Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Pregnancy

Talk about every stage of pregnancy, from early symptoms to preparing for birth.

Blue cheese etc ok if cooked?

13 replies

badkitty · 01/12/2010 16:19

This is going to sound like a daft question but you know the sorts of cheese which you are not allowed to eat if pg eg gorgonzola - are they ok if cooked? Presumably that would kill bacteria etc? I wanted to get my favorite walnut & gorgonzola pasta from Sainsburys tonight as can't be arsed to cook, then realised I probably couldn't have it, then though I could get a spinach and ricotta one but probably can't have ricotta either?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
JBrd · 01/12/2010 16:39

badkitty, ricotta is fine, as is mozzarella and parmensan! And I think that blue cheeses are OK when cooked and properly heated through. For exmaple, I have been eating salami on pizzas and chorizo in chillies, always making sure that they are cooked through.

diyqueen · 01/12/2010 16:46

Don't know- I think I've heard people say it's OK if thoroughly cooked but am avoiding blue cheese myself just in case, though I like it too. It's not worth worrying about if you're not sure, and luckily there are lots of other nice things we can still eat! Sometimes it says on the pack whether or not the cheese in something is pasteurised, if it is then it's OK.

lilly13 · 01/12/2010 16:49

heated blue cheese does not mean pasteurised. the reason why it is not recommended to eat some cheeses is because they have been made of unpasteurised milk. better safe than sorry...

badkitty · 01/12/2010 16:49

OK thank you - it is all so confusing..!

OP posts:
lollipopshoes · 01/12/2010 16:50

no.

with cheeses, if it's not ok raw, it's not ok cooked.

Sorry.

I know how you feel, I could kill for some melted stilton...

VivaLeBeaver · 01/12/2010 16:51

Its fine. I'm a midwife.

www.eatwell.gov.uk/asksam/agesandstages/pregnancy/#A219890

StiffyByng · 01/12/2010 17:17

Also, anything labelled Stilton is pasteurised, as the AOC demands it. So you don't have to look for the label if eating it hot, as I do regularly, melted on gnocchi.

PGWomble · 01/12/2010 17:44

Thanks Viva. As somebody who thoroughly enjoyed a thoroughly hot blue cheese soufflé at a special dinner recently I was beginning to think that I'd dreamt up the relevant paragraph in the page you have posted!

wigglesrock · 01/12/2010 17:58

I've eaten blue cheese and brie cooked, am currently 29 weeks.

GlitteryBalls · 01/12/2010 18:36

I have stilton in quiches and stuff. Pasteurisation normally heats things to 100 degrees so I'm guessing if it's been cooked and hot right through it's fine.

midori1999 · 01/12/2010 19:29

Yes, as the link said, cheese properlyheated is fine.

I never know why people just seem to make up what they can eat instead of checking guidelines. Confused My cousin insisted throughout her pregnancy that only Helmans mayonaisse was safe, no other brand.

GlitteryBalls · 02/12/2010 12:14

I was confused and didn't realise you could have shop-bought mayo at first and I really missed it. And I had a raging craving for peanut butter and thought I couldn't have it til I realised that current guidelines says you can. Funnily enough, craving died down once I knew I could eat it!

8rubberduckies · 02/12/2010 13:20

Yes cooked cheese is fine, but please don't think that pasteurised mould-ripened cheese is okay, as I did until recently. Any listeria bug will grow in a mould-ripened cheese after it is made, so whether the milk it has been made with is pasteurised or not makes no difference; it's still unsafe unless cooked.

On the plus side though, this does mean that you can eat unpasteurised hard cheeses, so don't have to stick to the supermarket shrink-wrapped stuff! Any hard cheese is unlikely to harbour listeria bacteria as it is a very unhospitabel environment for the nasties to grow in.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page