The Food Standards Agency here in the UK
has advised restaurants to halt serving dishes made from raw eggs and half-cooked poultry to
eliminate any risk of catching bird flu. The public is advised only to serve meat where the juices run clear and
eggs that have solid whites.
These rules, following the first confirmed bird flu outbreak in Scotland, rule out the making of fresh mayonnaise and mousses with raw eggs and the serving of poultry such as duck pink in the middle. Mousses and mayonnaise sold in supermarkets are fine as they are made from pasteurized egg which is safe.
On eggs specifically, the Food Standards Agency warned: "People should not eat raw eggs or use raw eggs in dishes that will not be cooked." Runny yolks can be eaten apparently even though the World Health Organization, has stipulated that both egg whites and yolks should be solid.
Global health authorities say that there is currently no bird flu in the Western Hemisphere and the most likely way
for it to enter the United States would be through birds smuggled in as pets or for cockfighting, or else from
migratory birds, particularly ducks and geese. Nearly every chicken consumed in the US is raised here. Commercially
bred chickens, including many "free range" birds, are raised inside giant airplane-hangar sized complexes and
almost never see the light of day. Outdoor-raised chickens are usually kept away from wild birds with netting. The birds
that are most at risk are unconfined birds and home raised birds, which may mingle with wild or migratory birds that
carry the disease.
In the wake of the avian flu in Asia, people in places like
Hong Kong and South Korea are 










