51. Cooking can kill the bacteria. 52. Cooking generally kills the bacteria, so Japanese are boiling their salads, pouring hot water over melons and cooking hamburgers well done these days. 53. Corriher cooks her turkey to a slightly lower temperature than the USDA recommends, relying on a combination of cooking time and temperature to kill bacteria. 54. Customers of Eastern Pines and Bell Arthur water corporations also should boil water for three minutes to kill any bacteria. 55. Deodorants do much the same thing, killing bacteria and masking bad odors, while antiperspirants actually block sweat glands, clogging them. 56. Doctors gave him antibiotics to kill the bacteria and drugs to make his heart beat stronger. 57. Eating steak will become even more dangerous when the government makes us char it into shoe leather to kill the bacteria. 58. For some drugs, like antibiotics that kill bacteria, a dramatic explosion into the bloodstream is exactly what they need to work best. 59. For those concerned about salmonella, cooking eggs four to five minutes should kill the bacteria, although people with weakened immune systems may want to beware. 60. For either recipe, the eggs do not reach a heat required to kill salmonella bacteria, so you may wish to use pasteurized eggs. |