I'd like to establish couple of facts up front:
- Eating/cooking/rinsing/brining/storing/freezing/thawing a turkey does not "give" it salmonella.
- The juice, water, liquid, skin, meat of EVERY turkey does not contain or create salmonella.
- Having a turkey in your home is not an immediate automatic incidence of salmonella.
Now for some further facts:
According to the FDA fewer than 10% of all the turkeys sold in the US are contaminated with salmonella. (In an odd quirk: Free-range and organic turkeys are MORE likely to have salmonella, because they don't get the vaccinations that are available that can prevent the infection. )
It is wise to assume that your turkey *could* be infected and take the proper precautions. That means not allowing cross contamination (using different knives, cutting boards, bowls, etc. for raw turkey) and cooking the meat thoroughly.
However. Either your turkey is infected or it isn't. You cannot GIVE YOUR TURKEY SALMONELLA. Thawing a turkey in water goes not "give it" salmonella. Brining a turkey does not "give it" salmonella. Undercooking a turkey does not "give it" salmonella.
Please let me say this again: YOU CANNOT GIVE A TURKEY SALMONELLA BY HOW YOU HANDLE IT.
Thank you for allowing me my seasonal rant.
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i've never heard anyone say "give a turkey salmonella," but i know a lot of people assume every turkey/chicken/egg has it and they have to cook it out. people always scrunch their noses at me when i taste raw cookie batter that has eggs in it. "you'll get salmonella!" i know, i know. someday i may end up eating an infected egg, but so far all my tasty batter has been bacteria free. guess i like to live on the edge!