I have come across this USDA document:
The USDA Kitchen Companion
All aspects of food safety is clearly defined and outlined in this single document for the home cook. Included are sections on slow cooking, BBQ and smoking (Pg 33, 34). Included is a complete discussion on the use of thermometers.
(I think this document should be the SMF reference for USDA recommendations, since that is exactly what it was written for us the home kitchen cook. Or at least one of SMF's official references.)
Procedures which are not discussed in the above document such as "waiting until 140º to insert thermometer probe", while it is certain may add an additional level of food safety, since even the USDA doesn't think that information is important enough to include in their own document, SMF gurus should refrain from insisting on a procedure when that procedure can't be referenced in any USDA home kitchen guide or fact sheet. (In addition
see below, even USDA website section on thermometers and usage has no reference to such a procedure.
Note: It is assumed for sake of discussion that all USDA prescribed smoking/cooking recommendations are being followed, cooking temp 225º - 300º and cooking meat at least to the USDA minimum internal meat temperature or higher.
However in other areas on USDA website which discuss smoking and the use of a thermometer it is clear that the USDA understanding of thermometer use includes inserting the thermometer through an intact muscle at an early stage of the cook/smoke, and since there are no other sequence indicators it is easy to infer at the beginning of a cook/smoke. (I draw this inference from the two most (traditional) common uses of thermometers inserted in the meat
(and remain there) during cooking, (turkey and roasts) which traditionally has been at the beginning of the cook.)
The
same info is provided here on USDA "smoking meat & poultry" fact sheet.
USDA FAct Sheet on Thermometers
http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Fact_Sheets...eets/index.asp
http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Fact_Sheets...ters/index.asp
Contradictions ???? in USDA recommendations
In the USDA Kitchen Companion there is an apparent contradiction.
It seems according to USDA it is unsafe to cook meat in a kitchen oven below 325º.
This raises the question, if it is unsafe in a kitchen oven to cook meat below 325º how does it become magically safe to do so in a smoker?
It is evident from every USDA publication that given all other USDA recommendations are followed the most critical is cooking meat to the USDA minimum internal safe temperatures (yes there are exceptions). When comparing minimum oven cooking temps to minimum smoker temp the one constant is cook the meat to the minimum internal safe temp. USDA understands that meat in a smoker will take longer to cook, but there is no mention of the danger zone, why? There is no mention of time constraints (in fact the opposite is covered "up to 8 hours or longer to smoke meat"), the emphasis for safe smoking is monitor the cooking temp minimum 225º and make sure the meat's internal temp achieves the USDA min. safe temp.
If USDA is flexible enough to recognize that smoking meat is a centuries old tradition and people are not dropping dead, in spite of science saying the risk of being in the danger zone when low & slow smoking is used or in spite of their own minimum oven cooking temp, should SMF safety recommendations be more stringent than what USDA has published for the home or consumer cook?
Finally, while SMF should always attempt to attain a high food safety standard, it often appears there is an over emphasis on straining gnats and the camels are missed.