color do not suggest E. Coli presence. A high temperature simply decreases the chances that living E. Coli will remain. And only a very small percentage of all ground beef produced contains it. It is introduced very infrequently through improper handling, such as a butcher not washing his hands after using the restroom. It's not simply inherently present in all ground beef. You probably have a better chance of being struck by lightning, than being infected by any given hamburger - even a raw one. Your immune system would have to be compromised for it to even invade your body, and it's so rare that a batch of ground beef leaving a meat facility actually contains any of the bacterium. It's really nothing to be afraid of, with modern meat handling practices.

Posted on October 9th, 2009 - 11:22am

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