gleam wrote:The FDA and USDA still recommend whole cuts of beef be cooked to at least 145F.
The problem is that the thermometer calls 145F Rare! If the USDA recommendation is followed and the meat is removed from the heat after reaching 145, it is, at the very least, medium-well. What they should do is remove the designations of rare, medium-rare, and medium from the thermometers so as to conform with the USDA guidelines. It might help too if the USDA would admit that they recommend that no one should be consuming raw meat or meat that is cooked less than medium well. No pink whatsoever.
The other problem is that these thermometers don't even have a scale for temperatures less than 145. The dial is blank in the areas most people would be using. What will the manufacturers do to absolve themselves of liability when the medium-rarers add markings at forbidden temperatures on their thermometers, or even more diabolically, start estimating temperatures when the dial is in the unmarked forbidden zone? Will all the meat thermometers be recalled and replaced with popup thermometers that give the cook no clue about the cooking progress until our meat is cooked to their mandated temperature?
Just give me a thermometer that has a scale from 80 to 220 and I'll be happy. If you want to put medium well and well in their proper places, that's fine too.