It's a mysteria
from Toes@ani.social to science_memes@mander.xyz on 01 Jun 02:00
https://ani.social/post/14463920

cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/30571968

#science_memes

threaded - newest

Batman@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 04:08 next collapse

The key is to distill the water out and pour it into the new beans. You don’t even need new water, it’s pure 🔥 👌 💯 🤧 😍 😩 🔥

abbotsbury@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 04:28 next collapse

okay so since this is the science memes community, did I choose the right foodborne illness or was there a better punchline than listeria?

Mbourgon@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 04:30 next collapse

Thank god , I was worried there was something I’d missed on cold brew coffee and I should be bleaching more things between runs

Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org on 01 Jun 06:00 next collapse

Unless coffee is too acidic this is one instance where mentioning botulism might actually be justified

TheSlad@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 11:39 collapse

I thought botulism thrived in room-temp anaerobic environments? If theyre constantly opening and refreshing thier cold brew coffee and keeping it in the fridge then i dont think botulism is much of a risk.

RebekahWSD@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 06:54 next collapse

The thing I remember listeria getting into for my food manager safety cert was underheated nacho cheese and deli meats!

ryedaft@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 09:02 next collapse

Listeria survives well in a cold, wet environment so I would say it was spot on.

wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 14:16 next collapse

I am confused. You are not the OP?

* OHH THE OG OOP.

<bows>

Krauerking@lemy.lol on 01 Jun 15:55 next collapse

Well I have had it 3 times (Caramel apples, Hummus, Ice Cream)

And I think I made that face each time sooo… Yeah I think it works.

phobiac@lemmy.world on 02 Jun 15:00 collapse

I ran a microbiology lab that specifically tested for food borne illness causing bacteria.

Here’s a very recent attempt to assess the safety of cold brew coffee coming out of UGA. newswire.caes.uga.edu/…/cold-brew-coffee.html

These findings line up with earlier work such as this paper doing a general analysis of cold brew coffee and this Canadian government report on detected food borne pathogens in cold brew coffee..

The consensus I’m seeing is that cold brew coffee, especially when kept cold, is not a great environment for most food borne illness causing pathogens to thrive. Bacillus cereus and potentially botulism would have been more accurate choices.

felixwhynot@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 07:05 next collapse

I wash my cauldron between batches. Seems legit.

iii@mander.xyz on 01 Jun 07:58 next collapse

My therapist told me not to view things so negatively. So instead of saying “I have listeria”, go “I have thousands of new small friends”

Venator@lemmy.nz on 01 Jun 11:54 collapse

Wouldn’t it be closer to millions?

iii@mander.xyz on 01 Jun 12:04 next collapse

Even better!

SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jun 12:50 next collapse

Definitely. The minimum infective dose is around 10-100 million CFUs.

i_love_FFT@jlai.lu on 01 Jun 13:03 collapse

Maybe most of them aren’t friends, just some… Millions of new flatmates, meaning a guarantee of thousands of new friends!

Rakonat@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 12:36 next collapse

I’m the caveman who thought this was craft beer or something. Y’all drinking coffee cold? Scared caveman noises.

socsa@piefed.social on 01 Jun 14:23 collapse

Doing longer extractions (12hr+) with room temperature water makes very smooth coffee with much less bitterness and significantly higher caffeine content. It's also less fussy - set it up in the evening and have great coffee in the morning.

stray@pawb.social on 01 Jun 17:23 collapse

Maybe there’s something I don’t understand (I don’t drink coffee at all), but coffee is antimicrobial and doesn’t need to be kept out of the food safety danger zone. I should think it would take an extremely long time to grow pathogens.

Relevant study: researchgate.net/…/388799782_Survival_of_Listeria…

rustydrd@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 18:17 next collapse

I think the concern initially was that cold brew may be more prone to bacterial contamination than normal coffee, because it has lower acidity and the water used to make it is not boiled. But like the study you linked found, it seems to be safe at least when refrigerated.

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk on 01 Jun 18:29 collapse

idk man, the shit that comes out of the drip tray of my coffee machine sure smells like it has a lot of bacteria in it